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Published in: BMC Pulmonary Medicine 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Case report

Pulmonary tularaemia: all that looks like cancer is not necessarily cancer – case report of four consecutive cases

Authors: Patrick Fachinger, Gabrielo Mauro Tini, Rainer Grobholz, Franco Gambazzi, Hans Fankhauser, Sarosh Irani

Published in: BMC Pulmonary Medicine | Issue 1/2015

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Abstract

Background

Pulmonary tularaemia is a very rare disease with only a small number of cases described in the literature. So far, to our knowledge, there exists no case report of pulmonary tularaemia where PET-CT scans and follow up CT scans are available.

Case presentation

We present four consecutive cases of pulmonary tularaemia. All patients suffered from non-specific symptoms. All patients were referred to our institution with strong suspicions of malignancy, particularly lung cancer.
Diagnosis of tularaemia was made by typical findings in the aspirate of EBUS guided fine needle aspiration (necrosis, epithelioid cell aggregation) and surgical biopsy respectively, and a positive serology. In three of the four cases, the diagnosis was confirmed by positive PCR results of the tissue. PET-CT scans obtained in all four cases were indistinguishable from lesions typically seen in patients suffering from lung cancer.
One of the four patients suffered from recurrence of the disease after antibiotic treatment; also this patient finally recovered after initiation of a second antibiotic regimen. One case became asymptomatic spontaneously, but this patient still received an antibiotic treatment.
In one case, a follow up CT scan was unchanged compared to the initial PET-CT scan; in all other cases, the lesions disappeared almost completely.

Conclusions

Symptoms of patients suffering from pulmonary tularaemia are non-specific and can be of prolonged character. PET-CT scans in these cases are indistinguishable from lung cancer. The diagnosis can be established when typical findings in EBUS guided fine needle aspirates or surgical biopsies are found in combination with a positive serology. In most cases the lesions disappear in follow up CT scans after clinically successful treatment.
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Metadata
Title
Pulmonary tularaemia: all that looks like cancer is not necessarily cancer – case report of four consecutive cases
Authors
Patrick Fachinger
Gabrielo Mauro Tini
Rainer Grobholz
Franco Gambazzi
Hans Fankhauser
Sarosh Irani
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Pulmonary Medicine / Issue 1/2015
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2466
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12890-015-0026-y

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