A woman who was thought to have treatment-resistant depression was later found to have a tumour in her brain, according to an article published in BMJ Case Reports.
The 54-year-old woman had been depressed for 6 months, but treatment with the antidepressant fluoxetine and the anti-anxiety medication bromazepam was discontinued after 5 months because these were not found to be effective.
Her symptoms included apathy, difficulties with making decisions and initiating action, a lack of energy, sleep disorders, and concentration and attention problems.
She had suicidal thoughts, admitted self-accusation due to ineffectiveness in her job, and lost interest in her usual past times.
She did not have a history of personal or familial mental illness, but experienced several stressful events.
A neurological examination was normal.
However, a brain CT scan and MRI revealed meningiomatosis with a giant meningioma – the most common primary benign brain tumour – in her left frontal lobe.
This is an area known to have an important role in the development of depression for patients with tumours in the brain.
The patient underwent emergency surgery, and made a recovery.
The depressive symptoms disappeared within one month.
Psychiatric symptoms such as depression, mania, hallucinations, anxiety disorders and anorexia nervosa, even without any neurological signs, may be a sign of a brain tumour, write the doctors who treated the patient.
They say that certain patients should have a brain scan to identify or exclude the possibility of a tumour, but note that "it seems unrealistic to prescribe brain imaging in every patient with a depressive syndrome" because this mental disorder is common while brain tumours are "remarkably rare" in patients with depression.
They recommend that it should be performed if the patient presents a late onset of depressive syndrome after 50 years of age, if a diagnosis of treatment-resistant depression is made or if the patient is apathetic.
Reference
Sophie Dautricourt, Vincent Marzloff, Sonia Dollfus (2015), Meningiomatosis revealed by a major depressive syndrome, BMJ
Source: BMJ
We are an independent charity and are not backed by a large company or society. We raise every penny ourselves to improve the standards of cancer care through education. You can help us continue our work to address inequalities in cancer care by making a donation.
Any donation, however small, contributes directly towards the costs of creating and sharing free oncology education.
Together we can get better outcomes for patients by tackling global inequalities in access to the results of cancer research.
Thank you for your support.