Sample Case Presentation Agatha Stanek January 26, 2010

Post on 24-Feb-2016

45 views 0 download

description

Sample Case Presentation Agatha Stanek January 26, 2010. Case presentation. 5 year- old girl brought to paediatric clinic by her mother who says the patient is tired, sleeps more than usual, and has a very low appetite Unexplained bruises on arms and legs. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Sample Case Presentation Agatha Stanek January 26, 2010

Sample Case Presentation

Agatha Stanek

January 26, 2010

Case presentation

•5 year- old girl brought to paediatric clinic by her mother who says the patient is tired, sleeps more than usual, and has a very low appetite

•Unexplained bruises on arms and legs.

•Afebrile at home but patient’s skin is very pale, warm and dry

Presentation continued

•Child is alert but ill-appearing

•Height and weight are normal for a 5- year old

•No redness in throat

•Child admits to some tenderness in abdominal area

•Child not involved in any competitive sports

Patient History

Medical Hx

•Patient was a full- term infant from uncomplicated pregnancy and delivery

•All immunizations are current

•Only previous childhood disease- measles at age 2 years

•Mother reports child’s fatigue and other symptoms having steadily worsened in the past week

Family Hx

•Patient lives with parents and one older brother (healthy)

•Grandmother died at age 62 from gastric cancer.

•Patient not exposed to any form of radiation or chemicals

Social Hx

•Patient lives with family in urban area in proximity to heavily occupied roads

•Developmental milestones are up to par

Occupational Hx

•Patient goes to nearby elementary school and daycare 5 days a week

Physical ExamVS: Patient Normal range

Systolic BP= 109 mm (94-109 mm)Diastolic BP= 67 mm (56-69 mm)HR= 130/min (70-115/min awake)RR= 20/min (17-27/min)T= 37° C 37° CHT= 41 inches (41-43 inches)WT= 37 lbs (40-50 lbs)

HEENT: Pupils equal at 3 mm, round, and reactive to light and accomodationPetechiae of mucous membranes

Neck: mild adenopathy; neck not tender

Cardiac: No murmurs

MS/Ext: no bone or joint pain elicited by palpation

Abd: No masses but liver and spleen enlarged

Differential Diagnosis?

Laboratory Test Results

Hb 7.1 g.dLHct 21%

AST 80 IU/LALT 103 IU/L

RBC 2.9 million/mm3

Total bilirubin 0.8 mg/dLTotal protein 6.9 g/dLAlb 3.5 g/dLCa 9.2 mg/dLPhos 4.0 mg/dLUric acid 4.3 mg/dLPT 13.0 secPTT 25.0 secGlucose, fasting 90 mg/dL

WBC 12, 800/mm3 •Neutrophils 59%•Lymphocytes 26%•Monocytes 3%•Eosinophils 1%•Basophils 1%•Blasts 10%

Plt 28, 000/mm3

Additional Tests

Lumbar Puncture•Spinal fluid clear, colourless•Opening pressure 90 mg/dL•Glucose 50 mg/ dL•Total protein 18 mg/dL•No blasts present

Bone Marrow Aspirate•93% blasts, 3% erythroblasts, 4% all other cells•(-) for TEL-AML 1 fusion gene

Chest X-Ray•Normal with no mediastinal mass

Immunology•(+) for cytoplasmic µ heavy-chain proteins

Peripheral Blood Smear Results

Rubin E, Farber JL. Pathology. 3rd Ed. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 1999.)

Diagnosis!

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Why “acute”?

How does this vary from T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia?

Diagnosis depends on detection of???

1- at least 2 surface immunoglobulins. ->CD 79-vs CD 3 in T cell ALL.

2-distinctive lymphoblast morphology ex: prominent vacuoles OR

3- expression of cytoplasmic immunoglobulin heavy-μchain proteins

Treatment

1- Remission and 2-induction therapy (peripheral blood count and bone marrow normalize) with....

Irradiated/ filtered platelets, packed RBCs, and allopurinol.

Chemotherapy: Involves use of 3-4 drugs

3- Consolidation: continue use of drugs but at higher doses

May require 2 or more years of continuiation therapy

Treatment of subclinical CNS leukemia

Intensive intrathecal (i.e., via spinal fluid) and systemic chemotherapy.

This strategy has produced excellent results with CNS relapse rates <2%.

Why is treatment important?

•Antibiotics?

•Peridex/ Biotine?

Possible complications of treatment

•Renal failure• sepsis• bleeding• thrombosis (i.e., intravascular blood clots)• encephalopathy (i.e., widespread degeneration of the brain)• seizures• secondary cancer (from therapy)• growth hormone deficiency, which can result in short stature• major cognitive defects

Prognosis/ Follow up

Good prognosis: absence of serious cytogenetic abnormalities a WBC count <30,000/cu mm, and complete remission within 4 weeks.

Poor prognosis: presence of serious cytogenetic abnormalities with a WBC count >100,000/cu mm, or failure to achieve complete remission within 4 weeks.

Prognosis is typically best for children ages 1–10.

Overall cure rate for ALL is currently 80- 85%.