Literature DB >> 22989822

Clinical features of 66 lymphoma patients presenting with a fever of unknown origin.

Jing Zhang1, Bobin Chen, Xiaoping Xu, Zhiguang Lin, Bo Huang, Jing Song, Guowei Lin.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the clinical characteristics, diagnostic approaches, short-term efficacy of treatment and prognosis of lymphoma patients presenting with a fever of unknown origin (FUO).
METHODS: We reviewed the records of 132 patients finally diagnosed with lymphoma in Huashan Hospital, half of whom initially presented with a FUO. The other 66 lymphoma patients without a history of FUO were diagnosed within a month when several patients in the FUO group were also diagnosed.
RESULTS: The patients presenting with a FUO were predominantly young men (71.21%, p=0.35) characterized by a temperature ≥ 39°C (55/66, 83.33%). Compared with the non-FUO group, patients in the FUO group more often had pancytopenia and hypohepatia, 61.54% with hypoalbuminemia (p<0.0001), 15.50% with significantly elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) (p<0.0001), 92.45% with elevated serum β(2) microglobulin (p=0.017), 93.48% with elevated urine β(2) microglobulin (p=0.002) and 30.77% with elevated alkaline phosphatase (p=0.001). Ninety-four percent of the FUO patients had aggressive lymphomas (p=0.012), with a poor performance status (96.97%, p=0.003), stage III/IV disease (96.97%, p<0.0001), night sweats (21.21%, p=0.026), unexplained weight loss (46.97%, p=0.002) and more than one extranodal site involved (65.15%, p=0.002). The patients in the FUO group also showed poor prognoses, and most of them were in the high-intermediate or high risk classification of the disease (96.61%, p<0.0001), with a low complete remission (CR) rate (61.11% vs. 93.75%, p=0.043). Twenty-one (15.91%) of all the patients were diagnosed based on the finding of lesion sites by Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography (PET/CT) scanning, which had not been detected by conventional scans.
CONCLUSION: Lymphoma presenting as FUO has a rapid progression and poor prognosis, and is difficult to diagnose. PET/CT scans can provide complementary information for an etiological diagnosis of a FUO and biopsy examinations are significant to establish an early diagnosis for patients presenting with a FUO.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22989822     DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.51.7817

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Intern Med        ISSN: 0918-2918            Impact factor:   1.271


  4 in total

Review 1.  Optimal use of the FDG-PET/CT in the diagnostic process of fever of unknown origin (FUO): a comprehensive review.

Authors:  Ryogo Minamimoto
Journal:  Jpn J Radiol       Date:  2022-07-04       Impact factor: 2.374

2.  Clinical characteristics and prognostic factors of lymphoma patients initially presenting with fever of unknown origin.

Authors:  Min Wu; Fulati Wulipan; Jiexian Ma; Wensi Qian; Shunrong Sun; Pingping Chen; Yu Xu; Mingyue Chen; Wenjing Yang; Yanhui Xie; Lin Shen
Journal:  Am J Transl Res       Date:  2022-04-15       Impact factor: 3.940

3.  Cutaneous B cell lymphomas: Report of two interesting cases.

Authors:  Ravichandran Gurumurthy; Ranjan Kumar Mohapatra; Jose M Easow; Subhashini Mohan
Journal:  Indian J Dermatol       Date:  2015 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.494

4.  Lymphomas diagnosed in an internal medicine department compared to lymphomas diagnosed in other departments: Clinical and outcome differences.

Authors:  Benoit Pernot; Emmanuel Gyan; François Maillot; Penelope Hodges; Marjan Ertault; Nicole Ferreira-Maldent
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2018-11       Impact factor: 1.889

  4 in total

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