| Literature DB >> 30393370 |
Tsuyoshi Ito1, Satoshi Koyama1, Shotaro Iwamoto2, Masahiro Hirayama2, Eiichi Azuma3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND Acquired platythorax, or flattening of the chest with a reduction in the anteroposterior (AP) diameter, is very rare and the prognosis depends on the degree of the deformity, respiratory function, and on any underlying disease. Drug-induced pulmonary fibrosis is associated with pulmonary hypoplasia. A case of acquired platythorax is presented in a young man previously treated with cyclophosphamide in childhood. CASE REPORT A 20-year-old man began to experience cough, chest pain, and mild exertional dyspnea. He was admitted to the hospital at 23 years of age with respiratory failure. Chest imaging showed pleural thickening and platythorax. He had been successfully treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), at 3 years of age, with chemotherapy that included a cumulative dose of cyclophosphamide of 15.6 g/m². His ALL relapsed six years later and he was the treated again with cyclophosphamide and underwent a second and complete remission. A clinical diagnosis of late-onset cyclophosphamide-induced lung disease with progressive platythorax was made on the basis of his clinical history and on imaging findings of the ratio of the AP to lateral chest wall diameter when compared with age-matched controls. Despite continued remission of his ALL, he died of progressive cardiopulmonary failure at 25 years of age. CONCLUSIONS This report described a rare case of acquired platythorax, or flattening of the chest, in a young adult. The use of the ratio of the chest wall AP diameter to lateral diameter may be used in the early detection of this rare chemotherapy-induced complication in children and adults.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30393370 PMCID: PMC6238677 DOI: 10.12659/AJCR.911701
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Case Rep ISSN: 1941-5923
Figure 1.Chest imaging in acquired platythorax, or anteroposterior flattening of the chest wall, as a late complication of cyclophosphamide treatment for acute leukemia in a 23-year-old man who was admitted to hospital with respiratory failure. (A) The time course of the chest radiograph appearance in this case. (B) The anteroposterior (AP) and lateral view of the chest. (C) A chest computed tomography (CT) scan showed pleural thickening, and pulmonary fibrosis distributed in both subpleural regions, and around bronchovascular bundles.
High mortality in cyclophosphamide-related late-onset lung disease with platythorax.
| 1 | ALL | 3/M | 20 | 1.5 yrs ±2 yrs (15.6 g/m2) | Severe platythorax (flat chest) | Non-productive cough, exertional dyspnea | Pleural thickening, diffuse infiltrates | Died | This case |
| 2 | ALL | 3/M | 22 | 12 yrs (35 g/m2) | n.d. | Exertional dyspnea | Extensive bilateral interstitial infiltrates, pleural thickening, loss of lung volume | Died | |
| 3 | Pylocytic astrocytoma | 5/F | 13 | n.d. | no | n.d. | Pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis | Deteriorated in two yrs | |
| 4 | ALL | 6/F | 13 | 2.5 yrs×50 mg/day (60 g/m2) | Extreme platythorax. | Cough, tachypnea, anorexia, weight loss | Prominent interstitial markings, pleural thickening, apical intrapleural accumulation of fluid | Died | |
| 5 | ML | 13/F | 26 | 13 yrs×50–100 mg/day | Extreme platythorax. | Non-productive cough, dyspnea | Hilar and mediastinal lymph node enlargement with interstitial infiltrates extending from both hilae | n.d. | |
| 6 | ALL | 14/M | 22 | (>3.6 g/m2) | No platythorax (+/−) | n.d. | Pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis | Deteriorated in nine yrs | |
| 7 | WG | 26/F | 29 | 4 yrs (91 g/m2) | Reduction of AP diameter | Non-productive cough, dyspnea | severe fibrous scarring of the upper lobes, bilateral reticulonodular infiltration and pleural thickening | Stable for six months | |
| 8 | Hodgkin’s lymphoma | 34/F | 37 | (3.4 g/m2) | Platythorax | n.d. | Pleuroparenchymal fibroelastosis. | Died | |
| 9 | Ovarian cancer | 40/F | 40 | 1.4 yrs ×100 mg/day (53 g/m2) | No platythorax | Productive cough, exertional dyspnea, palpitations | Increased linear and reticular changes in the right upper and left upper-middle lung fields, pleural thickening in the left upper lung | Died | |
| 10 | WG | 42/M | 42 | 2 yrs×150 mg/day | n.d. | Non-productive cough, progressive dyspnea | Coarse, bilateral reticulo-nodular infiltrates, marked bilateral pleural thickening | Died | |
| 11 | WG | 46/F | 58 | 4 yrs | n.d. | Cough, exertional dyspnea | Bilateral nodular infiltrates with associated volume loss and marked bilateral pleural thickening | n.d. | |
| 12 | Breast cancer | 50/F | 56 | 2 yrs×50 mg/day (36 g/m2) | no | Non-productive cough, exertional dyspnea | Infiltrates predominantly in the upper lung of both lungs, volume loss of the right lung, bilateral pleural thickening | Died | |
| 13 | WG | 52/M | 65 | 5 yrs×100 mg/day | n.d. | Non-productive cough, exertional dyspnea | Bilateral reticular infiltrates in both upper lobes with prominent pleural thickening | Died | |
| 14 | ML | 52/M | 56 | 1200 mg×8 doses (9.6 g/m2) | n.d. | Non-productive cough, dyspnea. | Bilateral reticulo-nodular infiltrates sparing both costphrenic angles | Died | |
| 15 | Multiple myeloma | 73/M | 77 | 4 yrs×50 mg/day | No | Non-productive cough, exertional dyspnea | Unremarkable | n.d. |
ALL – acute lymphoblastic leukemia; AP – anteroposterior; CPA – cyclophosphamide; ML – malignant lymphoma; n.d. – not described; T/W – thickness/width ratio on chest radiographs; WG – Wegener’s granulomatosis.
As described in the original papers; Cases that required chest radiation therapy, craniospinal irradiation, and total body irradiation are excluded.
Figure 2.Analysis of thickness (T)/width (W) ratio on chest radiographs in a case of acquired platythorax. (A) Box plot analysis of thickness/width ratio on chest radiographs in the control subjects. Box plots of the T (thickness)/W (width) ratio of chest radiographs (inset) are shown in each age group among 10 men and 10 women (from a total of 100 subjects in all age groups among 50 men and 50 women). The central horizontal line in the box plots shows the median quartile, and the top and bottom of each box represent the upper and lower quartile of the values for the sample. The bars extend above and below each box to the maximal and minimal values in the sample. (B) Time course of T/W ratio of chest radiographs in 21 long-term survivors with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The T/W ratios were within the normal range in 20 long-term survivors (gray lines). This case in this case report developed severe platythorax, or flattening of the chest (black line). A dashed horizontal line indicates a cut-off line for platythorax for the age group of 20–24 years.