| Literature DB >> 24260722 |
Jerry Liu1, Richard Bakst, Robert Phelps, Sundar Jagannath, Seth Blacksburg.
Abstract
We are reporting a case of a 75-year-old man with multiply recurrent IgA-lambda multiple myeloma status post multiple rounds of chemotherapy, autologous stem cell transplantation, and palliative radiation therapy for diffuse bone lesions. Approximately 15 years after original diagnosis, he developed secondary cutaneous plasmacytomas of the right arm, right chest wall, and right upper back over the course of several months. He underwent palliative involved field 3D conformal photon or en face electron therapy concurrently with various chemotherapy regimens and achieved good to complete response with palliation of pain at the irradiated sites. He died of complications related to his disease approximately 7 months after developing skin lesions. The case presented is unique for dermal involvement of myeloma treated with palliative involved field radiation.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24260722 PMCID: PMC3821948 DOI: 10.1155/2013/739230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Hematol ISSN: 2090-6579
Figure 1Secondary cutaneous plasmacytoma presenting as (a) nodularity on patchy violaceous background at dorsal surface of patient's right forearm. (b) Right forearm AP treatment field, as outlined in red, with (c) dosimetry shown on axial planning computed tomography image.
Figure 2Histopathologic features of biopsy from patient's right forearm lesion demonstrating: (a) neoplastic plasma cells infiltrating dermis with pleomorphic nuclei on Haematoxylin-Eosin staining, (b) strong lambda light chain staining, (c) lack of kappa light chain expression, and (d) strong staining for CD138 (plasma cell marker).
Figure 3Secondary cutaneous plasmacytoma presenting as (a) nodularity on violaceous background overlying Port-A-Cath on patient's anterior right chest wall. (b) Treatment positioning with outlined target and (c) en face field with custom block on simulation image. (d) Full resolution of lesions observed one month after treatment.