Title: Castlemans Disease: a case study
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2Castlemans Diseasea case study
- Hematology/Oncology Grand RoundsNovember 8, 2002
- Shao-Chun Chang
3History
- 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
4Laboratory
- CBC normal without cytopenia and normal indicies
and differential - Chemistry normal
- Urine positive for RBC
5Radiology
- 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
6Additional 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
7Pathology
- 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
8Staging
- 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
9Castlemans Disease
- Angiofollicular lymphoid hyperplasia
- Giant lymph node hyperplasia
- Angiomatous lymphoid hamartoma
- Lymph nodal hamartoma
- Lymph node hyperplasia of Castleman
10Castlemans Disease
- First described by Benjamin Castleman
- Localized mediastinal lymph-node hyperplasia
resembling thymoma Cancer (1956), 9822-830 - 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.
11Angiofollicular Lymphoid Hyperplasia
Sickel, J, NEJM (Sept 1995)
12Castlemans 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?
13Castlemans Disease
- Keller, AR, Hoghholzer, L, and Castleman, B,
Cancer (1972), 29670-683 - 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
14Castlemans Disease Anatomical Location
Location No. () Neck 5
(6) Mediastinum 70 (86) Anterior-superior 2
5 (31) Middle 3 (4) Posterior 15
(19) Left hilum 9 (11) Right hilum 15
(19) Not specified 3 (4) Intrapulmonary
2 (2) Axilla 1 (1) Retroperitoneal
1 (1) Pelvis 1 (1)
15Castlemans Disease Anatomical Location
Size (greatest diameter) No. () lt 2
cm 1 (1) 2-2.9 cm 4 (5) 3-4.9
cm 25 (31) 5-9.9 cm 42 (52) 10-16 cm
9 (11)
16Angiofollicular Lymphoid Hyperplasia
Hyaline-Vascular Type
- Small follicle center with penetrating
capillaries - Interfollicular tissue with small lymphocytes
- Effacement of lymphoid sinsus
Hoffman Hematology
17Angiofollicular Lymphoid Hyperplasia Plasma-Cell
Type
- Large cellular follicle center
- Interfollicular tissue with sheets of plasma
cells - Effacement of lymphoid sinsus
Hoffman Hematology
18Castlemans 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
19Castlemans 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
20Multicentric Castlemans 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
- Kaposis sarcoma 13
- NHL 18
21Multicentric Castlemans Disease Laboratory
- Anemia 89
- Mild (10-13 g/dL) 27
- Moderate-severe (lt10 g/dL) 73
- Leukopenia 21
- Thrombocytopenia 61
- Elevated ESR 95
- Hypergammaglobulinemia 85
- Hypoalbuminemia 100
- Abnormal liver tests 69
- Proteinuria 83
22Castlemans Disease Prognosis and Treatment
- Hyaline-vascular type
- Prognosis good
- Surgical resection
- Plasma-cell type, localized
- Prognosis good
- Curable with local therapy (surgery or radiation)
23Castlemans 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 Castlemans disease,
renal failure) - Surgical resection
- Radiation
- High dose steroids (1-2 mg/kg/d prednisone)
- Combination chemotherapy (NHL)
- Anti-IL-6 antibodies
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