75. A breast cancer patient scheduled for chemotherapy suddenly complained of difficulty breathing. She had been experiencing progressive shortness of breath for the past 5 days. She could not lie flat on the bed without experiencing difficulty breathing and preferred to sit up and slouch forward on a table to sleep.
Physical Examination & Diagnostics:
- Auscultation: Muffled heart sounds
- Chest X-ray: Enlarged cardiac shadow
- ECG: Low voltage complexes with electrical alternans
What does the ECG finding indicate?
(1 Point)
A. Hypokalemia
B. Pericarditis
C. Cardiac tamponade
D. Pleural effusion
C. Cardiac tamponade
ECG findings of low voltage complexes and electrical alternans suggest pericardial effusion with tamponade, causing impaired cardiac output.
B. Reflex tachycardia
Beck’s triad: Hypotension, muffled heart sounds, and neck vein distention. Reflex tachycardia is not part of the classic triad.
A. Lung CA, breast CA, leukemia, lymphoma
These cancers commonly metastasize to the pericardium, leading to malignant pericardial effusion.
B. Pericardiocentesis
Life-threatening cardiac tamponade requires urgent pericardiocentesis to relieve pressure on the heart.
The above symptoms are highly suggestive of:
(1 Point)
A. Tumor lysis syndrome
B. Acute pyelonephritis
C. Cystitis
D. Hepatitis
A. Tumor lysis syndrome
Rapid cell destruction from chemotherapy releases intracellular contents, leading to metabolic abnormalities and acute kidney injury.
A leukemia patient undergoing chemotherapy complained of abdominal pain with nausea and vomiting of previously ingested food. She had painful micturition midstream and complained of dark yellow urine.
A. Hyperuricemia, hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, and hypocalcemia
Tumor lysis syndrome causes elevated uric acid, potassium, and phosphate due to massive cell lysis, leading to hypocalcemia (calcium binds to excess phosphate).
A leukemia patient undergoing chemotherapy complained of abdominal pain with nausea and vomiting of previously ingested food. She had painful micturition midstream and complained of dark yellow urine.
A. Allopurinol and hydration
Allopurinol reduces uric acid production, and aggressive hydration prevents uric acid crystallization and kidney damage.
A. True
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is indicated for AML patients in complete remission but at high risk for relapse to improve long-term survival.
B. True
AML treatment planning includes consideration of allogeneic HSCT in eligible patients ≤75 years to maximize curative potential.
D. Rasburicase
Rasburicase rapidly lowers uric acid levels by converting uric acid to allantoin, making it the preferred treatment for tumor lysis syndrome.
B. Anticancer drugs
Therapy-associated AML often results from exposure to alkylating agents and topoisomerase inhibitors used in chemotherapy.
E. Acute megakaryocytic subtype
Down syndrome is associated with acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL), a unique AML subtype occurring in young children.
A. True
Empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics (e.g., cefepime, meropenem) should be started immediately at the onset of febrile neutropenia after blood cultures are taken.
A. Chronic lymphocytic leukemia
CLL has no known link to radiation exposure, unlike AML, CML, and ALL, which have radiation-associated risk factors.
CLL is primarily associated with genetic predisposition and age-related immune dysregulation rather than environmental or radiation-related factors.
E. All of the above
Monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis (MBL) is a CLL precursor with clonal B cells, no cytopenias, and no organ involvement.
E. Incidental finding on routine CBC with evaluation for another cause
CLL is often asymptomatic and diagnosed incidentally on CBC showing lymphocytosis during routine checkups.
B. Cardiovascular dysfunction
Cardiovascular disease (e.g., cardiomyopathy, heart failure, CAD) is the leading non-cancer cause of death in childhood cancer survivors due to prior chemotherapy (anthracyclines) and radiation therapy.
D. Lapatinib and ponatinib
Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKIs) such as Lapatinib and Ponatinib have received an FDA Black Box Warning for cardiovascular toxicity, including CHF, QT prolongation, and systemic & pulmonary hypertension, with a median onset of 4 years post-treatment.
D. None of the above**
Rationale:
- Pulmonary fibrosis resulting from chemotherapy has no effective therapy and is irreversible.
- The mainstay of management is supportive care:
- Low-dose oxygen (if hypoxic).
- Pulmonary rehabilitation.
- Lung transplantation (severe cases, if eligible).
Why Not the Other Options?
- A. Bronchodilators → Used for reactive airway disease or bronchospasm, but do not reverse fibrosis.
- B. Antibiotics → Only helpful if there is a superimposed infection but do not treat fibrosis.
- C. Prednisone → Steroids are useful for drug-induced pneumonitis (early stage), but NOT for established pulmonary fibrosis.
- Exception: Nitrosoureas (Carmustine, Lomustine)–induced fibrosis is unresponsive to steroids.
👉 Since there is no effective treatment for pulmonary fibrosis, the correct answer is “None of the above.” 🚀
A. Necrotizing encephalopathy
Necrotizing encephalopathy is the most severe form of radiation-induced neurologic damage, leading to progressive, irreversible CNS dysfunction with white matter necrosis.
D. All of the above
Nausea, vomiting, febrile neutropenia, and myelosuppression are among the most common side effects of cancer treatments, particularly chemotherapy.
C. Tumor markers can be used to assess treatment response in patients who had elevated levels at diagnosis.
Tumor markers lack specificity and sensitivity for diagnosis but are useful in monitoring treatment response when initially elevated.
C. Both A and B
The “winking owl sign” and pedicle erosion are early radiologic findings of vertebral tumors due to cortical bone destruction.
C. In young adults, the most common cause of SVCS is tuberculous lymphadenopathy.
Lung cancer (85%) and lymphoma are the most common causes of superior vena cava syndrome (SVCS), not tuberculosis.