| Literature DB >> 25806130 |
Khaled Youssef Elbanna1, Saeed Al-Shieban2, Fahad Azzumeea1.
Abstract
Primary non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the common bile duct is extremely rare. We present a case with history of inflammatory bowel disease and clinical manifestations of obstructive jaundice. Abdominal magnetic resonance imaging with magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) was done and demonstrated tight stricture at the middle part of common bile duct, and radiological findings were supportive of extra-hepatic cholangiocarcinoma. Whipple's procedure was performed and the case was histopathologically proven to be non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of follicular subtype involving the common bile duct. Lymphoma of the hepatobiliary system is usually present as secondary manifestation of systemic malignant lymphoma. However, primary malignant lymphomas arising from the hepatobiliary tree are extremely rare. The radiological appearance of common bile duct lymphoma is very similar to cholangiocarcinoma, making preoperative diagnosis very difficult, as in our present case. We also compare the imaging findings of our case to those seen in reported cases of follicular lymphoma of the common bile duct.Entities:
Keywords: Cholangiocarcinoma; common bile duct; lymphoma; magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography
Year: 2014 PMID: 25806130 PMCID: PMC4286821 DOI: 10.4103/2156-7514.148267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Imaging Sci ISSN: 2156-5597
Figure 171-year-old male with obstructive jaundice secondary to CBD lymphoma. (a) Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) coronal projection demonstrate 2.3 cm tight stricture at the mid-CBD (white arrows) with severe upstream dilatation. (b and c) Non-contrast MRI upper abdomen axial T1- and T2-weighted images show circumferential mural thickening at the area of maximum stenosis with intermediate signal intensity (black arrows).
Figure 271-year-old male with obstructive jaundice secondary to CBD lymphoma. Contrast-enhanced MRI with axial post-contrast T1-weighted images at different levels: (a) at the level of the hepatic duct bifurcation, shows severe bilobar intrahepatic biliary dilatation (short white arrows); (b) at the level of the junction of the markedly dilated proximal CBD (curved white arrow) and the stenotic segment (straight white arrow); (c) at the level of mid-CBD stricture show that the lesion enhances homogeneously (white arrow); (d) at the level of distal CBD shows the normal caliber of the CBD within the pancreatic head (black arrow).
Figure 3Histological sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H and E) (a) low-power view, (×25) shows nodules of lymphoid cells (white arrows) surrounding the common bile duct (dotted white arrows). (b) medium-power view, (×200) shows the nodules with a mix of neoplastic centrocytes and centroblasts. Immunochemical tests (c) shows the neoplastic lymphoid cells are positive for CD20 marker and (d) the cells are positive for CD10 marker.
Reported cases of primary follicular lymphoma of the common bile duct