| Literature DB >> 34336644 |
Jiangyuan Yuan1,2, Ying Li1,2, Xuanhui Liu1,2, Meng Nie1,2, Weiwei Jiang1,2, Yibing Fan1,2, Tangtang Xiang1,2, Hanhua Wang1,2, Wei Quan1,2, Chuang Gao1,2, Jinghao Huang1,2, Shuo An1,2, Yongxin Ru3, Qiufan Zhou4, Jianning Zhang1,2, Rongcai Jiang1,2.
Abstract
We are not aware of any reports regarding conservative treatment for leukemia-related chronic subdural hematoma (CSDH). We report our experience with 3 men who were admitted with subdural masses and abnormal leukocyte counts. In two patients, leukemia and CSDH were confirmed on the basis of medical records, mild head trauma, and neuroimaging features. Both patients experienced reduced CSDH and neurological symptoms after receiving atorvastatin (20 mg/day) plus low-dose dexamethasone. However, this combined conservative treatment was ineffective in the third patient, who was diagnosed as having leukemia and showed an increased hematoma volume after two weeks of therapy. Magnetic resonance imaging findings suggested dural metastasis, which prompted a switch from statin-based conservative treatment to chemotherapy. Complete remission of the leukemia and resolution of the subdural mass were observed after chemotherapy, which supported a diagnosis of leukemia encephalopathy. The 5-month follow-ups did not reveal CSDH relapse in all 3 cases. Thus, atorvastatin-based conservative treatment may be effective for leukemia-related CSDH but not for leukemia encephalopathy.Entities:
Keywords: atorvastatin; chronic subdural hematoma; dexamethasone; leukemia; leukemia encephalopathy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34336644 PMCID: PMC8320332 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.628927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Periodic acid-Schiff staining of bone marrow aspirate from the 3 patients at the time of admission. (A) Patient 1 had acute myeloid leukemia, (B) Patient 2 had chronic myeloid leukemia, and (C) Patient 3 had acute myeloid leukemia. (D) Patient 3 experienced complete remission after the chemotherapy.
Figure 2Neuroimaging findings for Patient 1. (A) Chronic subdural hematoma (red arrows) was detected in the bilateral frontotemporal lobes after head trauma. (B) After 4 weeks of atorvastatin treatment, the left-side hematoma was slightly absorbed. (C, D) Absorption of the hematoma after 8 weeks and 12 weeks of conservative treatment using atorvastatin plus low-dose dexamethasone.
Figure 3Neuroimaging findings for Patient 2. (A) A 72-year-old man with chronic myeloid leukemia was diagnosed as having right frontotemporal chronic subdural hematoma (red arrow). (B) The hematoma was significantly absorbed after 2 weeks of conservative treatment. (C) New bleeding in the subdural space was detected via magnetic resonance imaging at the 4-week follow-up. (D) Obvious absorption was observed after 10 weeks and (E) near disappearance was observed after 20 weeks of conservative treatment.
Figure 4Neuroimaging findings for Patient 3. (A) Computed tomography revealed bilateral chronic subdural hematoma (red arrows). (B) After 2 weeks of atorvastatin treatment plus low-dose dexamethasone, magnetic resonance imaging revealed an increase in the hematoma, with significant enhancement of the dura mater (green arrows) post-injection of contrast agent. (C, D) After chemotherapy, subdural mass was significantly absorbed in 8-14 weeks. (E) A 5 months follow-up MRI exhibited no hematoma in the subdural space.