Breeching “The Goldilocks Zone”: Tetraplegia as a Rare Life-Altering Infective Complication of Adjuvant Breast Cancer Chemotherapy

Publish Year: 1402
نوع سند: مقاله ژورنالی
زبان: English
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JR_ARCHB-10-1_013

تاریخ نمایه سازی: 14 آذر 1402

Abstract:

Background: Adjuvant chemotherapy has been an integral component of breast cancer care for decades. Advances in supportive care have been made, but despite this, infective complications of therapy remain a significant toxicity concern. Case Presentation: A premenopausal patient presented to the emergency department during the third wave of the Covid-۱۹ pandemic with sepsis after a second course of adjuvant docetaxel-cyclophosphamide chemotherapy. Overnight she developed tetraplegia. An urgent MRI cervical spine revealed a pre-vertebral, vertebral, and epidural abscess. This was treated with an emergency C۴-C۷ posterior cervical laminectomy and decompression. Her inpatient care involved a protracted ICU admission followed by rehabilitation. She remains tetraplegic and requires continued inpatient care over a year after presentation. Restricted pandemic-related hospital visiting has compounded the impact of her illness. Conclusion: Infective complications of adjuvant breast cancer chemotherapy remain an issue despite advances in supportive care. This case highlights the devastating, life-altering impact that these complications can have as emphasized by the inclusion of the patient’s perspective.

Authors

Aoife Broderick

Cork University Hospital, Department of Medical Oncology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

Hailey K Carroll

Cork University Hospital, Department of Medical Oncology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

Kenneth O’Riordan

Mercy University Hospital Cork, Department of Radiology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

Arthur Jeckson

Cork University Hospital, Department of Infectious Diseases, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland