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A systemic lymphoproliferative disorder with morphologic features of Castleman's disease: clinical findings and clinicopathologic correlations in 15 patients.
384
Citations
45
References
1985
Year
Liver Function TestsImmunologyPathologyFifteen PatientsSystemic Lymphoproliferative DisorderSurgical PathologyHematologyChronic Kidney DiseaseLymphoid NeoplasiaAutoimmune DiseaseHistopathologyClinicopathologic CorrelationsConstitutional SymptomsMorphologic FeaturesSclerodermaUrologyHepatologyGeneral PathologyLymphatic DiseaseMedicine
Fifteen patients (11 males, four females; median age 57) manifested a disease characterized by (1) the histopathologic features of Castleman's disease, plasma cell type, in lymph node biopsies; (2) predominantly lymphadenopathic disease, involving multiple, preferentially peripheral nodal groups; (3) varied manifestations of multisystemic involvement (such as constitutional symptoms; splenomegaly and hypergammaglobulinemia; elevated ESR, anemia, and thrombocytopenia; hepatomegaly and altered liver function tests (LFTs); signs of renal disease); and (4) idiopathic nature. Two main patterns of evolution were recognized: persistent, with sustained clinical manifestations, and episodic, with recurrent exacerbations and remissions. Seventy-three percent of patients had infectious complications, and 27% developed malignancies. Complete remissions were obtained occasionally with antineoplastic agents and with splenectomy but not with glucocorticosteroids alone. The median survival time is 30 months; 60% of patients have died. Median follow-up in the six surviving patients is 97+ months. A review of 50 cases in the literature revealed similar clinical and laboratory features. Despite some similarities with autoimmune diseases, the main features of this process seem to best fit a hyperplastic-dysplastic lymphoid disorder in a setting of immunoregulatory deficit.
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