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Spontaneous Remission Of Epstein-barr Virus-positive Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma Of The Elderly

Mizuno et al., 2013Lymphoma

Mizuno, T., Ishigaki, M., Nakajima, K., Matsue, T., Fukushima, M., Minato, H., Nojima, N., Atsushi, S., Ishigami, K., Atsumi, H., Ito, T., Iguchi, M., Usuda, D., Okamura, H., Urashima, S., Asano, M., Fukuda, A., Izumi, Y., Takekoshi, N., & Kanda, T. (2013). spontaneous remission of epstein-barr virus-positive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma of the elderly. Case reports in oncology, 6(2), 269–274. https://doi.org/10.1159/000345572

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Abstract

A 94-year-old female patient presented with anorexia and left axillar lymphadenopathy on admission. Her past history was angina pectoris at 83 years of age and total gastrectomy due to gastric cancer at 87 years. The family history revealed that her son had had a malignant lymphoma, the histopathological diagnosis of which was diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. A physical examination showed both cervical, axillar, and inguinal lymphadenopathy without tenderness. She had elevated lactate dehydrogenase, ferritin, and soluble interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R). Whole-body computed tomography confirmed the cervical, axillary, and inguinal lymphadenopathy. Gallium-68 imaging revealed positive accumulation in these superficial lymph nodes. A right inguinal lymph node biopsy showed features of Epstein-Barr virus-associated lymphoproliferative disorder. Immunohistological studies on this lymph node biopsy showed CD20-positive large cells, CD3-positive small cells, and CD30-partly-positive large cells. In situ hybridization showed Epstein-Barr virus-positive, LMP-partly-positive, and EBNA2-negative cells. She refused chemotherapy as her son had died from hematemesis during chemotherapy. She received intravenous hyperalimentation for 1 month after admission. No palpable lymph nodes were identified by physical examination or computed tomography 3 months after admission, and regression of lactate dehydrogenase, ferritin, and sIL-2R was observed. She recovered from anorexia and was discharged. She died from pneumonia 10 months later after initial symptoms of anorexia. The autopsy showed no superficial lymphadenopathy.

Case Details

Disease Location

Lymph nodes

Personal Characteristics

94 -year-old female past history was angina pectoris at 83 -year-old and total gastrectomy due to gastric cancer at 87 years family history revealed that her son had had a malignant lymphoma which was diagnosed as dlbcl, he died of hematemesis during chemo

Clinical Characteristics

Ebv positive dlbcl presented with anorexia and left axillaryyy lymphadenopathy physical exam and CT showed cervical, axillaryy, and inguinal lymphadenopathy without tenderness, gallium-68 imaging revealed positive accumulation in both cervical and axillaryy lymph nodes. Two right inguinal lymph nodes specimens measured 20x11x8mm and 10x7x5mm were excised of these two specimens, atypical large lymphoid cells were found with chromatin-rich nuclei and small-sized cells ihc showed CD20 positive large cells, CD3 positive small cells and CD30 partly positive large cells ebv was positive, lmp partly positive she refused chemo. She returned to the clinic 3 months later she died of pneumonia 10 months after initial symptoms of anorexia she had elevated ferritin, sil-2r, and ldh. These titers decreased gradually over the 10 months after admission

Remission Characteristics

3 months after admission, physical and CT were unable to detect any palpable lymph nodes, regression of soluble interleukin-2 receptors, ferritin, and circulating ldh was observed

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Sufficient nutrition may have helped immunosenescence recover in this case immunomodulation

Clinical Treatment

Excisional biopsy

Non-Clinical Treatment

None reported