Case report: radiation-induced lumbosacral plexopathy – a very late complication of radiotherapy for cervical cancer

Peter Krkoska · 2022-12-12

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Abstract

Background

Lumbosacral plexopathy caused by radiotherapy is a rare but severe consequence of cancer treatment. This condition often leads to varying degrees of sensory and motor impairment. Neurological complications, which are typically permanent, manifest a long period after irradiation.

Case presentation

We describe a case of progressive lower extremity weakness and sensory impairment in a woman who had been effectively treated with radiotherapy for cervical cancer with development 36 years after irradiation. The electrophysiological assessment revealed a subacute bilateral axonal lesion of the lumbosacral plexus. None of the clinical manifestations, serology, cerebrospinal fluid or imaging data discovered an explanation other than radiation-induced lumbosacral plexopathy (RILP).

Conclusions

This case demonstrates that RILP may emerge more than 30 years after the radiotherapy.

TL;DR

This case demonstrates that RILP may emerge more than 30 years after the radiotherapy, and none of the clinical manifestations, serology, cerebrospinal fluid or imaging data discovered an explanation other than radiation-induced lumbosacral plexopathy (RILP).

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