| Literature DB >> 25159097 |
Antonio Di Meglio1, Pier Vitale Nuzzo, Francesco Ricci, Bruno Spina, Francesco Boccardo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pelvic lymph nodes removed during radical retropubic prostatectomy for prostatic cancer can be found on pathological examination to harbor various unexpected pathologies. Among these, hematologic neoplasms are not infrequent. Given their frequently indolent clinical course, such neoplasms would likely have remained undiagnosed and non-life threatening. Despite this, the case we are reporting describes a rare association between two aggressive neoplasms, and it will be helpful to clinicians who encounter similar combinations of pathologies. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25159097 PMCID: PMC4152584 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-14-613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Adenocarcinoma of the prostate, Gleason 10. Hematoxylin and eosin stained photomicrographs (10x magnification) showing: (A) poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of the prostate (Gleason score 5 + 5 = 10); (B) disease extension into seminal vesicles; (C) tumor vascular invasion; and (D) presence of multifocal embolic perineural tumor.
Figure 2Infiltration of Hodgkin lymphoma within lymph nodes. Photomicrographs of (A) malignant Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cell showing (B) negative staining for CD45; (C) positive staining for CD30; and (D) positive staining for CD15.
Figure 3FDG PET scan images before and after treatment. (A) Staging FDG PET scan image showing nodal disease on both sides of the diaphragm with enhanced metabolic activity in the spleen and skeleton. (B) End of treatment: FDG PET image showing no residual disease.
Published reports of incidental concurrent findings during RRP and lymph node dissections for PCa
| Authors and year | Number of radical prostatectomies (Number of lymph node dissections performed) | Total number of concurrent hematolymphoid malignancies (Overall incidence) | Encountered Hematolymphoid malignancy | Treatment required for hematologic malignancy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Donohue | 225 (N.A.) | 3 (1.2%) | Lymphoma NOS | N.A. |
| Terris | 1092 (all patients) | 13 (1.2%) | 3 HL | Pelvic and abdominal external beam irradiation |
| 1 HCL | Aggressive tp NOS | |||
| 1 CLL | No tp | |||
| 6 SLL | No tp | |||
| Eisenberger | 4319 (all patients) | 10 (0.2%) | 8 Lymphocytic lymphoma | Single-agent CT |
| 2 FL | N.A | |||
| Winstanley | 1001 (854) | 15 (1.8%) | 2 SLL/CLL | N.A. |
| 3 neoplastic (0.003%) | 1 FL | N.A. | ||
| 12 Non-neoplastic findings1 | N.A. | |||
| Weir | 6143 (all patients) | 18 (0.3%) | 18 SLL/CLL | N.A. |
| He | 1500 (1150) | 13 (1.13%) | 9 SLL/CLL | N.A. |
| 3 MZL | N.A. | |||
| 1 MCL | Aggressive CT NOS | |||
| Chu | 48313 (N.A.) | 29 (0.6%) | 18 incidental cases | N.A. |
| 13 SLL/CLL | N.A. | |||
| 3 MZL | ||||
| 1 MCL | ||||
| 11 concurrent known lymphoma2 | ||||
| 4 SLL/CLL | ||||
| 4 FL | ||||
| 2 MCL | ||||
| 1 DLBCL | ||||
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| Carson H | 1 SLL/CLL | N.A | ||
| Mydlo | 1 lymphoma NOS | N.A | ||
| Drinis | 1 SLL/CLL | No tp | ||
Abbreviations used: NOS not otherwise specified, tp therapy, N.A. not available, CT chemotherapy, HL Hodgkin lymphom, HCL hairy cell leukemia, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, SLL small lymphocytic lymphoma, MZL marginal zone lymphoma, MCL mantle cell lymphoma.
1Including sinus histiocytosis, non-caseating granulomas, foreign body reactions.
2Prostate and pelvic lymph nodes involved as part of a systemic disease.
3Specimens were from 3405 biopsies, 266 transurethral resections, and 1160 prostatectomies.
Figure 4Seminal vesicle infiltration by adenocarcinoma of the prostate (Hematoxylin/Eosin and CD44 staining). (A,C) Hematoxylin and eosin stained photomicrographs showing left seminal vesicle infiltration by poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of the prostate (10× and 40× magnification, respectively) (B,D) Photomicrographs showing positive CD44 staining of left seminal vesicle and negative staining CD44 staining of adenocarcinoma of the prostate (10× and 40× magnification, respectively).