# Managing Medical Emergencies With Palliative Medicine in a Patient With Metastatic Breast Carcinoma Receiving Only Supportive Care

**Authors:** Parth S Jha, Prasun P, Srikanta Panda, Jayita K Deodhar

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.80619 · Cureus · 2025-03-15

## TL;DR

This paper presents a case where a patient with advanced breast cancer and multiple medical emergencies was successfully managed with supportive care and palliative measures.

## Contribution

The paper highlights a holistic approach to emergency palliative care that integrates symptom relief with communication about care goals.

## Key findings

- The patient was stabilized with intravenous hydration, insulin, antibiotics, and symptom control medications.
- A multidisciplinary approach prioritizing comfort care led to successful stabilization and hospital discharge.
- Effective communication with the family ensured treatment aligned with the patient's goals of care.

## Abstract

We report the case of a 56-year-old female patient with synchronous breast carcinoma on supportive care alone, who presented to the emergency department with acute medical emergencies such as altered sensorium, anasarca, vesicular skin lesions, and hemodynamic instability. Initial investigations revealed a myriad of life-threatening conditions, including suspected brain metastasis, diabetic ketoacidosis, acute kidney injury and sepsis. Balancing symptom control with appropriate medical interventions while respecting the goals of care remains a critical challenge. Emergency management involved intravenous hydration, insulin therapy, empirical antibiotics, and symptomatic control with fentanyl and haloperidol. Throughout hospitalization, she received targeted antibiotic therapy, albumin infusions, and antiepileptics. She was gradually stabilized. Despite the complexity of her condition, she responded well to the instituted measures and was discharged in a stable condition after 14 days. This case highlights key principles in palliative emergency management, including the integration of medical knowledge to address overlapping critical illnesses. This holistic approach prioritizes symptom relief without futile escalation of care and includes effective communication with family members to align treatment with the goals of care.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** breast carcinoma (MONDO:0004989), diabetic ketoacidosis (MONDO:0012819), acute kidney injury (MONDO:0002492)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ALB (albumin) [NCBI Gene 213] {aka FDAHT, HSA, PRO0883, PRO0903, PRO1341}
- **Diseases:** acute kidney injury (MESH:D058186), skin lesions (MESH:D012871), metastasis (MESH:D009362), diabetic ketoacidosis (MESH:D016883), sepsis (MESH:D018805), vesicular (MESH:D012872), Breast Carcinoma (MESH:D001943)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

11 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11994836/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11994836