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Intrathoracic Rosai-dorfman Disease With Spontaneous Remission: A Clinical Report And A Review Of The Literature

Noguchi et al., 2012Other/Unknown

Noguchi, S., Yatera, K., Shimajiri, S., Inoue, N., Nagata, S., Nishida, C., Kawanami, T., Ishimoto, H., Sasaguri, Y., & Mukae, H. (2012). Intrathoracic Rosai-Dorfman disease with spontaneous remission: a clinical report and a review of the literature. The Tohoku journal of experimental medicine, 227(3), 231–235. https://doi.org/10.1620/tjem.227.231

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Abstract

Rosai-Dorfman disease (RDD), also known as sinus histiocytosis with massive lymphadenopathy, is a rare non-neoplastic disease that is characterized by a proliferation of histiocytes mostly in lymph nodes. However, the etiological mechanism of RDD still remains unclear. Intrathoracic manifestations of RDD are only observed in 2% of patients with RDD. Spontaneous remission was reported in about 20% of patients with RDD; however, there are no reports of an intrathoracic manifestation of RDD that showed a spontaneous remission within a short period of time. A 64-year-old Japanese female with dry cough and left chest pain was introduced to our hospital, and computed tomography revealed a pulmonary nodular lesion and enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes. The bronchial specimen obtained from the abnormal mucosal lesion showed massive infiltration of histiocytes underneath the bronchial epithelium and emperipolesis, a typical pathological finding in RDD, which is characterized by the presence of histiocyte-like cells engulfing intact lymphocytes. These histiocytes were positive for S-100 (one of the known positive markers of RDD) and for CD68 (a marker for various cells of the macrophage lineage). All these findings are consistent with the diagnosis of RDD. These radiological and endoscopic findings spontaneously resolved within four months without any treatment. In conclusion, clinicians should be aware of this disease as one of differential diagnoses of pulmonary nodules in combination with mediastinal lymph node enlargements, especially in order to differentiate it from primary lung cancer.

Case Details

Disease Location

Lung/ln

Personal Characteristics

64-year-old japanese female, surgical treatment of a left inguinal herniation when she was 63 years old. She had been treated essential hypertension and hyperlipidemia with telmisartan (40 mg/day), doxazosin mesilate (2 mg/day), acute myeloid leukemiaodipine besilate (5 mg/ day) since she was 58 years old

Clinical Characteristics

Dry cough and slight left chest pain in july of 2008. Pe was normal. Laboratory findings on admission demonstrated a slight elevation of the peripheral white blood cell count (9,800/μl) and serum c-reactive protein (2.6 mg/dl), and an increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (58.0 mm/hour). Chest x-ray showed a nodular opacity in the left lower lung field and an enlargement of the left hilum. CT of the chest revealed a pulmonary nodular lesion of 1.6 cm in size with spiculations in the left s9 with an enlargement of the subaortic and subcarinal lymph nodes. Bronchoscopic findings performed on the 6th day after admission proved a protruding lesion with a comparatively smooth surface on the bifurcation of the left lower lobe bronchus the specimen obtained from the bronchial mucosal lesion revealed massive histiocytic infiltration

Remission Characteristics

Spontaneously recovered without any treatment one months after admission, and disappeared after four months

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Not discussed

Clinical Treatment

Telmisartan, acute myeloid leukemiaodipine, doxazosine (for comorbilities)