| Literature DB >> 35059332 |
Uzma Khan1, Anton Borg2, Radu Beltechi3, Hiten Mehta4, Timothy Robbins1, Harpal Randeva1, Pratibha Machenahalli1.
Abstract
Non-Hodgkin lymphomas of the hypothalamus and pituitary are rare. They usually remain clinically silent until onset of compressive features affecting surrounding structures. When symptomatic, patients most commonly present with diabetes insipidus, headaches, ophthalmoplegia and/or bilateral hemianopia. We report a case of a 67-year-old Caucasian female with a history of B-cell lymphoma in complete remission. She presented with left oculomotor nerve palsy and was subsequently found to have a sellar/suprasellar mass lesion on MRI. Alongside hypocortisolism and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, she developed transient diabetes insipidus during her illness. Her clinical course was characterized by rapid intracranial progression of the sellar mass. MR spectroscopy suggested a diagnosis of lymphoma. Diagnostic biopsy confirmed high-grade diffuse large B-cell CNS lymphoma; this changed the definitive management from surgical excision to chemotherapy. Despite treatment, she succumbed to her illness within 7 months of initial presentation. This case highlights the aggressive nature of CNS lymphomas and the need for a high index of suspicion in an unusual presentation of sellar/suprasellar mass lesions. LEARNING POINTS: Novel imaging techniques such as MR spectroscopy might help to differentiate some brain tumours from pituitary macroadenomas, but these are not diagnostic.Tissue diagnosis with biopsy and histopathology is the gold standard for deciding management of pituitary fossa mass lesions with atypical presentation. © EFIM 2021.Entities:
Keywords: CNS lymphoma; Non-Hodgkin lymphoma; pituitary macroadenoma; sellar mass
Year: 2021 PMID: 35059332 PMCID: PMC8765684 DOI: 10.12890/2021_002980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Case Rep Intern Med ISSN: 2284-2594
Figure 1Baseline pituitary MRI with contrast (coronal and sagittal T1 FS) demonstrating a sellar mass measuring 14×12×11 mm with suprasellar extension without compression of the optic chiasm
Anterior pituitary function test results at baseline and 6 weeks
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Figure 2Head MRI with contrast (coronal T1 FS and sagittal T1 FLAIR) after 6 weeks demonstrating a significant increase in the size of the sellar-suprasellar mass now measuring 22×14×15 mm, with the largest portion lying in the hypothalamus, and evidence of impingement affecting both optic nerves and the optic chiasm