Trousseau Syndrome in a 25-YearOld Woman with Occult Colon Malignancy, Lynch Syndrome, and Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension

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Abstract

We present a rare case of thrombosis associated with an occult colon malignancy (Trousseau syndrome) in a 25-year-old woman who also presented with previously unidentified Lynch syndrome and acute-on-chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. Staged treatment included bilateral pulmonary endarterectomy under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest, followed 11 days later by laparoscopic subtotal colectomy and creation of a primary anastomosis. The patient tolerated both procedures well and recovered normal functional status. Final pathologic analysis of the resected colon mass revealed a pT3N0, stage IIA adenocarcinoma; no adjuvant therapy was administered. At her one-year follow-up visit, the patient was cancer-free, remained on lifelong apixaban anticoagulation, and was undergoing routine monitoring and genetic counseling. This case highlights the need for multidisciplinary management of a patient with severe chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension and a concomitant malignancy.

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Matthews, C. R., Madison, M., Zhang, C., Waters, J., Garcia, J. P., & Beckman, D. (2022). Trousseau Syndrome in a 25-YearOld Woman with Occult Colon Malignancy, Lynch Syndrome, and Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension. Texas Heart Institute Journal, 49(3). https://doi.org/10.14503/THIJ-20-7419

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