Deep Vein Thrombosis Revealing Prostate Cancer about a Case in the Cardiology Department of the Ignace Deen National Hospital in Conakry ()
1. Introduction
Venous thrombosis is a frequent disease; its origin is most often multifactorial. Its incidence is variable; in France a recent work carried out in Brest found an incidence of 1.24 of venous thrombosis per 1000 people [1]. In the United States Anders finds an incidence of 0.48 event per 100 inhabitants [2].
Venous thromboembolic disease (MVTE) and cancer are two frequently entangled pathologies. MVTE is likely to complicate the development of nearly 10% of cancer patients and is particularly difficult to manage [3]. Conversely, cancer is present in almost 20% of patients with MVTE and it is even likely to be the first sign of tumor pathology [4].
Cancer patients very often combine several acquired risk factors for MVTE: bed rest, surgery, immobilization, extrinsic venous compression, etc., certain specific cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy [5].
In Guinea, a study carried out in 2016 found 40 cases of venous thrombosis, i.e. 13% of the hospitalization rate [6]. Many factors are involved in the occurrence of venous thrombosis among which we have cancers, hemopathies; the frequency of thrombosis in cancer patients is 5 - 10 [1] [7]. The objective of this study was to report a case of deep vein thrombosis of the right lower limb linked to prostate cancer, to underline the importance of systematic screening for prostate cancer before a deep vein thrombosis especially in the elderly.
2. Observation
The patient was an 88-year-old former driver admitted to the cardiology department of the Ignace Deen national hospital for a painful swelling of the right leg, a fever, and low back pain. This symptomatology had been evolving for two weeks. In his personal history, we find a notion of herniated disc evolving for 7 years and having led to a sensory and motor deficit of the lower limbs. Note that the patient is neither hypertensive, diabetic, nor smoking. The initial clinical examination found a fairly good general condition, a BP equal to 120/80mmHg, a heart rate of 100 beats, a SaO2 at 98% in ambient air, a swelling of the painful, hot right leg with absence calf sloshing and a positive Homans sign. The pelvic feel reveals an increase in the volume of the prostate, with an irregular surface. Cardiopulmonary auscultation was normal. The electrocardiogram showed a regular sinus rhythm at 65 cycles/min, with no sign of enlarged cavities or conduction disturbance. Venous Doppler ultrasound of the lower limbs showed the presence of an extensive acute deep venous thrombosis of the sural vein extended to the popliteal and the deep femoral. The reino-vesico-prostatic ultrasound concluded in a heterogeneous prostatic hypertrophy with projection of a median lobe associated with a bladder of fight with a significant post voiding residue evaluated at 619 ml, the rate of specific antigen of prostate PSA was at 84.87 ng/ml. The pathology analysis made after a prostate biopsy puncture concluded with an adenocarcinoma with a gleason score of 3.
The patient was treated with effective anticoagulation and analgesics. The evolution was favorable with a clear regression of the swelling of the right leg. He was referred to urology for the surgical management of the prostate (Figures 1-3).
Figure 1. Ultrasound showing heterogeneous prostatic hypertrophy with a protrusion of the median lobe.
Figure 2. Venous Doppler ultrasound of the lower limbs with (a) and without compression (b).
Figure 3. Swelling of the right leg following an acute deep vein thrombosis.
3. Discussion
As reported in this clinical case, the association between cancer and the occurrence of venous thromboembolic disease has been known since the 19th century. There are many arguments for the causal nature of this association. This association seems independent of the other thromboembolic risk factors, it is reversible and the thromboembolic risk disappears with the cure of the cancer [8]. Thus, in a North American study of the case control type in the population, cancer was found in 142 patients out of the 625 cases of MVTE included (23%), compared to 22 patients out of 625 controls (3.5%) matched for the age and sex: the odds ratio for the association between cancer and MVTE was 7.7% to 95%. This can be interpreted as follows: the presence of cancer is associated with a sevenfold risk of MVTE [9].
As presented in this clinical case, advanced age is both a risk factor for venous thromboembolic disease [10] and prostate cancer after 50 years [11].
The revealing circumstance of prostate cancer in our patient was deep vein thrombosis of the right lower limb. In the literature, the revealing circumstances of prostate cancer are very variable: the symptoms are represented by urination disorders such as urgency, pollakiuria, dysuria, acute retention of urine, but sometimes by symptoms related to local compression as a unilateral edema of a lower limb [12] [13].
The biopsy revealed an adenocarcinoma which in agreement with the data of the literature which reports that the adenocarcinomas seem to be more providers of venous thromboembolic disease than the squamous cell carcinomas as evidenced by a Dutch study where the incidence of thrombosis was estimated at 537 patients included after diagnosis of non-small cell lung cancer [14].
4. Conclusion
There is a strong association between cancer and venous thromboembolic disease, with a risk multiplied by approximately seven to develop venous thromboembolic disease in cancer patients compared to free patients. It can be the first clinical manifestation of cancer. Routine pelvic examination is necessary in any patient with deep vein thrombosis of the lower limbs.