| Literature DB >> 27957358 |
Mehmet Akce1, Elaine Chang1, Mohammad Haeri2, Mike Perez2, Christie J Finch2, Mark M Udden1, Martha P Mims1.
Abstract
Plasmablastic lymphoma (PBL) is a rare subtype of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL), often associated with HIV infection. We present a case of a 53-year-old HIV-negative man with untreated hepatitis C viral infection who presented with abdominal pain and lymphadenopathy. Lymph node and bone marrow biopsies were consistent with plasmablastic lymphoma. He had partial response (PR) to 6 cycles of EPOCH but disease progressed seven weeks later. Repeat biopsy was consistent with plasmablastic lymphoma. Three cycles of bortezomib, ifosfamide, carboplatin, and etoposide (B-ICE) chemotherapy resulted in a partial response (PR). Five months later, he presented with widespread lymphadenopathy and tumor lysis syndrome with circulating blasts. Flow cytometry revealed a different population of lymphoma cells, this time positive for CD5, CD19, CD20, and CD22, with dim expression of CD45 and CD38. The patient died on the first day of ESHAP chemotherapy. There are no treatment recommendations or standard of care for plasmablastic lymphoma. A literature search yielded 10 cases in which bortezomib was administered in either HIV-positive or HIV-negative PBL. Six reported a partial response, 3 reported a complete response, and 1 was a near-complete response. Bortezomib, in combination with chemotherapy, may be an effective treatment option in PBL as reported here.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27957358 PMCID: PMC5124468 DOI: 10.1155/2016/3598547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Hematol ISSN: 2090-6579
Figure 1(a) Plasmablastic lymphoma, with immunoblastic morphology, involving the bone marrow. (HE stain) (b, c) the neoplastic cells are positive for CD138 and MUM-1 respectively, indicating the plasma cell origin of this neoplasm. (d) The neoplastic cells are positive for CD30. (e) Strong and homogenous staining with Ki-67 indicating a high proliferation index. (f) The neoplastic cells are negative for CD5. Few, scattered T cells staining positive for CD5 are identified.
Figure 2(a) CT without contrast. Pretreatment lymph node (∗) is 2 cm. (b) CT with contrast. Posttreatment lymph node on a comparable level is not visible.
Figure 3(a) CT without contrast. Pretreatment lymph node (X) is 2.1 cm. Orange circle is IVC. (b) CT with contrast. Posttreatment lymph node on a comparable level is not visible.
Figure 4(a) Flow cytometry, side scatter versus CD45, demonstrates a large, atypical lymphocyte population shifted into the blast/myeloid gate. (b) CD19 versus CD20 evaluation identifies a CD19/CD20 positive B lymphocyte population. (c) Surface kappa light chain restriction is indicative of monoclonal B lymphocyte population. (d) The neoplastic B cells are positive for CD19 and CD5. The previous plasmablastic neoplasm identified in this patient was CD20 and CD5 negative.
Figure 5Timeline of clinical course.