| Literature DB >> 22719215 |
Matthew K Steehler1, Mark W Steehler, Steven P Davison.
Abstract
Benign lymphoepithelial cysts are a widely recognized cause of parotid gland swelling in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). These cysts are pathognomonic for HIV. The cysts frequently grow to be exceptionally large, causing physical deformity and gross asymmetry of facial contour. This clinical commentary analyzes this cosmetically deforming disease entity and the many treatments that accompany it. The patient presented in this paper is a surgical case-control. The case is a microcosm for our findings upon review of the literature. Treatment options for benign lymphoepithelial cysts include repeated fine-needle aspiration and drainage, surgery, radiotherapy, sclerotherapy, and conservative therapy, with institution of highly active antiretroviral therapy medication. Based on this surgical case-control and our review of the literature, it is concluded that surgical intervention offers the best cosmetic result for these patients.Entities:
Keywords: benign lymphoepithelial cyst; cosmetic surgery; head and neck surgery; human immunodeficiency virus; parotid; parotidectomy
Year: 2012 PMID: 22719215 PMCID: PMC3377388 DOI: 10.2147/HIV.S27755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HIV AIDS (Auckl) ISSN: 1179-1373
Figure 1Patient with HIV BLEC of the left parotid gland.
Notes: Patient is status postsuperficial parotidectomy on the right side 6 years ago (complete resolution). Patient routinely wears multiple accessories daily to distract others from her obvious facial lesion (32-year-old patient, May 2010).
Abbreviation: BLEC, benign lymphoepithelial cyst.
Advantages and disadvantages of treatment for benign lymphoepithelial cysts of the parotid gland as well as treatment duration and cost of treatment
| Advantages | Disadvantages | Length of treatment | Estimated cost of treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HAART therapy | Noninvasive Standard of care for HIV Partial response | Incomplete response | ≥3 months | $1250/month |
| FNA drainage | Minimally invasive Avoids radiation | 100% recurrence rate Multiple treatments | ≤2×/month | $450/procedure |
| Radiation therapy | Noninvasive Avoids needle stick injuries | Therapeutic doses of radiation (24 Gray) Side effects include xerostomia, skin necrosis, mucositis Incomplete response | 3 weeks | $17,600 total |
| Sclerotherapy | Minimally invasive Avoids radiation | Multiple treatments Varying degrees of drug toxicities ranging from rash to pulmonary fibrosis Incomplete response Fibrosis makes future surgery more difficult | 1–4 procedures | $450/procedure |
| Surgery | Complete response Cosmetically superior Avoids radiation | General anesthesia 23-hour observational stay in hospital 2–6-hour invasive procedure Surgical scar Surgical complications hematoma (7%), facial nerve injury (2.3%–6%), Frey’s syndrome (5%), recurrence (2%) | One surgery | $8000 total |
Abbreviations: FNA, fine-needle aspiration; HAART, highly active antiretroviral therapy; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.
Treatment of benign lymphoepithelial cysts: review of the literature
| Resource | Modality | Amount/drug | Design | Sample | Follow-up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Syebele and Bütow | HAART | Stavidune | Retrospective | 10 patients | 3 months | 90% of patients with “significant response” |
| Monama and Tshifularo | Sclerotherapy | Bleomycin (180–270 U) | Retrospective | 3 patients | 12–15 months | 3/3 resolution |
| Heran and Legiehn | Sclerotherapy | OK-432 (0.25 KE, 0.5 KE) | Retrospective | 1 patient | 12 months | 1/1 “No clinically significant recurrence” |
| Meyer et al | Sclerotherapy | Alcohol (1/2 volume of cyst) | Unblinded Prospective | 11 patients | 5.7 months | 10/11 patients “happy” with results |
| Marcus and Moore | Sclerotherapy | Sodium morrhuate (50 mg/mL to 3 mL) | Retrospective | 4 patients (6 cysts) | 2.5 months | 6/6 reduction in size |
| Berg and Moore | Sclerotherapy | Sodium morrhuate (50 mg/mL, 4 mL) | Retrospective | 9 patients | Not specified | 5/9 additional cyst formation |
| Lustig et al | Sclerotherapy | Doxycycline (1 mg/mL, 2 mL) | Prospective | 8 patients (9 cysts) | 12–17 months | 7/9 reduction in size |
| Echavez et al | Sclerotherapy | Tetracycline (250 mg/2 mL) | Retrospective | 3 patients | 14–36 months | 3/3 resolution |
| Beitler et al | Radiotherapy | 24 Gray | Retrospective | 19 patients | 23 months | 13/19 with adequate cosmetic control |
| Beitler et al | Radiotherapy | 8–10 Gray | Retrospective | 12 patients | 9.5 months | 1/12 with adequate cosmetic control |
| Goldstein et al | Radiotherapy | 8–10 Gray | Retrospective | 8 patients | One month | 5/8 complete response |
| Shaha et al | Surgery | Superficial parotidectomy | Retrospective | 35 patients | Up to 6 years | Complete response |
| Ferraro et al | Surgery | Enucleation | Retrospective | 10 patients | 3–36 months | One recurrence |
Note: Cost data based on clinical/hospital data pooled from respective authors’ places of practice based on unilateral parotid lesion.
Figure 2Patient 6 weeks postoperatively after left superficial parotidectomy. A similar result can be seen as compared to the right side. Facial contour and symmetry has been restored with excellent cosmetic outcome.