A woman in her thirties with confusion
- PMID: 39167002
- DOI: 10.4045/tidsskr.23.0344
A woman in her thirties with confusion
Abstract
Background: Coercion is rare in cancer treatment. We present a case where a young woman received gamma knife radiosurgery and immunochemotherapy under compulsory institutional care.
Case presentation: A previously healthy patient in her thirties was admitted to hospital due to confusion, apathy, weight loss and sleep disturbance. She had difficulties expressing herself and spoke with considerable latency. A brain MRI revealed a tumour of 23 mm in the left-side centrum semiovale and perifocal oedema, while a CT scan showed a 5.6 cm tumour in the right upper lobe and enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes. She was diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer, no actionable mutations, PD-L1 <75 %. When she did not wish to return to the hospital to undergo gamma knife radiosurgery, she was readmitted under a formal decision to use coercion, and remained under institutional care for over six months. Today she is fully recovered and has no cancer progression almost five years after diagnosis.
Interpretation: This case report illustrates the challenges of brain metastases and use of coercion during cancer treatment, both for the patient and healthcare personnel. There is a need for thorough interdisciplinary discussions and to establish as early as possible a shared understanding of the intention and scope of the forced treatment.
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