Cases reported "Lymphatic Metastasis"

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1/169. Primary malignant lymphoma of the appendix (a case report and review of the literature).

    Authors report a case of a 29-year-old male with primary malignant lymphoma of the appendix with involvement of lymph nodes in the mesenteries. Surgical intervention was performed, adjuvant chemotherapy was applied. No recurrences, metastases or complaints occurred after one year of follow-up. The case is of interest due to the clinical and histopathological diagnostic problems as well as the dimension of the metastatic lymph node in the ileal mesentery.
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ranking = 1
keywords = lymphoma
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2/169. acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related intraocular B-cell lymphoma.

    OBJECTIVES: To present the full clinical spectrum of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related intraocular lymphoma as manifested in the eye, specifically retinal lymphoma associated with primary central nervous system lymphoma, isolated ocular lymphoma, and choroidal lymphoma associated with systemic lymphoma. methods: Three patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome were noted to have atypical retinal lesions. Diagnostic retinal biopsy in 2 patients and postmortem examination of the eyes in the third case were performed. RESULTS: Diagnostic retinal biopsy in the first 2 patients revealed retinal B-cell lymphoma. Initial systemic evaluation showed the eyes to be the sole site of disease. Later, in 1 of these patients, the lymphoma spread to the brain. The third patient developed an acute abdomen 4 months after the development of his ocular findings. The histological evaluation of the resected bowel revealed high-grade B-cell lymphoma. The patient died 1 week later and postmortem analysis of the eyes disclosed the presence of lymphoma in the choroid of both eyes. CONCLUSIONS: This is the most complete series of patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related intraocular B-cell lymphoma and, to our knowledge, provides the first 2 cases diagnosed by retinal biopsy. These 3 cases present the full clinical spectrum of the disease as manifested in the eye.
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ranking = 3
keywords = lymphoma
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3/169. Follicular large-cell lymphoma of the orbit: a clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical and molecular genetic description of one case.

    BACKGROUND: Follicular large cell lymphoma of the orbit is a very rare and aggressive lymphoproliferative disease of the ocular adnexa. In this study we analyzed the clinicopathologic characteristics of one patient, including the immunoglobulin gene rearrangement assay by means of polymerase chain reaction. CASE REPORT: A 71-year-old female underwent an incisional biopsy in the superior nasal quadrant of the left orbit following the occurrence of bilateral eyelid edema and ptosis. histology and immunohistochemistry revealed a follicular large cell lymphoma of the orbit. Computerized tomography aimed at staging the disease revealed a supraclavicular lymphoadenopathy approximately 0.5 cm in diameter. bone marrow biopsy was negative for lymphoma. The patient was classified as stage IV. She underwent a 10-week cycle of polychemotherapy (VP16, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, bleomycin). Ten months after therapy, disease recurred at the cervical lymph nodes and the patient underwent a radiotherapy cycle of 4320 cGy with disease remission. At the time of writing, the patient presents a left axillary adenopathy on computerized tomography followup. CONCLUSION: Ophthalmologists should be aware of possible rare occurrences of follicular large cell lymphomas of the orbit. In this case the clinical outcome is always more aggressive than the more common MALT-type lymphoma, which usually exhibits benign behavior.
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ranking = 1.8
keywords = lymphoma
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4/169. Revision of the diagnosis of T-zone lymphoma in the father of a patient with autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome type II.

    autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) is a disease of childhood characterized by typical clinical and laboratory findings. Here we describe an adult patient presenting with lymph node enlargement and splenomegaly. Pathological examination of an adenopathy supported the diagnosis of malignant T-zone lymphoma. The patient was treated accordingly. 3 years later his child was diagnosed with ALPS. Therefore the diagnosis of the father's disease was reconsidered. review of the slides and functional tests led to the diagnosis of ALPS in both father and son. ALPS should be considered as a possible differential diagnosis in adult patients presenting with rare types of T-cell lymphomas.
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ranking = 1.2
keywords = lymphoma
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5/169. Metastasising malignant lymphoma mimicking necrotising and hyperplastic gingivostomatitis.

    This paper presents the case of a 65 year-old woman suffering from recurrent oral aphthoid ulcers which rapidly evolved towards hyperplastic and ulcerated lesions over the entire floor of the mouth. The initial lesions were interpreted as non-specific aphthoid ulcers. Later, a tentative diagnosis of necrotising stomatitis with secondary reactive proliferating epithelial hyperplasia was made. The clinical symptoms and the immuno-phenotyping of lymphocytes circulating in the peripheral blood suggested the diagnosis of CD30-positive large cell anaplastic lymphoma. The biopsy showed only a pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia, reactive infiltrates and no lymphoma cells. The disease ran a fulminant course leading to death within 4 weeks due to acute gastro-intestinal bleeding. autopsy revealed infiltrates of CD30 large cell anaplastic lymphoma in a submandibular lymph node, in a thrombus stenosing the right subclavian vein, in the spleen, the anterior and posterior gastric wall as well as in the depth of the tumour on the floor of the mouth. The clinical and histopathological spectrum of CD30 large cell anaplastic lymphoma is considerably variable. The particular feature of pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia has been reported especially in CD30 anaplastic large cell lymphomas. An early correct diagnosis is rendered difficult in insufficient biopsy size, becauses this type of lymphoma often simulates other inflammatory or neoplastic skin diseases. Thus, with a necrotising and hyperplastic gingivostomatitis, the diagnosis of a CD30 anaplastic large cell lymphoma should be considered.
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ranking = 2.2
keywords = lymphoma
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6/169. Invasive squamous cell carcinoma with sporotrichoid metastasis in a patient with cutaneous T cell lymphoma treated with chronic extracorporeal photopheresis.

    An 83-year-old Caucasian man with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma developed an aggressive squamous cell carcinoma of the left forearm, which recurred and metastasized after Mohs micrographic surgery and systemic chemotherapy with cis-platin and 5-fluorouracil. He was treated with extracorporeal photopheresis, radiation therapy, PUVA photochemotherapy, and interferon therapy for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. Aggressive squamous cell carcinoma can occur in the setting of extracorporeal photopheresis.
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ranking = 1.2
keywords = lymphoma
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7/169. High grade, synchronous colon cancers after renal transplantation: were immunosuppressive drugs to blame?

    Recipients of renal transplants are known to have an increased incidence of cancer, which is believed to be related to the use of immunosuppressive drugs used to prevent rejection. Although the risks of lymphoma and Kaposi's sarcoma are clearly increased in this setting, the association with colon cancer is controversial. We report a 44-yr-old woman, 20 yr post-renal transplant, and with no family history of colorectal cancer or polyps, who was found to have synchronous, poorly differentiated colon cancers associated with extensive abdominal lymph node, bone marrow, and bone (skull) metastasis. The long term immunosuppressive drugs that she had received may have been an important factor in her tumor development and/or progression. Our case and literature review suggest a possible mild, increased risk of colon cancer development in patients after renal transplantation.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = lymphoma
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8/169. Follicle center lymphoma and Warthin tumor involving the same anatomic site. Report of two cases and review of the literature.

    We report 2 cases of follicle center non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and Warthin tumor involving the same site. Case 1 is a 68-year-old woman with Warthin tumor and grade 1 follicular NHL involving a periparotid lymph node. She had localized NHL and was treated with radiation therapy; dissemination developed 54 months later. Case 2 is a 55-year-old man with a 17-year history of a parotid mass with gradual enlargement during the last 5 years. Surgical excision revealed Warthin tumor and grade 1 follicular NHL involving the right parotid gland and surrounding lymph nodes. Immunohistochemical studies supported the diagnosis of NHL in both cases; the neoplasms were positive for CD20 and BCL-2 and negative for CD3. polymerase chain reaction analysis done on paraffinembedded tissue of case 1 revealed monoclonal immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement and bcl-2/JH fusion dna sequences diagnostic of the t(14;18)(q32;q21). The small size of the Warthin tumor in case 1, clearly arising in lymph node, supports the hypothesis that Warthin tumor arises from heterotopic salivary gland ducts within lymph nodes. The localized NHL in both patients suggests that the NHL initially arose in the lymph node involved by Warthin tumor, and, thus, the Warthin tumor may have provided a source of long-term antigenic stimulation from which a monoclonal B-cell population subsequently arose.
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ranking = 1
keywords = lymphoma
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9/169. Epstein-Barr virus-positive primary gastrointestinal Hodgkin's disease: association with inflammatory bowel disease and immunosuppression.

    Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is associated with an increased risk of lymphoma, which is usually extraintestinal but sometimes may involve the diseased bowel itself. Most lymphomas described in this setting are of non-Hodgkin's type, but rare cases of Hodgkin's disease (HD) have been reported. We describe the clinicopathologic and molecular features of four patients with primary gastrointestinal HD. Three patients had preexistent Crohn's disease (CD), for which two of them had received immunosuppressive therapy. The fourth patient had a longstanding history of diverticulitis and myasthenia gravis and was receiving immunosuppressive therapy for the latter. Multifocal involvement of the bowel by HD was noted in all four cases. Disease was staged as IVA in one patient, IIIB in one patient, and IE in one patient, and the fourth patient died in the postoperative period before further workup. Two patients received chemotherapy, one of whom was dead at 9 months, whereas the other has no evidence of disease at 25 months' follow-up. The patient with IE disease did not receive any therapy because only a few microscopic foci of disease were present and is also without any evidence of disease at 17 months. The Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells in all four cases expressed CD30, CD15, EBER-1, and LMP-1; two of four were focally CD20-positive. VJ-polymerase chain reaction for immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) rearrangement showed a polyclonal pattern in all four cases. In two cases, laser capture microdissection was used to isolate individual RS and Hodgkin's cells, which contained rearranged immunoglobulin genes, confirming a B-cell genotype. Whereas one case showed a dominant clonal band present in all isolates, cells from the patient with stage IE disease clearly showed a polyclonal population of RS cells. Our findings indicate that HD arising in the setting of IBD or chronic inflammation is the result of an Epstein-Barr virus-driven lymphoproliferation, analogous to that found in other immunodeficient states. Disordered immunoregulation inherent to CD and immunosuppressive therapy for the latter may contribute to its development. The finding of polyclonal RS cells in a patient with early stage disease and apparent cure by surgical resection versus monoclonal RS cells in the patient with disseminated disease suggests that HD in the setting of immunodeficiency also may show molecular progression, in a manner similar to that occurring in conventional B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders arising in the same setting.
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ranking = 0.4
keywords = lymphoma
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10/169. Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma associated with acquired ichthyosis.

    Anaplastic, CD30( ), large-cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a subtype of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma that accounts for 2% to 8% of all lymphomas. Its most common form is a classical systemic type, which involves multiple nodal and extranodal sites, including the skin. Malignant lymphoproliferative disorders, especially Hodgkin's disease, are known rarely to be associated with acquired ichthyosis, whereas only 1 case of ALCL has been reported to be associated with acquired ichthyosis. We describe a 74-year-old Japanese man with ALCL, involving lymph nodes and the skin, who exhibited acquired ichthyosis. The clinical and histopathologic findings were recorded, and immunophenotyping, T-cell receptor (TCR), and immunoglobulin gene rearrangement were determined. Clinically, right axillary and bilateral inguinal lymph nodes were palpable. The cutaneous eruptions were multiple pinkish and yellow colored, up to thumb-sized nodules, some of which were ulcerated. Histologically, the right axillary lymph node showed proliferation of anaplastic large cells in the paracortical and sinusoidal areas. Both the lymph node and skin showed pleomorphic proliferation of lymphoid cells with a mixture of mononuclear cells having oval, embryo-shaped, reniform, and lobulated nuclei, binucleated Reed-Sternberg-like cells, and multinucleated cells, with giant anaplastic and wreath-shaped nuclei. immunophenotyping of the neoplastic cells revealed that they were positive for CD30 (Ber-H2), CD15 (Leu-M1), CD45 (LCA), and CD45RO (UCHL-1). Southern blot analysis demonstrated clonal rearrangement of the TCR beta region. In contrast, no novel bands were detected with the immunoglobulin heavy chain JH probe. Several months after the detection of the axillary nodes, an ichthyosiform, scaly eruption developed over almost the entire body of the patient. Histologically, it showed orthokeratotic, slight hyperkeratosis of the epidermis without a granular layer or with only a single layer of cells in the granular layer. Several kinds of lymphoproliferative diseases are associated with acquired ichthyosis, including Hodgkin's disease, multiple myeloma, and lymphomatoid papulosis. This is the second case report of acquired ichthyosis associated with ALCL. Although a common pathomechanism is suspected of underlying the development of acquired ichthyosis in these diseases, it is still unexplained.
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ranking = 1.6
keywords = lymphoma
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