A 36-year-old male with a history of smoking (2-4 packs of cigarettes per day), called his PCP’s office with complaints of chest congestion and coughing up small clots of blood for the previous few weeks. He spoke with a nurse practitioner (NP). The PCP prescribed antibiotics and the NP asked the patient to call back if he did not feel better.
A week later, the patient saw the same NP in the office for shortness of breath and wheezing. This time he did not mention coughing up blood. A chest X-ray was read as normal by a staff radiologist. The NP shared the findings with the patient, diagnosed asthmatic bronchitis, and prescribed a second course of antibiotics and asthma inhalers. The patient was told to return 48 hours later to be reexamined.
The patient did not return in two days as instructed. Instead, he returned to the practice a month later, complaining that he had coughed up blood for the last two days. An X-ray taken that day was interpreted by a staff radiologist as showing signs of infiltrate in the right lobe; however, the radiologist considered this to be unchanged from the X-ray taken a month earlier. The PCP believed the infiltrate was smoking-related. The patient received prescriptions for steroids and a different antibiotic, was told to return in seven days, and was encouraged to stop smoking.
A week later, the patient’s lungs showed marked improvement. He was advised to finish his antibiotics and continue with the inhalers. Within a week, however, he went to the emergency room with complaints of shooting pain in his right lung and difficulty breathing. A new X-ray showed continued signs of infiltrate in the right lobe. A TB test was done, and the patient was instructed to return to his PCP to go over his TB test results. His PCP’s office reminded the patient the next day with a phone call and made an appointment for the following week, but he failed to return.
Nearly three months later, the patient called his PCP, complaining of a “golf ball” size lump on his neck and an unusual taste in his mouth. The patient was seen the following day, and his PCP diagnosed a swollen lymph node. He prescribed antibiotics and referred the patient to an ENT, who saw him within three days. The ENT changed his medication to Augmentin and scheduled a follow-up visit for three weeks later. At that time, he reported that after initial improvement in the mass with Augmentin, it had returned to its original size once he finished the medication.
One month later, during a scheduled follow-up visit, a biopsy of the lump suggested malignant neoplasm. The patient underwent a CT scan, MRI, and an additional fine needle biopsy. The ENT specialist notified him by phone with a diagnosis of stage IV lung cancer with metastasis to the brain. The patient died the following year.