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AIDS-related Primary Pulmonary Lymphoma
69
Citations
27
References
1998
Year
Lymphoid NeoplasiaMedicineMultiple Pulmonary NoduleImmunologyPathologyLymphomatous Pulmonary InvolvementPrimary Pulmonary LymphomaPulmonary MedicineLymphatic DiseasePulmonary BlastomaHivChronic Viral InfectionChest RadiographyLung CancerRadiology
We describe 12 cases of AIDS-related primary pulmonary lymphoma occurring between 1986 and 1996 in a large French cohort of HIV-infected patients. Diagnostic criteria were: (1) histologically proven lymphomatous pulmonary involvement; (2) absence of mediastinal and/or hilar adenopathy on chest radiography; (3) absence of extrathoracic lymphoma extension. All patients were severely immunodeficient at the time of diagnosis. All but one patient presented with B and/or nonspecific respiratory symptoms. Chest radiography showed one or more marginated nodule(s) or large mass. CT scan showed a cavitary lesion in five patients. No lymph node enlargement or specific pleural effusion was detected. Transthoracic needle biopsies were performed in 10 patients and avoided open-lung biopsy for the diagnosis of lymphoma in five patients. All but one of the primary pulmonary lymphoma were high-grade B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Using antilatent membrane protein-1 antibodies and an Epstein-Barr-Virus-encoded RNA transcript-specific probe, latent EBV infection of tumor cells was demonstrated in every case. All but one of the patients received chemotherapy. The median survival time was 4 mo, and no patient was still alive at the cut-off date for this analysis. Progessive pulmonary lymphoma was the main cause of death, but infections were also frequent.
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