Spontaneous Remission In Diffuse Large Cell Lymphoma: A Case Report
Snijder, J., Mihyawi, N., Frolov, A., Ewton, A., & Rivero, G. (2019). Spontaneous remission in diffuse large cell lymphoma: a case report. Journal of medical case reports, 13(1), 28. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13256-018-1937-z
View Original Source →Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spontaneous remission in solid malignancies has been documented. However, spontaneous remission in aggressive diffuse large b cell lymphoma is exceedingly rare. Previous reports of lymphoma remission suggest that not yet fully characterized tumor-intrinsic and microenvironment mechanisms cooperate with spontaneous regression. CASE DESCRIPTION: Here, we report the case of an 88-year-old white woman with diffuse large b cell lymphoma (follicular lymphoma transformed) who achieved morphologic spontaneous remission 3 months after her diagnostic core biopsy. We examined 16 similar cases of diffuse large b cell lymphoma suggesting that spontaneous remission is preferentially observed in elderly patients soon after their biopsy microtrauma, especially if malignancies are Epstein-Barr virus driven and activated B-cell type. CONCLUSION: Our case and reported analysis highlight that anti-tumor adaptive T cell responses are potentially augmented in a subset of patients leading to lymphoma regression. In these patients, it is possible that "primed" innate anti-tumor T cell immunity is enhanced in immunogenic lymphoma subtypes after tissue biopsy. Our case and analysis not only reinforce the role of innate T cell anticancer immunity, but also originates potential proof of concept for investigation of unexplored pathways that could favorably impact T cell therapy.
Case Details
Disease Location
Lymph nodes
Personal Characteristics
88-year-old white woman with a history of vascular dementia and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (ipf)
Clinical Characteristics
Presented with a 4.5 cm left-sided level iii anterior cervical lymph node. CT-guided core needle biopsy showed b cells of follicular origin, admixed with high-grade large cells. PET-CT revealed single uptake above the clavicle on the left side.
Remission Characteristics
Three months later, during a routine follow-up examination, it was noted that the lymph node had completely regressed
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
Biopsy related
Clinical Treatment
Biopsy
Non-Clinical Treatment
None reported