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Combine Conference (8, Jan. 07’ ). Case report Reporter :NS R2 洪培恩 R3 吳孟庭. Case 1. 方 X , 68 Y/O, male ID: 001876582H Admission date: 95/12/12 ~ Chief complaint: Progressive weakness of R't side limbs and dizziness with falling down accident for 5 days. History.
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Combine Conference (8, Jan. 07’) Case report Reporter :NS R2 洪培恩 R3 吳孟庭
Case 1 • 方X, 68 Y/O, male • ID: 001876582H • Admission date: 95/12/12 ~ • Chief complaint: Progressive weakness of R't side limbs and dizziness with falling down accident for 5 days
History • Personal Hx: Smoking 1PPD for 30 years Past Hx: Hypertension for 10+ years • He was brought to 台大雲林分院 and brain MRI on 95/12/11 revealed L't parietal and frontal tumor lesion, suspected metastatic tumor. • Visit our NS OPD, Cons’ alert, MP:R‘t side limbs,Gr 2 • Admission for further evaluation and treatment
Neurologic Examination • Consciousness: E4V5M6 • Pupil: R/L: 3.0/3.0 without light reflex • Babinski sign: bilateral no response • No R-L disorientation, no dysphagia • Increased DTR, MP- RUE/RLE:Gr 2/2 • CN: intact • Sensory function: intact
LaboratoryData Date Na (mEq/l) K (mEq/l) Cre (mg/dl) Ca(mg/dl) 144 4.1 0.7 8.6 Date WBC (/cumm) Hb (g/dl) Platelet (/cumm) Neu (%) Lym (%)15000 13.0 187K 81.4 11.5Tumor markersAFP 1.32 ng/ml CA-199 13.30 Unit/mlCEA 2.78 ng/ml SCC < 0.3 ng/mlFree-PSA 0.57 ng/ml
Image study • CxR: Slight prominent bil. hilar regions • Sono,Abdomen: non-significant finding • Chest CT(contrast) on 12/14: Bullous formation in left upper lung, small subpleural infiltration in both lowers Small lymphadenopathy in subaortic region of mediastinum
Operation(mass effect and for diagnosis) • 2006/12/18 Left F-T-P craniotomy with removal of tumor under Brainlab navigator • OP finding Gray brown soft tissue mass was found about 3 and 5 cm in size over left frontal and parietal region, respectively • Froxen section:high grade malignancy
Post op course • Seizure episode x 1 (Depakene level: 39.9 ug/ml) • Biopsy report: Peripheral T-cell lymphoma, unspecified. • Consult CCRT WBRT(2000cGy/8fr.) start on 12/27 • For complete lymphoma staging CT,abdomen: No abnormal LAPs in the abdomen Gallium scan: Increased uptake in the bil. pul. Hili • Bone marrow examination: not representative, No lymphoma is seen
Further treatment • Rehabilitation • Suggest chemoport placement and systemic chemotherapy
Final diagnosis • Peripheral T-cell lymphoma with CNS metastasis
Peripheral T Cell Lymphoma • They represent 7% of all cases of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. • T-cell prolymphocytic leukemia a high white blood cell count, usually characteristic prolymphocytic morphology, and expression of surface CD3 with either CD4 or CD4 and CD8 • T-cell large granular lymphocytic leukemia most often CD3, CD8, CD57, and TIA-1 expression. • aggressive NK-cell leukemias, and • adult T-cell lymphoma/leukemia..
Clinical Characteristics • Median Age, years : 61 y/o • B Symptoms, % : 50% • Bone Marrow Involvement, % : 36% • Gastrointestinal Tract Involvement, % : 15% • % Surviving 5 years : 25%
Diagnosis • Mostly CD4+, but a few will be CD8+, both CD4+ and CD8+, or have an NK cell immunophenotype. • No characteristic genetic abnormalities have yet been identified, but translocations involving the T cell antigen receptor genes on chromosomes 7 or 14 may be detected. • human T-cell lymphoma/leukemia viruses I and II (HTLV-I and HTLV-II), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and human herpesvirus 8 (HHV-8) sequences as previously described. • The neoplastic nature of a T-cell infiltrate is established by histologic features in combination with failure to determine an inflammatory cause and demonstration of monoclonality of T-cell receptor genes.
Immunohistochemistry • Indirect biotin-avidin method --detect the antigens. • Monoclonal antibodies used in the tests were for detecting CD20, CD30, and anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) ; CD3, CD4, CD8, CD56, CD57, Ki-67, granzyme B, pancytokeratin, and glial fibrillary acidic protein and TiA-1.
Stage evaluation of patient • Physical examination • Documentation of B symptoms • Laboratory evaluation • Complete blood counts • Liver function tests • Uric acid • Chest radiograph • Calcium • Serum protein electrophoresis • Serum B2-microglobulin • CT scan of abdomen, pelvis, and usually chest • Bone marrow biopsy • Lumbar puncture in lymphoblastic, Burkitt's, and diffuse large B cell lymphoma with positive marrow biopsy • Gallium scan (SPECT) or PET scan in large-cell lymphoma
Treatment • Treatment regimens are the same as those used for diffuse large B cell lymphoma, but patients with peripheral T cell lymphoma have a poorer response to treatment.