1. Dasatinib associated lymphadenopathy in a chronic myeloid leukemia patient
- Author
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Christos Savopoulos, Triantafyllia Koletsa, George Polychronopoulos, Georgia Kaiafa, Dimitrios Pilalas, Grigorios Panselinas, Georgios Arsos, and Paraskevi Exadaktylou
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Myeloid leukemia ,Context (language use) ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Malignancy ,Lymphoma ,Dasatinib ,03 medical and health sciences ,Leukemia ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nilotinib ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Biopsy ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Radiology ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Rationale Dasatinib associated lymphadenopathy (DAL) is a rare adverse event in chronic myeloid leukemia patients (CML). A case of voluminous lymphadenopathy in the context of DAL is presented. Patient concerns A 40-year-old male patient was diagnosed with BCR-ABL1 positive chronic stage CML 2 years ago and achieved complete molecular response on nilotinib, which was switched to dasatinib due to nilotinib intolerance. After 5 months on dasatinib, the patient presented with a large mass in the axillary region. Diagnosis Common infectious and autoimmune etiologies of lymphadenopathy were ruled out. The positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) demonstrated a hypermetabolic lymphadenopathy highly suspicious of lymphoma. The subsequent biopsy excluded lymphoma or extramedullary blastic transformation of CML and revealed reactive lymphadenopathy with mixed (cortical and paracortical) pattern. Clinical history and clinicopathological correlation suggested the diagnosis of DAL. Intervention Dasatinib was discontinued and the patient remained in close follow-up. TKI treatment with nilotinib was reinitiated. Outcomes Lymphadenopathy resolved clinically at 4 weeks and normalization of PET/CT findings was documented at 9 weeks after cessation of the drug. TKI treatment with nilotinib was reinitiated with good tolerance. Lessons DAL may present with voluminous lymphadenopathy consistent with malignancy in clinical and imaging workup. We describe the spectrum of lesions associated with DAL and identify common features with drug-induced lymphadenopathy.
- Published
- 2020