Case report: Neoadjuvant treatment with mistletoe and chemotherapy in a patient with ovarian-cancer, peritoneal carcinosis and metastasis of the spleen

Phytomedicine ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 61 ◽  
pp. 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin-Günther Sterner
2021 ◽  
Vol 07 (02) ◽  
pp. e116-e120
Author(s):  
Tatjana Braun ◽  
Amelie De Gregorio ◽  
Lisa Baumann ◽  
Jochen Steinacker ◽  
Wolfgang Janni ◽  
...  

AbstractSplenosis is a rare disease, which is often discovered incidentally years after surgical procedures on the spleen or traumatic splenic lesions. Through injury of the splenic capsule, splenic cells are able to spread and autoimplant in a fashion similar to the process of metastatic cancer. Here we present the case of a 62-year-old female patient with a palpable tumor of the lower abdomen. Her medical history was unremarkable, except for splenectomy after traumatic splenic lesion in her childhood. Clinical examination and diagnostic imaging raised the suspicion of advanced ovarian cancer, which was further substantiated by the typical presentation of adnexal masses and disseminated peritoneal metastases during the following staging laparotomy. Surprisingly, we also found peritoneal implants macroscopically similar to splenic tissue. Microscopic examination of tissue specimens by intrasurgical frozen section confirmed the diagnosis of intra-abdominal splenosis. The patient then underwent cytoreductive surgery with complete resection of all cancer manifestations, sparing the remaining foci of splenosis to avoid further morbidity. This case demonstrates the rare coincidence of intra-abdominal carcinoma and splenosis, which could lead to intraoperative difficulties by misinterpreting benign splenic tissue. Therefore, splenosis should be considered in patients with medical history of splenic lesions and further diagnostic imaging like Tc-99m-tagged heat-damaged RBC scan could be used for presurgical distinguishing between tumor spread in the abdominal cavity and disseminated splenosis. The presented case report should not only raise awareness for the rare disease splenosis, but also emphasize the need to consider the possibility of simultaneous incidence of benign and malignant intra-abdominal lesions, as to our knowledge this is the first published case of simultaneous peritoneal carcinomatosis and splenosis.


2005 ◽  
Vol 97 (2) ◽  
pp. 693-696 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriella Ferrandina ◽  
Mariagrazia Distefano ◽  
Antonia Testa ◽  
Rosa De Vincenzo ◽  
Giovanni Scambia

BMC Cancer ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Clemens B. Tempfer ◽  
Franziska Hartmann ◽  
Ziad Hilal ◽  
Günther A. Rezniczek

2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matilde Pensabene ◽  
Claudia Von Arx ◽  
Sofia Giuliana ◽  
Filomena Calabrese ◽  
Paola Capodanno ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Malignant hypercalcemia is a common complication in cancer patients and can be predictive of poor prognosis and advanced malignancy. Cancer-related mechanisms of hypercalcemia depends either on ectopic hypersecretion of humoral factors (PTH, PTH-like molecules, Vit D) by the tumoral mass, or on osteolysis due to bone invasion. In consideration of the high renal and cardiac impact of severe hypercalcemia, its prompt recognition and treatment can be lifesaving. AKI is frequently associated with malignant hypercalcemia and recognizes a multifactorial pathogenesis (direct renal vasoconstriction, volume depletion, tubule-interstitial damage, etc.). Substitutive renal treatment can be necessary, but not always viable in patients with poor physical performance and is a difficult choice in cancer patients with advanced malignancies. Case report We present the case of a 46 years old woman with an infiltrating non special type (NST) carcinoma of the right breast (luminal B, ER 70%, PgR 60%, Ki67 35%, HER2 1+). Unfortunately, she quickly progressed after a neoadjuvant treatment with Epirubicin/Cyclophosfamide (4 cycles) followed by Paclitaxel (10 cycles). A first line hormonal treatment (Palbociclib, Letrozole and LHRH analogous) was then started, but a further rapid disease progression was observed. A new biopsy showed a muted and more aggressive cancer phenotype (high grade triple negative carcinoma with no PDL1 expression). Due to a rapid worsening of general conditions with cognitive impairment, the patient was admitted to the Oncology department. Blood test showed severe hypercalcemia (corrected calcium: 23.26 mg/dl) and severe hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis (blood pH 7.57; HCO-3 32 mmol/l; K+ 2.6 mmol/l) associated to AKI (creatinine doubled to 1.42 mg/dl; eGFR 45 ml/min/1,73 mq). Alkaline phosphatase and Vitamin D were normal and iPTH was < 2 pg/ml. ECG showed a significant QTc prolongation to 550 msec. Imaging exams revealed lung metastasis, lung carcinomatous lymphangitis and bilateral pleural effusion, while Bone Scan showed a low caption limited to right ribs. Oncologists and Intensive Care Physicians referred to our Nephrology and Dialysis Unit proposing Hemodialysis support. In consideration of the preserved diuresis, the advanced disease stage and the unstable hemodynamics, our advice was instead for a conservative medical approach. An i.v. infusion of 4000 ml NaCl 0.9% + KCl 60 mEq/24h; a continuous i.v. infusion of Furosemide 5mg/h were started and maintained for several days, leading to a progressive and full renal function recovery (creatinine decreased to 0.7 mg/dl) and metabolic alkalosis correction. However, corrected calcium remained largely over target, being 16.3 mg/dl. Sodium bicarbonate 80 mEq, Zoledronic acid 4 mg and Desametasone 4mg/day were administered and at day 16 even calcium was in normal range. We realized that this was a favourable window for acting on the underlaying cause of malignant hypercalcemia, that likely was the aberrant secretion of non-dosable PTH-like molecule(s). Thus, we suggested the Oncologist to start chemotherapy, and they were allowed to treat the patient with Carboplatin/Gemcitabine. The patient was successfully treated with stabilization of normocalcemia and is still alive. Conclusion Malignant hypercalcemia is a life-threatening complication in advanced malignancies. Our case report highlights the key role of the nephrologist in treating a complex and fragile oncologic patient, achieving the full correction of several severe renal disorders, hemodialysis avoidance and survival improvement.


2017 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 477 ◽  
Author(s):  
So Ra Oh ◽  
Jung-Woo Park ◽  
Hyun Young Kwon ◽  
Seo-Hee Rha

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