| Literature DB >> 24900933 |
Ricardo Costa1, Rubens Costa2, Renata Costa3, Gilberto Moura de Brito Junior4, Henrique Queiroz Cartaxo4, Alex Caetano de Barros5.
Abstract
Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS) is clinical radiologic condition associated with neurological symptoms and cerebral white matter edema. It has been associated with uncontrolled hypertension, eclampsia, immunosuppressants, and more recently the use of antiangiogenic drugs. Sunitinib is an inhibitor of the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor widely used in the treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC). We report a rare case of RPLS occurring on therapy with sunitinib in a patient with RCC. Our aim is to highlight the importance of considering RPLS as a diagnostic possibility and to hold sunitinib for RCC patients presenting with neurologic symptoms.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24900933 PMCID: PMC4037124 DOI: 10.1155/2014/952624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
Figure 1Increased T2 uptake sequence on cerebral occipital parietal regions.
Figure 2Increased fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) uptake sequence on cerebral occipital parietal regions.
Reports of reverse posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome associated with sunitinib.
| Case author | Age (years)/gender | Onset after starting sunitinib | Management | Recovery after discontinuation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Padhy et al. [ | 65/male | 8 days | Sunitinib discontinuation, antihypertensive | Complete recovery in 17 days |
|
| ||||
|
Kapiteijn et al. [ | 54/female | 8 months | Sunitinib discontinuation, antihypertensive, anticonvulsants | Complete recovery in 10 days |
|
| ||||
|
Martín et al. [ | 70/female | 2 weeks | Sunitinib discontinuation, antihypertensive, anticonvulsants | Complete recovery in few days |
|
| ||||
|
Cumurciuc et al. [ | 39/female | 1 week | Sunitinib discontinuation, antihypertensive, anticonvulsants | Complete recovery in 2 weeks |
|
| ||||
|
Chen and Agarwal [ | 48/female | 1 week | Sunitinib discontinuation | Complete recovery in 3 weeks |
|
| ||||
|
van der veldt et al. [ | 84/female | 14 days | sunitinib discontinuation | Complete recovery in 3 days |
|
| ||||
| van der veldt et al. [ | 74/male | 13 days | sunitinib discontinuation | Complete recovery in 3 days |
|
| ||||
|
Hadj et al. [ | 61/male | 15 weeks | Sunitinib discontinuation, antihypertensive, anticonvulsants | Complete recovery in 10 weeks |
|
| ||||
| Present case | 67/male | 2 months | Sunitinib discontinuation, antihypertensive, anticonvulsants | Complete recovery not achieved (patient deceased few weeks after discontinuation of sunitinib due to cancer progression) |