Cases reported "Hodgkin Disease"

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1/155. Primary intracerebral Hodgkin's disease: report of a case with Epstein-Barr virus association and review of the literature.

    A case of primary intracerebral Hodgkin's disease (HD) without dural attachment in a 54-year-old immunocompetent patient is described. The infiltrate was located superficially in the occipital lobe and corresponded to the histologic type of nodular sclerosis. A typical immunohistochemical profile (membrane and cytoplasmic staining with dotlike Golgi enhancement of CD30, moderate cytoplasmic staining of CD15 in the Golgi area, membrane staining of CD20 of <10% of blastic cells, CD45RB negative) and in addition Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) latent membrane protein was detectable in reed-sternberg cells. Staging revealed no other organ sites of involvement. After combined surgery, postoperative radiotherapy, and chemotherapy, there are no signs of recurrence or systemic disease on follow-up for >1 year. To the authors' best knowledge, an association of EBV with primary central nervous system HD has not been demonstrated before.
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keywords = central nervous system, nervous system
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2/155. Acute leukemia following prolonged cytotoxic agent therapy.

    1. Nine patients in whom acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) developed following prolonged alkylating agent therapy are described. Five of the patients received no radiotherapy. The conditions treated were: Hodgkin's disease (four patients), primary amyloidosis, primary macroglobulinemia, malignant lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and carcinoma of the tonsil. 2. Prior to the advent of chemotherapy, this complication was not observed in large series of patients with lymphoproliferative disorders and multiple myeloma. However, the medical literature now contains at least 125 other detailed reports of ANLL developing after prolonged cytotoxic agent therapy. 3. multiple myeloma and Hodgkin's disease, both of which commonly have good responses to chemotherapy, predominate as the underlying diseases. However, 35% of the case reports involve patients with other illnesses, including 12 patients who did not have neoplasms. 4. More than half of the patients developing ANLL have received chemotherapy alone without radiotherapy. 5. At least half of the patients developing ANLL experienced long periods of significant cytopenia during therapy, often with documentation of bone marrow dysplasia. 6. The wide variety of drugs associated with this complication suggests that any cytotoxic agent may be leukemogenic. However, alkylating agents overwhelmingly predominate as the class of compounds which are most often associated with terminal ANLL. 7. The vast majority of patients reported in the literature with ANLL complicating underlying malignancies have received cytotoxic drugs for prolonged periods (median 3 1/2 years) and leukemia developed most commonly 3 to 5 years after the diagnosis of the underlying disease. Most of these patients benefited from therapy and survived longer (median 5 years) than historical control of untreated patients. 8. The leukemogenic potential in man of prolonged cytotoxic agents therapy, especially with alkylating agents, seems to be well established. This evidence admonishes against the prolonged use of these drugs in non-fatal disorders. 9. More accurate assessment of risk: benefit ratios awaits the results of prospective controlled studies. The results of these studies could also lead to significant modifications in recommendations for long-term maintenance therapy with cytotoxic agents.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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3/155. Peripheral T-cell lymphoma with Reed-Sternberg-like cells of B-cell phenotype and genotype associated with Epstein-Barr virus infection.

    We report three cases of nodal peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) with Reed-Sternberg-like (RS-like) cells of B-cell pheno- and/or genotype. Histologic analysis in all cases revealed diffuse nodal effacement by atypical lymphoid cells of variable size. Two of the three cases had features of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AILT). Large mononuclear and binucleated cells with prominent eosinophilic nucleoli and abundant cytoplasm resembling classic RS cells and mononuclear variants were scattered throughout all biopsies. The lymphoma cells in the three cases were of T-cell lineage (CD3 , CD43 , and CD45RO ). The RS-like cells from all cases were CD30 and CD15 positive. In contrast to the neoplastic T cells, the RS-like cells lacked all T-cell markers and in two cases were positive for CD20. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1) and EBER 1 (2/2) were detected in the RS-like cells in all cases. The neoplastic T cells were negative for EBV. polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis demonstrated clonal rearrangements of the T-cell receptor gamma chain gene in the three cases. PCR analysis of microdissected RS-like cells for immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements in cases 1 and 3 showed an oligoclonal pattern. The presence of RS-like cells in PTCL represents a diagnostic pitfall, because in one case this observation led to a misdiagnosis of Hodgkin's disease (HD). The oligoclonal expansion of EBV-infected cells may be related to underlying immunodeficiency associated with T-cell lymphomas and AILT in particular. This phenomenon may provide the basis for some cases of Hodgkin's disease after T-cell lymphomas and suggests that they are clonally unrelated neoplasms. The expression of LMP1 appears to be crucial for the immunophenotype and probably for the morphology of the RS and RS-like cells appearing in diverse lymphoid malignancies, including HD, chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and PTCL.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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4/155. Thymic Hodgkin's disease--a histological and immunohistochemical study of three cases.

    Thymic Hodgkin's disease (HD) shows some peculiar histological features different from nodal disease which are a result of the interaction with the specific thymic microenvironment. We describe the histological and immunohistochemical findings in three cases presenting as a primary thymic neoplasm both clinically and radiologically. Histological hallmarks were the prominent formation of epithelium-lined cysts, inflammatory changes, a marked proliferation of thymic epithelium in association with Hodgkin- and Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells and the occurrence of the nodular sclerosing subtype in all cases. The immunophenotype of the neoplastic cells was that of classical HD. They expressed CD30, CD15 and lacked CD45. In two cases CD20 expression was observed. All cases were negative for the latent membrane protein (LMP) of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). The accompanying inflammatory infiltrate was rich in mature T-cells, but also showed a significant number of B-cells with frequent formation of follicles and proliferation of follicular dendritic cells. Thymic HD develops in a microenvironment with features of thymic medulla as defined by the morphology and pattern of the proliferating epithelial cells and the mature immunophenotype of the admixed thymocytes. These findings, especially the CD20 positivity in Hodgkin and RS-cells, may point to the possible origin of thymic HD from medullary B-cells.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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5/155. Classical Hodgkin's disease and follicular lymphoma originating from the same germinal center B cell.

    PURPOSE: Classical Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin's B-cell lymphoma occasionally occur in the same patient. To clarify whether these different diseases share a common precursor cell, we analyzed the immunoglobulin rearrangements in tumor cells of the classical Hodgkin's disease and the follicular lymphoma that developed in the same patient 2 years apart. patients AND methods: polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for the detection of rearranged immunoglobulin genes was carried out on single reed-sternberg cells and on whole tissue dna extracted from the follicular lymphoma. PCR products were sequenced and compared with each other and with germ line immunoglobulin variable segments. Immunoglobulin heavy- and light-chain transcripts were analyzed by radioactive in-situ hybridization. RESULTS: The same monoclonal immunoglobulin gene rearrangement was found in both neoplasms. The variable region of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain genes of the Reed-Sternberg and of the follicular lymphoma cells were differently mutated, but six somatic mutations were shared by both lymphoma cells. Although the coding capacity of the immunoglobulin genes was preserved in both neoplastic cell populations, immunoglobulin heavy- (mu) and light- (kappa) chain expression was restricted to the follicular lymphoma cells, except for small amounts of kappa light-chain mRNA in some reed-sternberg cells. CONCLUSIONS: The neoplastic cells of the Hodgkin's disease and the follicular lymphoma that occurred in this patient derived from a common precursor B cell. Its differentiation stage could be identified as that of a germinal center B cell. Thus, transforming events can be more important than the cell of origin in determining a disease entity.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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6/155. Hodgkin's disease and myelomonocytic leukemia: an ultrastructural and immunocytochemical study.

    The ultrastructual and immunologic features of the initial Reed-Sternberg and Hodgkin cells are compared with the ultimate leukemic cell type in a child with Hodgkin's disease who subsequently developed acute myelomonocytic leukemia (AMML) following 29 months of chemotherapy. Hodgkin tumor cells contained cytoplasmic IgG and ultrastructurally resembled large immunoblasts, containing one or two round nuclei with large bizarre nucleoli, many polyribosomes, sparase endoplasmic reticulum, underdeveloped Golgi lamellae, and few cytoplasmic granules. The Hodgkin tumor cells displayed no evidence of phagocytosis. The leukemic monocytic cells did not contain cytoplasmic IgG and, ultrastrucally, exhibited and indented and irregular nuclear profile with less prominent nucleoli, numerous pleomorphic granules, a moderate number of free ribosomes, short segments of endoplasmic reticulum, and stacked Golgi lamellae. The cell surface was irregular and occasionally appeared involved in endocytic activity. These results indicate that the Hodgkin tumor cells originated from B lymphocytes rather than tissue macrophages, whereas the leukemic monocytes arose from the bone marrow-derived monocyte-macrophage series. The findings suggest further that AMML developing after Hodgkin's disease consitutes a second neoplasm rather than a leukemic transformation of Hodgkin tumor cells.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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7/155. Pancreatic carcinoma as a sequel to therapy of lymphoma.

    Development of a carcinoma in the pancreas of a young man who had five years previously undergone intensive radiotherapy and subsequent chemotherapy for treatment of a lymphoma suggests that induction of the second neoplasm occurred as the result of the therapy of the first. While definite proof of causality is lacking, a review of recent literature strongly suggests that the association noted in the patient described is more than serendipitous. Increased usage of high-dose radiotherapy, particularly in conjunction with chemotherapy, may be directly related, and it is imperative that such an association be kept in mind when such patients are seen in follow-up.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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8/155. Thyroid sclerosing mucoepidermoid carcinoma with eosinophilia: mimic of hodgkin disease in nodal metastases.

    We present the clinical and pathologic findings of a case of sclerosing mucoepidermoid carcinoma with eosinophilia of the thyroid in a 39-year-old woman. This particular case is notable because it initially presented as a cervical lymph node metastasis, and the initial clinical and histologic impression was hodgkin disease, nodular sclerosis type. Sclerosing mucoepidermoid carcinoma with eosinophilia is a differentiated malignant neoplasm of the thyroid that can be confused with anaplastic carcinoma, medullary carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, or, as in this case, hodgkin disease. A correct diagnosis of sclerosing mucoepidermoid carcinoma with eosinophilia involves awareness of this entity and appropriate immunohistochemical analysis. In this article, we briefly review the literature and stress the histologic and cytologic findings characteristic of sclerosing mucoepidermoid with eosinophilia of the thyroid.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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9/155. An unusual cutaneous presentation of Hodgkin's disease.

    Hodgkin's disease is a neoplasm of lymphoid tissue defined histopathologically by the presence of reed-sternberg cells in an appropriate cellular background. Hodgkin's disease extends only rarely into the skin. Sinus and fistula formation has been reported in very occasional cases. We now report a case of a 34-year-old woman presenting with a cutaneous lesion surrounding a discharging blind-ending sinus in the neck, subsequently diagnosed as Hodgkin's disease. To our knowledge this form of presentation of Hodgkin's disease has not been reported in the English literature before, and at the same time we would like to outline the difficulties in diagnosis encountered with these cutaneous lymphoid lesions.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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10/155. paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration in pediatric hodgkin disease.

    paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD) is a rare neurological complication in adults with extracerebral neoplasms. It is characterized by a diffuse cerebellar dysfunction, usually leading to severe neurological sequelae. In childhood, this complication is extremely rare. We report on PCD as primary manifestation of hodgkin disease (HD) in a thirteen-year old boy. On magnetic resonance imaging, irreversible atrophy of the cerebellum developed within three months. antibodies against purkinje cells were detectable at diagnosis and normalised after successful treatment of the lymphoma. Cerebellar symptoms, however, only partially resolved. The necessity of a search for a malignant tumour is emphasised in the presence of an otherwise unexplained, subacutely developing, diffuse cerebellar dysfunction.
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ranking = 0.46133130754874
keywords = neoplasm
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