Medicina (Nov 2022)

Insights on Lipomatosis after Platinum-Based Chemotherapy Use in Pediatric Oncology: A Case Report

  • Estera Boeriu,
  • Alexandra Georgiana Boc,
  • Alexandra Borda,
  • Rodica Anamaria Negrean,
  • Bogdan Feciche,
  • Amalia Iulia Boeriu,
  • Florin George Horhat,
  • Ion Cristian Mot,
  • Ioana Delia Horhat,
  • Madhavi Ravulapalli,
  • Omar Sabuni,
  • Abduljabar Adi,
  • Adnan Anjary,
  • Smaranda Teodora Arghirescu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58121715
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58, no. 12
p. 1715

Abstract

Read online

Agents of platinum-based chemotherapy, such as cisplatin or carboplatin, are used in the treatment of a wide range of malignancies that affect children, such as brain tumors, osteosarcoma, neuroblastoma, hepatoblastoma, and germ cell tumors (GCTs). The Cyclophosphamide Equivalent Dose (CED) calculator for reproductive risk does not take platinum-based chemotherapy into account, despite the fact that it accounts for the majority of chemotherapy medications that are typically administered for pediatric GCTs. As a result, exposure to platinum-based drugs throughout infancy can have predictable long-term effects such as infertility, as well as other rare encounters such as lipoma formation and lipomatosis. Lipomas are the most prevalent benign soft tissue tumor subtype. They may be either solitary entities or engaged in multiple lipomatosis, which may have a familial origin or be an acquired disorder. Chemotherapy is a possible cause of lipomatosis. Chemotherapy based on cisplatin has been linked to a variety of long-term consequences, including kidney damage, neurotoxicity, and pulmonary toxicity, and may even create secondary cancers. However, lipoma development is known to occur in fewer than 1 in 100 individuals, and only a few examples of multiple cutaneous lipomatosis triggered by this therapy have been documented. Here we present a very rare case of lipomatosis in a pediatric patient with GCT under cisplatin therapy, which might be the third report of this kind affecting children.

Keywords