| Literature DB >> 29399586 |
Stephanie Wu1, Anna Sarcon1, Khuyen Do1, Jerold Shinbane1, Rahul Doshi1, Helga Van Herle1.
Abstract
We present a case of a 48-year-old female who developed myocarditis and near fatal arrhythmias during high dose Il-2 therapy for metastatic renal cancer. On day 5 of therapy, the patient developed sudden onset chest pain, elevated cardiac enzymes and ST segment changes on EKG. Coronary angiogram was normal, however echocardiogram showed reduced ejection fraction and hemodynamic measurements showed elevated bilateral elevated filling pressures. The patient then developed episodes of recurrent ventricular arrhythmia, precipitated by bradycardia and PVC, requiring defibrillation and temporary pacemaker placement. Endomycardial biopsy was nonspecific showing fibrosis with subsequent cardiac MRI showed evidence of myocardial edema, consistent with Il-2 induced myocarditis in the setting of no prior cardiac history. After the discontinuation of Il-2 therapy, the patient displayed clinical improvement as well as improved ejection fraction. This case brings attention to the cardiac toxicities associated with high dose Il-2 therapy including potentially lethal arrhythmias and highlights the importance of careful cardiac screening prior to initiation of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: IL-2 therapy; myocarditis; ventricular tachycardia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29399586 PMCID: PMC5788128 DOI: 10.1177/2324709617749622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Investig Med High Impact Case Rep ISSN: 2324-7096
Figure 1.Sinus tachycardia with low voltage in limb leads and anterolateral ST depression.
Figure 2.Rhythm strip showing sinus bradycardia with premature ventricular contraction occurred on antecedent T-wave leading to polymorphic ventricular tachycardia.
Figure 3.Myocardial tissue with trichrome stain showing focal fibrosis.
Figure 4.Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging showing enlarged left ventricle with wall thinning. Patchy mid-wall and scattered areas of subepicardial delayed gadolinium enhancement (arrows) involving all segments of the left ventricle.
Figure 5.Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging triple-inversion recovery sequence demonstrating hyperenhancement consistent with myocardial edema (arrows).