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HPI  49 year old woman with metastatic breast cancer seen in the hospital for fever and SOB  Right breast cancer (infiltrating ductal ca) diagnosed in 2001 at age 38 – Treatment included mastectomy (negative lymph nodes), doxarubicin and cytoxan (4 courses) HPI  Patient did well until March 2010 when erythema over right chest noted – Biopsy + adenoca c/w breast  Breast ca: “triple negative” – Estrogen receptors – Progesterone receptors – Her2 Staging  PET scan demonstrated multiple positive lymph nodes: mediastinum, supraclavicular and bone mets Treatment Course  Radiation  June to chest wall 2010 – Received Paclitaxel and Bevacizumab – Also given Zometa for bone mets – Stopped in Dec 2010 due to toxicity  April 2011 – Started Gemcitabine/Carboplatin and Iniparib (experimental protocol) Treatment Course  October 2011 – Brain mets noted and patient started stereotactic brain radiation, also given dexamethasone  Dexamethasone mid-December  December stopped in 27, 2011 – Admitted with fever and SOB PMH/FH/SH/Meds  Prothrombin mutation noted on initial heme eval - prophylactically started on warfarin in 2010  Family history of breast CA  Non-smoker,  Meds: no unusual exposures omeprazole, metoprolol, warfarin Physical Exam/Lab          VS – Current temp 37 (prior to 37.9) – Pulse 110 – On 02 3 LPM Chest: Bilateral crackles, most prominent at bases No other physical findings H/H 11.8/33.9 WBC 5.1 Plt 64 INR 1.58 ESR >100 CRP 213 CT Chest - Radiology  Diffuse groundglass opacities and scattered centrilobular nodules. Differential includes cardiogenic or noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, infection and drug reaction. Clinical Course  Started on antibiotics (Zosyn, Levaquin)  Negative: cocci serology, PCR of nasal swab for influenza and mycoplasma antibodies  Bronchoscopy on 12/29 with BAL done BAL  Fluid slightly hemorrhagic, did not clear with repeated lavage  Smears/cultures negative  Negative aspergillus antibody in BAL  Negative PCR for PCP and legionella Clinical Course  Patient continued to have low-grade fever –Oxygen requirements increased  BAL cultures remained negative  VATS lung biopsy done on 1/5/12 –? infection –? drug toxicity Pathology Report  Fibrinous acute lung injury with increased alveolar macrophages, scattered multinucleated giant cells and increased extravascular tissue eosinophils. The overall histopathology favors drug toxicity over other possibilities. Clinical Course  Patient started on corticosteroid therapy  All cultures remained negative  Was discharged on 1/7/12 on prednisone 60 mg/day  F/U in pulmonary clinic on 2/8/12 – Clinically improved Clinical Diagnosis: Drug-induced Lung Injury – Likely due to Gemcitabine  Patient most recently receiving gemcitabine/carboplatin/iniparib  Onset of respiratory symptoms was delayed several months after last dose – delay due to dexamethasone treatment for brain mets? Gemcitabine Lung Toxicity  Acute dyspnea with infusion in 10%  3 types of acute pneumonitis: – Capillary leak syndrome – Diffuse alveolar damage – Alveolar hemorrhage  Frequency is low: 0.27% Gemcitabine Lung Toxicity Reduction in DLco within 2 months of treatment reported in 24%, often self-limited (more frequent in women, older age, low baseline DLco)  Some cases of pulmonary fibrosis reported, but rare  Ann Onc 2004 Gemcitabine Lung Toxicity  Factors increasing risk of lung injury include other chemotherapy (including paclitaxel), chest radiation  Mortality rate with acute pneumonitis up to 20%, but rapid response to steroid therapy is reported Iniparib Poly(adenosine diphoshate-ribose) polymerase inhibitor (PARP)  Recent phase 2 trial (NEJM, 2011;364:205) in metastatic “triple negative” breast cancer  123 patients given iniparib with or without gemcitabine/carboplatin  Iniparib improved survival: 7.7 months vs 12.3 months  Dyspnea reported, but no severe pulmonary complications from Iniparib in this study.