| Literature DB >> 23056972 |
Erik K Mayer1, Shabnam Undre, Daniel C Cohen, Marjorie M Walker, Justin A Vale, Anup Patel.
Abstract
Bladder lymphomas are rarely primary tumours and more commonly associated with systemic lymphoma, either as nonlocalised bladder lymphoma or as secondary bladder lymphoma. Primary bladder lymphomas (PBL) tend to be low-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) type, contrasting with diffuse large cell or follicular centre cell types more commonly seen in secondary bladder lymphoma. Bladder involvement by systemic lymphoma infers poor prognosis and patients often have no localising symptoms (typically a postmortem diagnosis). Other treatments are preferred over surgery for all bladder lymphomas, except where diagnosis is uncertain or for relief of irritative bladder symptoms. We describe a unique case of systemic high-grade B-cell lymphoma with simultaneous cutaneous renal and bladder lesions at presentation.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23056972 PMCID: PMC3465867 DOI: 10.1155/2012/480826
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
Figure 1(a) Scalp nodules as seen at presentation. (b) MRI demonstrating an extensive mixed signal, soft tissue mass, over the vertex of the skull. There is infiltration through the inner and outer tables of the skull vault and extension into the dural membranes.
Figure 2(a) Urine cytology demonstrates a cluster of atypical lymphoid cells. (b) Biopsy of bladder tumour showing infiltration of the transitional epithelium and lamina propria by atypical B lymphocytes (CD20 positive on immunohistochemistry).