We found that both histopathologic classification (ISN/RPS criteria) and histopathologic grading (US National Institutes of Health activity and chronicity indices) correlate to some clinical manifestations of LN. Considering these correlations may help to determine the patients' clinicopathologic status, prognosis and the need to immediate treatment. Nevertheless, it is necessary to clarify the accuracy of these findings in larger-scale prospective studies.
TAFRO syndrome is a new presentation of idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease which is termed as thrombocytopenia, anasarca, myelofibrosis, renal failure and organomegaly (TAFRO). The exact pathophysiology of TAFRO syndrome is unclear and management is mostly based on case reports and expert opinion. In this report, a 37 years old male patient with TAFRO syndrome is discussed. The patient was referred with fever, sweating, anorexia, abdominal distension and generalized edema which has been hospitalized multiple times for such complaints. The patient also developed skin lesions dispersed in red nodules, which was reported as "granuloid hemangioma". Renal biopsy suggested mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis and bone marrow specimen showed hypercellular active marrow with reticulin fibrosis. The lymph node biopsies were reported as Castleman disease. This report demonstrates that different manifestations of TAFRO syndrome may overlap with other syndromes and can be managed by Bortezomib and Tocilizumab.
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