A 15-year-old Boy With Primary Maxillary Bone Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase-positive Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Relapsed With Rib Metastasis After Spontaneous Remission Of A Maxillary Bone Lesion: A Case Report And Literature Review
Aizawa, K., Yamazaki, F., Shima, H., Kurosawa, T., Ishikawa, T., Nakazawa, A., & Shimada, H. (2023). A 15-Year-Old Boy with Primary Maxillary Bone Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase-Positive Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma Relapsed with Rib Metastasis after Spontaneous Remission of a Maxillary Bone Lesion: A Case Report and Literature Review. Case reports in oncology, 16(1), 308–314. https://doi.org/10.1159/000530459
View Original Source →Abstract
Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a rare form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) in children, accounting for 10-15% of all NHL cases. ALCL is currently classified as follows: systemic anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive, systemic ALK-negative, primary cutaneous, and breast implant-associated ALCL. In children, systemic ALK-positive ALCL is the most common, and patients often present with extranodal involvement. We report a rare case of systemic ALK-positive ALCL with primary bone involvement in a 15-year-old male patient. Primary bone lymphoma is most commonly observed in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and is extremely rare in systemic ALCL. Therefore, the clinical features and prognosis of primary bone ALCL remain unclear. Our patient had spontaneous remission of primary maxillary bone ALCL after gingival scraping but relapsed 12 months later with rib metastasis. Spontaneous remission of ALCL has been reported frequently in primary cutaneous ALCL and rarely in systemic ALCL. Our case demonstrates for the first time that systemic ALCL can also present as solitary bone involvement that can spontaneously remit. Because systemic ALCL is aggressive and has a risk of relapse, as in our case, it is important to consider ALCL in the differential diagnosis of primary bone lesions and to make a precise pathological diagnosis.
Case Details
Disease Location
Maxillary bone
Personal Characteristics
15-year-old male
Clinical Characteristics
Left-sided chest pain lasting longer than 4 weeks. CT and MRI revealed bone destruction and a dark mass in the left fifth rib. 12 months prior to admission: diagnosed with buccal cellulitis, maxillary sinusitis, and periapical periodontitis at the root of the left maxillary first molar and second premolar treated with antibiotics for 14 days. Head CT scan showed a left maxillary lesion with bone destruction. Intraoperative findings revealed that the buccal bone of the maxillary first and second premolars was deficient, the gingival granulation tissue of the defect was scraped, and no bone removal or drilling was performed. Inflammatory cells were identified in the pathological specimens.
Remission Characteristics
A second CT scan 8 months after maxillary bone scraping, revealed normal findings
Treatment & Mechanisms
Clinical Treatment
Biopsy fo the maxillary bone antiboitcs
Non-Clinical Treatment
None reported