A 37-year-old woman with history of Evans Syndrome with poor response to high-dose corticoid treatment presented to the
emergency department with gastrointestinal and vaginal bleeding. The patient was later diagnosed with severe thrombocytopenia
and a stage G1, well-differentiated gastric neuroendocrine tumor, confirmed by a biopsy. A total gastrectomy was performed
to eradicate the tumor. After being treated with a total splenectomy for her Evans Syndrome with no clinical or laboratory
improvement, she began regular treatment with octreotide on the basis of a possible hepatic metastasis. Days after the
initiation of the octreotide, an increase in the platelet count was evidenced by laboratory findings, from 2,000 platelets/mm3 to
109,000 platelets/mm3
. Weeks later, the hepatic metastasis is discarded by a negative octreotide-body scan, and the octreotide
treatment was interrupted. Immediately after the drug interruption, a progressive and evident descent in the platelet count was
evidenced (4000 platelets/mm3
). The present case report highlights the possible association between octreotide treatment and a
severe thrombocytopenia resistant to conventional treatment.
Authors: Chung Delgado, Kocfa; Revilla Montag, Alejandro; Guillén Bravo, Sonia; Ríos Díaz, Hugo; Alva Muñoz, José C.
Source: Case Reports in Hematology
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10757/314004
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