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Case 3

History:

39 year old female with nose stuffiness

Findings:

T1 pre and post gadolinium show an axial showing an enhancing soft tissue lesion in the nasopharynx. T2 WI show the lesion to be mildly hyperintense in signal. Also noticed bilat parotid gland cysts. The patient also had bilateral neck nodes (not shown).

Diagnosis:

HIV patient with nasopharygeal lymphoma and parotid gland lymphepithelial cysts.

Discussion:

According to the Lymphoma Research Foundation of America (LRFA), approximately 30 percent of all AIDS patients contract lymphoma. Approximately 95 percent of HIV-1-associated lymphomas are considered to be of B-cell origin. In general, the clinical setting and response to treatment of patients with AIDS-related lymphoma is very different from that of the non-HIV patients with lymphoma. The HIV-infected individual with aggressive lymphoma usually presents with advanced-stage disease that is frequently extranodal. Common extranodal sites include bone marrow, liver, meninges, and gastrointestinal tract, while very unusual sites are also characteristic, including anus, heart, bile duct, gingiva, and muscles. The clinical course is more aggressive, and the disease is both more extensive and less responsive to chemotherapy. Immunodeficiency and cytopenias, common in these patients at the time of initial presentation, are exacerbated by the administration of chemotherapy. Treatment of the malignancy increases the risk of opportunistic infections that, in turn, further compromises the delivery of adequate treatment.

References:

  • Ziegler JL, Beckstead JA, Volberding PA, et al.: Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 90 homosexual men. Relation to generalized lymphadenopathy and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. N Engl J Med 311 (9): 565-70, 1984
  • Rabkin CS, Yellin F: Cancer incidence in a population with a high prevalence of infection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J Natl Cancer Inst 86 (22): 1711-6, 1994.
  • Simonelli C, Spina M, Cinelli R, et al.: Clinical features and outcome of primary effusion lymphoma in HIV-infected patients: a single-institution study. J Clin Oncol 21 (21): 3948-54, 2003.
  • Nador RG, Cesarman E, Chadburn A, et al.: Primary effusion lymphoma: a distinct clinicopathologic entity associated with the Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus. Blood 88 (2): 645-56, 1996