| Literature DB >> 30046502 |
Geetha Jagannathan1, Guldeep Uppal1, Kevin Judy2, Mark T Curtis1.
Abstract
Cerebral amyloidomas are rare cerebral mass lesions often associated with significant morbidity. Cerebral amyloid accumulation can be the result of a number of disease states and it is crucial for proper patient care to identify the pathogenic process leading to amyloidoma formation. Low grade clonal B-cell processes are one cause of cerebral amyloidomas. We report a case of an 87-year-old woman who presented with a lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma associated cerebral amyloidoma complicated by cerebral hemorrhage, discuss the proper workup of this disease entity, and present a review of the literature on this topic.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30046502 PMCID: PMC6038588 DOI: 10.1155/2018/5083234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Pathol ISSN: 2090-679X
Figure 1MRI with contrast shows multifocal T2 hyperintense abnormalities with the largest focus in the right frontal lobe.
Figure 2(a) Abundant accumulation of parenchymal, vascular, and perivascular amyloid, hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification 100x. (b) Congo-red stain highlights the amyloid deposition in a parenchymal blood vessel that also shows perivascular lymphocytic infiltration, original magnification 200x. (c) Small intraparenchymal blood vessels with perivascular lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate, hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification 100x.
Figure 3(a) Perivascular infiltrate highlighting the lymphoplasmacytic appearance of the cells, hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification 600x. (b) Immunohistochemical stain for CD20 highlights a perivascular infiltrate of B-cells, original magnification 200x. (c) and (d) Positive staining of the tumor cells for lambda light chains but not for kappa light chains signifies lambda light chain restriction, in situ hybridization, original magnification 200X.
(a) Presentation, treatment, and outcome of primary CNS mature B-cell lymphomas presented as an amyloidomas published in literature
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| (1) Lehman et al. [ | 63F | Focal sensory seizure- trigeminal neuralgia and mild right sided hearing loss | 3 years | Dural, frontal lobe | Meningioma | Surgical resection of the largest mass, radiation therapy | 8 months- alive with disease, imaging showed no change in the size of the amyloid mass | Primary CNS Marginal zone lymphoma |
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| (2) Pace et al. [ | 46F | Seizures | Acute onset | Left frontal lobe | Oligodendroglioma or metastasis | Surgical resection only | 24 months- no evidence of disease | Primary CNS lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma |
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| (3) Tu et al. [ | 49 M | Seizures | NR | Dural, left frontal | NR | Methotrexate, recurrence treated with fludarabine | 7.6 years- Recurrence at 4 months, No evidence of disease after treatment with fludarabine | Primary CNS Marginal zone lymphoma |
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| (4) Tu et al. [ | 62F | Ataxia | NR | Dural, left occipital | NR | Radiation | 25 months- No evidence of disease | Primary CNS Marginal zone lymphoma |
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| (5) Our case | 87F | Left sided weakness | 6 months | Right frontal lobe | Lymphoma, vasculitis, or sarcoidosis | Rituximab, status post 1st cycle | 2 months- patient developed hemorrhagic stroke | Low grade B-cell lymphoma with plasmacytic differentiation |
NR: not reported; ND: not done.
(b) Diagnostic testing performed on the primary CNS mature B-cell lymphomas presented as an amyloidomas published in literature
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| (1) Lehman et al. [ | MRI- isointense on T1 and hyperintense on T2 | Intracerebral and vascular amyloid deposition, CD 20+ B cells and plasmacytoid cell infiltrates, CD138+ plasma cells | Kappa | Normal | NR | SPEP and UPEP- normal, | ND |
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| (2) Pace et al. [ | MRI- isointense on T1, hypointense on T2 | Intracerebral and vascular amyloid deposition, CD 20+ B cells and plasmacytoid cell infiltrates, CD138+ plasma cells | Kappa | Normal | Ruled out by serum amyloid P component scan | SPEP- normal, normal serum free kappa, free lambda and kappa: lambda ratio | ND |
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| (3) Tu et al. [ | NR | Amyloid deposition, CD20 + B cell infiltrates | Kappa | NR | NR | NR | Trisomy 3 positive, Negative for MALT1 and IgH translocation |
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| (4) Tu et al. [ | NR | Amyloid deposition, cyclin D1-, CD20 + B-cell infiltrates | Kappa | NR | NR | NR | Trisomy 3 positive, Negative for MALT1 and IgH translocation |
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| (5) Our case | MRI-T2 hyperintense | Intraparenchymal and perivascular amyloid deposition (AL subtype). CD20+, CD3-, CD5-, BCL1-, CD23- plasmacytoid lymphocytes and CD138+ plasma cells | Lambda | Normal | Ruled out by abdominal fat biopsy | Normal serum free kappa, free lambda and kappa: lambda ratio | MYD88 L265P mutation analysis was negative |
NR: not reported; ND: not done.