| Literature DB >> 25664189 |
Mark Ashamalla1, Marita S Teng2, Joshua Brody3, Elizabeth Demicco4, Rahul Parikh5, Kavita Dharmarajan6, Richard L Bakst6.
Abstract
We are reporting a case of a 62-year-old African American woman with a history of gastric MALT lymphoma successfully treated with radiation who presented with a laryngeal MALT lymphoma 4 years after her original diagnosis. She received definitive radiation with a complete response. The case presented is unique for the rare presentation of a MALT lymphoma in the larynx, especially in light of the patient's previously treated gastric MALT lymphoma years ago.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25664189 PMCID: PMC4312623 DOI: 10.1155/2015/109561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Hematol ISSN: 2090-6579
Figure 13D conformal radiation therapy of MALT lymphoma of the stomach. Dose distribution in the saggital (a), axial (b), and coronal (c) planes. Black line represents the 36 Gy isodose line.
Figure 2Laryngeal MALT lymphoma. (a) A 3 cm mass arising from the right aryepiglottic fold obscuring view of the right vocal cord on fiberoptic examination (red arrow). (b) PET/CT demonstrates a PET-avid exophytic mass arising from the right false cord (red arrow). (c) Immunohistochemistry: high power view (40x) anti-CD20, anti-CD43, and H&E: dense lymphocytic infiltrate and scattered small reactive-appearing follicles are seen surrounded by diffuse sheets of neoplastic marginal zone cells.
Figure 33D conformal radiation therapy of MALT lymphoma of the larynx. Dose distribution in the saggital (a), axial (b), and coronal (c) planes. Yellow line represents the 30 Gy isodose line.
Figure 4Complete response following radiation therapy. The mass (red arrow) present on CT-based imaging performed at diagnosis (a) has resolved 3 months following radiation (b) and there is no corresponding PET avidity (c).
Characteristics of the English-language reported cases of supraglottic laryngeal lymphomas from 1997 to 2014.
| Study | Age at presentation | Gender | Symptoms at presentation | Treatment | Disease status | Follow-up (mo) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhao et al., 2012 [ | 35 | F | Hoarseness | 2 cycles CHOP, 27 Gy | NED | 3 |
| Markou et al., 2010 [ | 67 | M | Hoarseness, stridor, dyspnea | Immediate tracheostomy, CHOP | NED | 48 |
| Gonzàlez et al., 2009 [ | 42 | F | Cough, dysphonia | RT | NED | 96 |
| Arndt et al., 2007 [ | 34 | F | Hoarseness | Doxycycline, FCR regimen | NED | 6 |
| Fujita et al., 2007 [ | 64 | M | Hoarseness | CHOP-R | NED | 18 |
| Kania et al., 2005 [ | 46 | M | Dysphonia | Co2 laser excision, Omeprazole, Amoxicillin, Clarithromycin | NED | 24 |
| Caletti et al., 2003 [ | 57 | M | Hoarseness | Anti- | NED | 46 |
| Cheng et al., 1999 [ | 58 | F | Hoarsness and foreign body sensation | 30 Gy | NED | 12 |
| de Bree et al., 1998 [ | 36 | F | Hoarseness | Debulking and 28 Gy | NED | 24 |
| Kato et al., 1997 [ | 54 | F | Dysphonia | CHOP and RT, lung: surgery and RT | NED | 35 |
CHOP: cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunorubicin, vincristine, prednisone.
CHOP-R: cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunorubicin, vincristine, prednisone, rituximab.
FCR: fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, rituximab.
NED: no evidence of disease.
SOB: shortness of breath.
mo: months.
RT: radiotherapy.
Gy: gray.