| Literature DB >> 31229774 |
Eiyoung Kwon1, Mijin Kim1, Eunhye Choi1, Youngsam Park1, Cheolseung Kim2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Tamoxifen is often used as antihormonal therapy in patients with breast cancer. However, it has various side effects, of which pneumonia is a rare occurrence. PRESENTATION OF CASE: A 46-year-old female patient with breast cancer underwent surgical treatment. Tamoxifen was administered as adjuvant therapy on post-operative day 14; 2 days after administration of tamoxifen, the patient developed high fever of more than 39 °C and cough with dyspnea. Based on chest computed tomography findings of ground glass opacity, interlobular septal thickening, and mild pleural effusion in both lungs, eosinophilic pneumonia was suspected. Tamoxifen was discontinued and methylprednisolone injection was administered; the patient showed improvement of symptoms and radiographic findings. DISCUSSION: Tamoxifen was suspected as the cause of eosinophilic pneumonia since the patient developed high-grade fever at the time of tamoxifen administration, which subsided after discontinuation of the treatment. Other factors considered as the cause of pneumonia were examined, but all showed negative results. In order to confirm tamoxifen as the cause of pneumonia, tamoxifen treatment was restarted at follow-up (post-operative day 47); however, after 1 month, regular administration was not possible due to the development of itching symptom and difficulty in obtaining the patient's cooperation.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Eosinophilic pneumonia; Tamoxifen
Year: 2019 PMID: 31229774 PMCID: PMC6597481 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2019.02.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2210-2612
Fig. 1Chest x-ray on post-operative Day 20. Soft haziness in the right middle lung field and costophrenic angle blunting with subsegmental atelectasis in left lower lung field are observed.
Fig. 2Chest CT on post-operative Day 21. Ground-glass opacification and interlobular septal thickening, and mild pleural effusion in both lungs.
Drugs causing eosinophilic lung disease.
| Ampicillin | Methylphenidate |
| Beclomethasone dipropionate | Minocycline |
| Bleomycin | Naproxen |
| Carbamazepine | Nickel |
| Chlorpromazine | Nitrofurantoin |
| Clofibrate | Para-aminosalicylic acid |
| Cocaine(inhaled) | Penicillin |
| Cromolyn(inhaled) | Pentamidine(inhaled) |
| Desipramine | Phenytoin |
| Diclofenac | Pyrimethamine |
| Febarbamate | Rapeseed oil |
| Glafenine | Sulfadimethoxime |
| GM-CSF | Sulfasalazine |
| Ibuprofen | Sulindac |
| Interleukin 2&3 | Tamoxifen |
| Iodinated contrast media | Tetracycline |
| Tolazamide | |
| Mephenesin carbamate | Tolfenamic acid |
| Methotrexate | Vaginal sulfonamide cream |
Fig. 3Patient’s body temperature and eosinophil count by tamoxifen administration.
Side effects of tamoxifen-induced pneumonia in previous case report.
| Symptom onset at post-medication time point | Symptoms | Restarting | Symptoms after restarting | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahmed et al. [ | 1week | Cough | No | Not reported |
| dyspnea | ||||
| intermittent fever | ||||
| mechanical ventilation | ||||
| Shiiki et al. [ | 2day | Cough | Yes | Cough |
| dyspnea | dyspnea | |||
| Etori et al. [ | 3month | Mild cough | Yes | Cough |
| dyspnea on exertion | ||||
| Kwon et al. | 3day | Cough | Yes | Itching sense |
| dyspnea | ||||
| Fever (40.5 °C) |
All cases had initial and restarting dose of tamoxifen of 20 mg daily.
Current study.