| Read Time: 4 minutes | Medical Malpractice
leukemia misdiagnosis

A leukemia misdiagnosis can lead to severe consequences, including loss of life or significant decline in the patient’s quality of life. If a doctor or medical facility fails to correctly diagnose leukemia due to negligence or haste, they may be held responsible for the resulting medical expenses.

Mistakes can happen. But when a mistake rises to the level of negligence, you can file a medical malpractice claim.

To learn more about your legal rights, contact a New Mexico medical malpractice lawyer at Poulos & Cavazos, LLP today.

A delayed or missed leukemia diagnosis can feel overwhelming and frightening. You do not have to navigate this alone. We are here to listen, answer your questions, and guide you through your legal options with compassion and care. Contact Us

Key Takeaways

  • Leukemia misdiagnosis can occur when symptoms are mistaken for less serious conditions, leading to delayed treatment and potentially life-threatening consequences.
  • Early and accurate diagnosis of leukemia is critical, as prompt treatment significantly impacts survival rates and long-term health outcomes.
  • A failure to order appropriate blood tests, misinterpret lab results, or ignore persistent symptoms may constitute medical negligence in some cases.
  • To pursue a leukemia misdiagnosis lawsuit, patients generally must prove that a healthcare provider breached the standard of care and that the delay directly caused harm.
  • Compensation in a leukemia misdiagnosis case may include damages for additional medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and reduced quality of life.

How to Test for Leukemia

Doctors can sometimes detect leukemia with a blood test before a person exhibits symptoms. Blood tests can show abnormal platelets or white blood cells. Doctors will conduct a physical exam to check for other symptoms and signs.

Another test is to check a person’s bone marrow. The process requires a long needle to extract bone marrow from the person’s hip.

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What Can Cause a Misdiagnosis of Leukemia?

Sometimes, leukemia doesn’t show symptoms until the disease progresses, which can contribute to a misdiagnosis. Some symptoms can mimic other illnesses or diseases. Symptoms vary depending on the type of leukemia. Possible signs of leukemia include:

  • Persistent fatigue and weakness,
  • Easy bruising or bleeding,
  • Fever or chills,
  • Recurrent nosebleeds,
  • Severe or frequent infections,
  • Enlarged spleen or liver,
  • Swollen lymph nodes,
  • Losing weight without trying,
  • Tenderness or bone pain,
  • Excessive sweating, and
  • Petechiae (tiny red skin spots).

Some of these symptoms resemble those for conditions such as autoimmune disorders, influenza, other bleeding disorders, and immune thrombocytopenic purpura.

When a doctor does everything possible and comes up with a misdiagnosis, their actions might not be negligent. But if a doctor’s misdiagnosis is the result of not following the accepted standard of care, a negligence claim might come into play. Negligence in this context could  include:

  • Failure to listen to the patient’s complaints,
  • Failure to order the proper examinations and lab tests,
  • Failure to follow up and investigate certain symptoms,
  • Mixing up and losing the patient’s file, and
  • Not interpreting lab tests or exam results correctly.

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A misdiagnosis of leukemia is serious because the cancer could progress, so the person misses out on life-saving treatment. 

A leukemia misdiagnosis doesn’t just mean failing to catch the disease. Someone can be diagnosed with leukemia when they don’t have it. This scenario means someone undergoes unnecessary cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy.

This treatment can create new health conditions, not to mention the ordeal of chemotherapy itself.

Can You Sue for a Leukemia Misdiagnosis?

If you have evidence that the medical professional was negligent in your misdiagnosis, you can bring a medical malpractice claim for compensation. However, proving medical malpractice is complicated.

You need an experienced medical malpractice lawyer who will protect your rights and help preserve all evidence. Successfully collecting compensation from these negligent parties is complicated but not impossible. You need solid evidence that demonstrates the defendants breached their duty of care.

Leukemia Misdiagnosis — FAQs

1. What is leukemia misdiagnosis?

Leukemia misdiagnosis occurs when a healthcare provider fails to correctly identify leukemia, delays diagnosis, or mistakes it for another condition, potentially allowing the cancer to progress untreated.

2. What are common reasons leukemia is misdiagnosed?

Leukemia symptoms can resemble less serious illnesses such as infections or anemia. Misdiagnosis may result from failure to order proper blood tests, misreading lab results, or not referring a patient to a specialist.

3. How can a delayed leukemia diagnosis affect a patient?

Delays can allow the disease to advance, reduce treatment options, worsen prognosis, and lead to more aggressive therapies or life-threatening complications.

4. When does leukemia misdiagnosis become medical malpractice?

It may be considered malpractice when a doctor fails to meet the accepted standard of care and that failure directly causes harm, such as disease progression or reduced survival chances.

5. What must be proven in a leukemia misdiagnosis lawsuit?

Generally, a patient must show that a provider breached the standard of care and that the delayed or incorrect diagnosis caused measurable harm or worsened outcomes.

6. What compensation may be available in these cases?

Compensation can include additional medical costs, lost wages, reduced earning capacity, pain and suffering, and other damages resulting from delayed treatment.

7. How long do I have to file a leukemia misdiagnosis claim?

The time limit, known as the statute of limitations, varies by state. It is important to consult an attorney promptly to protect your right to file a claim.

8. What evidence is important in a leukemia misdiagnosis case?

Key evidence may include medical records, lab results, timelines of symptoms, expert medical opinions, and documentation of how the delay impacted treatment and prognosis.

9. Can family members file a claim if a loved one dies from delayed diagnosis?

In some cases, surviving family members may pursue a wrongful death claim if a delayed or incorrect leukemia diagnosis contributed to their loved one’s death.

10. Should I contact a lawyer about a possible leukemia misdiagnosis?

Yes. An experienced medical malpractice attorney can evaluate your case, consult medical experts, and explain your legal options during a confidential consultation.
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Leukemia Misdiagnosis? We Are Here to Help

At Poulos & Cavazos, LLP we specialize in medical malpractice cases. We are trial lawyers who aren’t afraid to file a lawsuit against all responsible parties, including medical professionals, hospitals, and medical centers.

We work closely with licensed medical professionals to help evaluate your case and locate expert witnesses to testify on your behalf. Don’t try to handle a medical malpractice claim without our assistance.

Contact Poulos & Cavazos today to schedule an initial consultation if you received a leukemia misdiagnosis.

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Author Photo

Victor Poulos, JD

For more than two decades, Victor Poulos has devoted his practice exclusively to representing patients and families harmed by medical negligence. He has handled complex medical malpractice cases involving hospitals, surgeons, anesthesiologists, and other healthcare providers, and has taken hundreds of depositions of physicians, nurses, and hospital staff across nearly every medical specialty. Mr. Poulos has successfully tried high-stakes malpractice cases to verdict and is known for his meticulous case preparation and relentless advocacy on behalf of injured patients.

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