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Hypomanic Episode During Recurrent Gastric Cancer Treatment: Report of a Rare Case and Literature Review

Authors :
Keisuke Miwa
Kazuhiro Araki
Toshikado Kaneta
Hideki Onishi
Ken Shimada
Mototsugu Matsunaga
Yasutsuna Sasaki
Tsuyoshi Noguchi
Hirofumi Nakayama
Yu Sunakawa
Masaru Narabayashi
Mayumi Ishida
Source :
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology. 42:961-964
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2012.

Abstract

S-1 plus cisplatin is the standard chemotherapy for recurrent gastric cancer. While depression and delirium are frequent in cancer patients, hypomania during chemotherapy is rare. We describe a rare case of hypomania during S-1 plus cisplatin treatment for recurrent gastric cancer. A 66-year-old woman, with no previous psychiatric disorder, received S-1 plus cisplatin for recurrent gastric cancer. She showed peculiar behavior. Physical examination, urine, blood and imaging findings were normal. There was no gastric cancer progression. During psychiatric consultation, she behaved inappropriately. However, she behaved normally while performing daily activities. She manifested a persistently elevated, expansive or irritable mood, clearly different from her usual non-depressed state, meeting hypomania diagnostic criteria. Her condition did not require chemotherapy discontinuation or additional medication. During the second and subsequent S-1 plus cisplatin cycles, symptoms were stable. Cancer patients often have adjustment disorders, depression and delirium, but rarely hypomania. Our patient showed no significant changes in blood biochemistry and brain and whole body imaging. While S-1 plus cisplatin-induced hypomania cannot be excluded, hypomanic symptoms did not improve during the chemotherapy rest period, nor was there deterioration during subsequent cycles, suggesting drug-induced mania to be unlikely. Possible onset mechanisms include manic defense phenomena, common with stressful life events. There are no reports of recurrent gastric cancer patients experiencing hypomania during S-1 or S-1 plus cisplatin therapy, i.e. our patient represents a rare course. Clinicians should recognize psychosis or mood disorders during gastric cancer treatment. Further accumulation of such rare cases might elucidate pathological mechanisms underlying hypomania in cancer patients.

Details

ISSN :
14653621 and 03682811
Volume :
42
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e0c758d847e3a300a8e72dad70c09bf