| Literature DB >> 19669223 |
Katalin Kelemen1, Wendy Cao, Loann C Peterson, Andrew M Evens, Daina Variakojis.
Abstract
Primary mediastinal large B cell lymphoma (PMLBCL) is a subtype of diffuse large B cell lymphoma arising in the mediastinum with distinctive clinical and morphological features. Though diffuse large B cell lymphoma is one of the most common non-Hodgkin lymphoma associated with AIDS, there are no data available regarding the association of HIV and PMLBCL. We report here two cases of PMLBCL arising in AIDS patients. In both cases, PMLBCL presented in a setting of low CD4 T-cell count as rapidly enlarging mediastinal mass. The morphologic and immunophenotypic findings are characteristic of PMLBCL. One of the two patients, a 25-year-old woman who had localized disease and evidence of Epstein-Barr virus in lymphoma cells, did not respond to chemotherapy and died of disease progression 5 months after diagnosis. The second patient, a 38-year-old male with disseminated disease, responded to therapy and is disease-free after 9 months of follow-up.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19669223 PMCID: PMC2713493 DOI: 10.1007/s12308-009-0022-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematop ISSN: 1865-5785 Impact factor: 0.196
Fig. 1Chest CT of Case 1 reveals a 13.7 × 9.2-cm superior mediastinal mass, multiple left pleural masses ranging from 2.4–2.7 cm, a 1.6-cm left upper lobe lung nodule, and bilateral pleural effusions
Fig. 2Pathologic examination of Case 1 shows varying degrees of compartmentalizing fibrosis associated with lymphocytic infiltrate. The infiltrating cells are mostly large with irregular and convoluted vesicular nuclei, 1–3 visible nucleoli, and moderate cytoplasm. The tumor cells are strongly positive for CD20. EBER in situ hybridization is positive in approximately 30% of the tumor cells
Fig. 3Chest X-ray of Case 2 shows an abnormal cardiomediastinal silhouette caused by a large left-sided mediastinal mass extending within the superior hemithorax medially. In addition, large left-sided pleural effusion is present, and several nodular opacities are noted in the left lung
Fig. 4Microscopic sections of Case 2 show dense lymphoid infiltrate composed of large lymphoid cells with abundant pale cytoplasm, pleomorphic nuclei which form clusters and rounded nests surrounded by delicate fibrous bands. Frequent mitoses, including atypical mitotic forms are present. By immunohistochemistry, the tumor cells are positive for CD20, CD30, and Bcl-6. EBER in situ hybridization was negative
Comparison of the clinical features of Case 1, Case 2, and the case reported by Milling et al. 2004
| Case #1 | Case #2 | Case reported by Millings et al. 2004 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age/sex | 25/Female | 38/Male | 29/Female |
| Presentation | Shortness of breath, cough, chest pain | Shortness of breath, fever, night sweats | Fever, night sweats and cough |
| Duration of HIV+ status | 1 year | 7 years | 12 years |
| Prior therapy for HIV | Azathyoprine | None | None |
| CD4 count at presentation | 152/μL | 140/μL | 316/μL |
| LDH at presentation | 379 IU/L (high) | 886 IU/L (high) | 542 IU/L (high) |
| Stage of disease | Stage IV | Stage IV | Not stated |
| Bone marrow involvement | Negative | Negative | Negative |
| Extramediastinal involvement | Pleural masses, pleural effusions, left lung nodule | Pleural effusion, left lung nodules, multifocal abdominal and acetabular masses | None |
| Therapy received | HAART, 3 cycles of EPOCH then VP-16, ifosfamide, ARA-C, mesna | HAART, 6 cycles of Rituxan-Hyper CVAD | 1 cycle of CHOP and G-CSF |
| Outcome | Death 5 months after diagnosis | No detectable disease after 9 months follow-up | Death 6 days after chemotherapy |