| Literature DB >> 31645987 |
Anusha Shirwaikar Thomas1, Mary Schwartz2, Eamonn Quigley2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gastrointestinal (GI) lymphomas comprise a group of distinct clinicopathological entities of B- or T- cell type, with primary gastrointestinal Hodgkin lymphoma being extremely uncommon. The GI tract is the predominant site of extranodal non-Hodgkin lymphoma accounting for 30-40% of all extranodal lymphomas. In the Western world, the stomach is the most commonly involved site followed by the small bowel. Several chronic inflammatory and immune-mediated disorders which predispose to accelerated cell turnover may lead to the malignant transformation of gut lymphocytes and ultimately manifest as GI lymphoma. The challenge for the clinical gastroenterologist is that these tumors may have varied presentations, ranging from nonspecific symptoms such as dyspepsia or bloating to abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, GI bleeding, diarrhea, weight loss or bowel obstruction.Entities:
Keywords: gastric lymphoma; gastrointestinal neoplasia; gastrointestinal pathology
Year: 2019 PMID: 31645987 PMCID: PMC6782046 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgast-2019-000320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Gastroenterol ISSN: 2054-4774
Demographics, presenting features and clinical findings in 16 consecutive cases of gastrointestinal lymphoma
| Case | Gender | Clinical presentation | Endoscopy |
| 1 | Female | Dyspepsia | Antral ‘gastritis’, duodenitis |
| 2 | Male | Chronic diarrhoea | Multiple colonic polyps |
| 3 | Male | Positive stool DNA testing | Ulcerated mass at splenic flexure and ascending colon |
| 4 | Male | Food impaction, dysphagia | Clean-based gastric ulcers |
| 5 | Male | Melena | Fungating, ulcerated circumferential mass in the gastric fundus |
| 6 | Male | Gastric outlet obstruction | Fungating, infiltrative, ulcerated circumferential mass in gastric body |
| 7 | Female | Haematemesis | Large cratered necrotic duodenal ulcer |
| 8 | Male | Intussusception at terminal ileum (TI) | Partially obstructing mass at the ileocaecal valve |
| 9 | Male | Abdominal pain | Fungating, partially obstructing mass in ascending colon and caecum |
| 10 | Female | Epigastric pain | Patchy mild erythema in duodenum |
| 11 | Male | Haematochezia | 3 cm ulcerated non-obstructing polypoid mass in the terminal ileum |
| 12 | Female | Abdominal pain | Partially obstructing tumour in the caecum |
| 13 | Male | Abnormal abdominal imaging, anaemia | Partially obstructing mass at the ileocaecal valve |
| 14 | Female | Profound hypoalbuminaemia (malnutrition), anasarca | Mucosal changes in jejunum |
| 15 | Male | Severe anaemia, abdominal pain | Non-obstructing, circumferential, polypoid mass in the terminal ileum |
| 16 | Female | Iron deficiency anaemia | Large, ulcerated, non-obstructing mass at ileocaecal valve |
Figure 1(A) Partially obstructing mass at ileocecal valve. (B) High grade B cell lymphoma
Figure 2(A) Multilobulated ulcerated polypoid lesion at the ileocaecal valve. (B) A large fungating, polypoid, ulcerated, non-obstructing mass in the distal ileum
Figure 3(A) A caecal mass with adjacent lymphadenopathy on contrasted abdominal imaging. (B) Malignant appearing partially obstructing cecal tumor. (C) EBV positive Burkitt Lymphoma.
Figure 4Benign appearing colon polyps.
Figure 5(A) Large cratered necrotic duodenal ulcer. (B) Marked duodenal wall thickening on contrasted abdominal imaging. (C) Large B- cell lymphoma.
Figure 6(A) Mass in the gastric fundus on contrasted abdominal imaging. (B) Large, fungating, infiltrative mass in fundus. (C) Diffuse large B cell lymphoma.
Figure 7Non specific gastric erosions and duodenal bulb erythema.
Figure 8(A) Large gastric mass with direct invasion into left lobe of liver on contrasted abdominal imaging. (B) Fungating, ulcerated mass in gastric body. (C) Diffuse large B cell lymphoma.
Figure 9(A, B) Clean based antral and duodenal bulb ulcers. (C) MALT lymphoma.