Tuberculous Meningitis during Chemotherapy for Advanced Gastric Cancer

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Abstract

Introduction: Tuberculous meningitis is rare but one of the most severe forms of tuberculosis infection. Case Report: A 78-year-old woman was diagnosed with advanced gastric cancer with multiple lymph node metastases. Four months after the beginning of second-line chemotherapy with weekly paclitaxel, she was admitted to our hospital because of fever and mild drowsiness. She had no other symptoms and no abnormalities in physical examinations. Her blood tests, urinalysis, and blood culture revealed no remarkable abnormal findings. Although her symptoms relieved, her disturbance of consciousness gradually progressed during 2 weeks thereafter. Finally, we diagnosed tuberculous meningitis on the 22nd day of hospitalization by a positive acid-fast bacilli test of the cerebrospinal fluid and tuberculosis-polymerase chain reaction. Although anti-tuberculosis therapy was started, she died on the 37th day of hospitalization because of tumor bleeding. Conclusion: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of tuberculous meningitis during chemotherapy for advanced gastric cancer, suggesting that subacute onset of fever followed by disturbance of consciousness may indicate the possibility of tuberculous meningitis even without typical signs of meningitis including headache or meningeal irritation.

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APA

Matsumoto, H., Sasaki, A., Nakamura, Y., Kawazoe, A., Kuboki, Y., Okinaka, K., & Shitara, K. (2018). Tuberculous Meningitis during Chemotherapy for Advanced Gastric Cancer. Case Reports in Oncology, 11(1), 228–233. https://doi.org/10.1159/000488313

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