Popis: |
We describe a case of a 73-year-old male with a rare T-cell lymphoma that presented deceptively as progressive hepatic failure with fever, weight loss, pancytopenia, mental confusion, splenomegaly, and no lymphadenopathy. An alcoholic history supported the diagnosis of cirrhosis, but a liver biopsy was not performed. A bone marrow biopsy was considered unremarkable. Death occurred after a course of four months. Postmortem examination showed hepatic, splenic, lymph node, and marrow infiltration by characteristically sparse, isolated, bizarre, medium-to-large sized neoplastic cells with extensive hepatic centrilobular necrosis, steatosis, and predominant splenic involvement. Immunohistochemical markers indicated a T-cell lymphoma consistent with either an alpha/beta peripheral T-cell lymphoma or a gamma/delta lymphoma. Definitive immunotyping was not available. However, the pathologic features are most consistent with a gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma. This case is an example of a rare, rapidly progressive lymphoma, which is a recognized clinical entity, easily missed, and treatable. Its diagnostic consideration must be explicitly communicated to pathologists, because the isolated or sparse tumor cells in a lymph node, liver, or bone marrow biopsy may easily be mistaken for variants of megakaryocytes or histiocytes. |