250 likes | 898 Views
Castleman's Disease: a case study. Hematology/Oncology Grand Rounds November 8, 2002Shao-Chun Chang. History. 35-year-old healthy man until July 8, 2002Sharp, intense right flank and back pain with radiation to groinGross hematuriaNausea and vomitingNo constitutional Sx, no neuro Sx, no other pain, no other GU Sx, no HIV risk factorsNo PMHxPE: RLQ mass with guarding without rebound.
E N D
2. Castleman’s Disease:a case study Hematology/Oncology Grand RoundsNovember 8, 2002
Shao-Chun Chang
3. History 35-year-old healthy man until July 8, 2002
Sharp, intense right flank and back pain with radiation to groin
Gross hematuria
Nausea and vomiting
No constitutional Sx, no neuro Sx, no other pain, no other GU Sx, no HIV risk factors
No PMHx
PE: RLQ mass with guarding without rebound
4. Laboratory CBC normal without cytopenia and normal indicies and differential
Chemistry normal
Urine positive for RBC
5. Radiology Initial workup for nephrolithiasis
IVP showed effacement of bladder secondary to a pelvic mass
CT of abdomen/pelvis
7.8 x 5 cm mass in right pelvis
Enlarged mesentery and inguinal lymph nodes
Mild right hydronephrosis and hydroureter
6. Additional Laboratory LDH normal
SPEP
Polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia
Small M-spike in beta region (~0.2 g/dl), IgA lambda
Beta2-microglobulin normal
AFP normal, HCG normal
HHV8 negative, HIV negative
7. Pathology Cervical and inguinal biopsy
Chronic reactive lymphoid hyperplasia
Pelvic mass biopsy
Angiofollicular lymphoid hyperplasia, plasma cell variant
Flow cytometry showed polyclonal T and B cell populations
8. Staging Bone marrow biopsy was non-diagnostic
PET scan
Uptake to the right pelvic mass and regional lymph nodes consistent with CT
No distant uptake
Exploratory Laparotomy
Unresectable pelvic mass encasing the IVC and right iliac artery and vein
Right ureter stent placement
9. Castleman’s Disease Angiofollicular lymphoid hyperplasia
Giant lymph node hyperplasia
Angiomatous lymphoid hamartoma
Lymph nodal hamartoma
Lymph node hyperplasia of Castleman
10. Castleman’s Disease First described by Benjamin Castleman
“Localized mediastinal lymph-node hyperplasia resembling thymoma” Cancer (1956), 9:822-830
“A series of thirteen cases of mediastinal masses resembling thymoma grossly and microscopically are shown to be a peculiar form of lymph-node hyperplasia characterized by germinal-center formation and marked capillary proliferation.”
“Evidence is presented that the condition is neither neoplastic nor thymic in origin.”
11. Angiofollicular Lymphoid Hyperplasia
12. Castleman’s Disease: Eitology Unknown
Reactive chronic lymphoid hyperplasia (Hyaline-vascular type)
Inflammatory pathogensis (Plasma-cell type)
Chronic antigenic stimulation (infection)
Autoimmune mechanism
Overproduction of IL-6
Association with HHV8 in 25% multicentric form
HIV?
13. Castleman’s Disease Keller, AR, Hoghholzer, L, and Castleman, B, Cancer (1972), 29:670-683
Case study of 81 patients
All had localized disease
Two distinct histologic patterns
Hyaline-vascular type: 74 cases (91%)
Plasma-cell type: 7 cases (9%)
Age: 8- to 66-years-old
No gender or race preference
14. Castleman’s Disease: Anatomical Location
15. Castleman’s Disease: Anatomical Location
16. Angiofollicular Lymphoid Hyperplasia: Hyaline-Vascular Type Small follicle center with penetrating capillaries
Interfollicular tissue with small lymphocytes
Effacement of lymphoid sinsus
17. Angiofollicular Lymphoid Hyperplasia: Plasma-Cell Type Large cellular follicle center
Interfollicular tissue with sheets of plasma cells
Effacement of lymphoid sinsus
18. Castleman’s Disease: Multicentric Histopathologic features of plasma-cell type
Clinical presentation as a predominantly lymphadenopathic disease, consistently involving multiple peripheral nodes
Evidence of multisystem involvement
Idiopathic
19. Castleman’s Disease: Clinical Symptoms Hyaline-vascular type (localized)
Asymptomatic, except for tumor compression
Plasma-cell type (localized)
+/- Systemic symptoms
Plasma-cell type (multicentric)
By definition with systemic symptom +multisystem involvement
20. Multicentric Castleman’s Disease: Clinical Symptoms System symptoms (95%)
Malaise 81%
Fever 71%
Weight loss 58%
Night sweats 48%
Anorexia, nausea 42%
Multicentric LAD (100%)
Peripheral 100%
Abdomen 53%
Mediastinum 47% Splenomegaly 79%
Hepatomegaly 63%
Skin rashes 37%
Neurological Sx
Central 24%
Peripheral 5%
Kaposi’s sarcoma 13%
NHL 18%
21. Multicentric Castleman’s Disease: Laboratory Anemia 89%
Mild (10-13 g/dL) 27%
Moderate-severe (<10 g/dL) 73%
Leukopenia 21%
Thrombocytopenia 61%
Elevated ESR 95%
Hypergammaglobulinemia 85%
Hypoalbuminemia 100%
Abnormal liver tests 69%
Proteinuria 83%
22. Castleman’s Disease: Prognosis and Treatment Hyaline-vascular type
Prognosis good
Surgical resection
Plasma-cell type, localized
Prognosis good
Curable with local therapy (surgery or radiation)
23. Castleman’s Disease: Prognosis and Treatment Plasma-cell type, multicentric
Unpredictable course (medium survival of 29 months)
Cause of death: 70% infection and 30% others (malignancies, progressive Castleman’s disease, renal failure)
Surgical resection
Radiation
High dose steroids (1-2 mg/kg/d prednisone)
Combination chemotherapy (NHL)
Anti-IL-6 antibodies