Radiology Case Reports (Oct 2024)

Changes after sterile inflammation caused by trabectedin infusion from central venous port: A case report

  • Jun Kamohara, MD,
  • Takatoshi Kubo, MD, PhD,
  • Koichiro Yasaka, MD, PhD,
  • Hiroshi Kobayashi, MD, PhD,
  • Osamu Abe, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 10
pp. 4650 – 4653

Abstract

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Trabectedin is an antineoplastic drug used to treat soft tissue sarcomas. Trabectedin is mainly infused from the central venous port (CVP) because trabectedin leakage causes serious skin and soft tissue complications. Characteristic sterile inflammation has recently been reported after infusion of trabectedin from the CVP. Here, we report a case of sterile inflammation along a tunneled catheter pathway after trabectedin infusion from the CVP, with residual postinflammatory changes even after CVP removal.A 57-year-old man with myxoid liposarcoma developed skin erythema, swelling, and induration along a tunneled catheter pathway of the CVP after 16 cycles of trabectedin infusion through the CVP. The patient was diagnosed with sterile inflammation because various tests were negative for infection. The CVP was removed because the increasing injection resistance made trabectedin infusion difficult. The catheter firmly adhered to the surrounding tissue during removal. The induration and pigmentation along the catheter persisted for 4 months after CVP removal.

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