Osteoporosis is frequently seen in systemic mastocytosis. Although diphosphonate therapy has been shown to be transiently effective, therapy options for this form of osteopenia are very limited. We have treated three patients with systemic mastocytosis and osteopenia successfully with interferon alpha-2b. Two patients had urticaria pigmentosa and two severe back pain due to vertebral compression fractures. All patients received a daily interferon dose of 3 x 5 mio units/week s.c. for a period of 6 months. Therapy was well tolerated, and back pain resolved in both patients. A marked decrease of mast cell numbers in the bone marrow and a significant increase of bone mineralization and bone density was observed in all patients. Our data suggest that alpha interferon may be a new treatment option for osteopenia in systemic mastocytosis.
High-dose chemotherapy, especially for bone marrow transplantation, causes a great degree of immunosuppression, and thus carries the risk for invasive fungal infections. Although hepatic and splenic involvement in disseminated candidiasis is frequent, involvement of these organs is rarely appreciated antemortem. During the last decade, focal hepatosplenic candidiasis has been recognized increasingly by ultrasound. We report the sonographic and clinical findings of 6 patients: 3 AML (acute myeloid leukemia), 2 NHL (non-Hodgkin's lymphoma), and 1 HD (Hodgkin's disease) who demonstrated multiple, small-nodule, hypoechoic lesions in spleen and/or liver after high-dose chemotherapy. All patients were in complete hematologic remission when the study was performed. Septic fever was unresponsive to antibiotic therapy. Granulocytopenia (< or = 1000/mm3) was seen for at least 10 days. However, the manifestation of hepatolienal microabscesses became apparent by ultrasound only after the neutrophil count returned to normal in all but 1 patient. Microabscesses decreased or disappeared on follow-up examination after antifungal treatment. Systemic candida infection was confirmed serologically. Sonographic-guided abscess biopsy (n = 3) revealed necrosis/abscess. Structural inhomogeneity of parenchymal organs was seen for several months after therapy.
Between 1980 and 1993, 680 patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) and Hodgkin's disease (HD) were studied by ultrasonography. In 210 patients a total of 254 extranodular abdominal lymphoma infiltrates were diagnosed. Infiltrates were confirmed histologically in 118 patients and through the clinical course and follow-up studies in 92 patients. Lymphoma infiltrates were seen most frequently in the spleen (n = 101), the gastrointestinal tract (n = 70), the liver (n = 47), the kidneys (n = 17) and other organs (n = 19). The sonographic features of lymphomatous infiltrates in different extranodal sites are described, and possible correlations between lymphoma subtypes and sonographic texture characteristics are investigated. Different infiltration patterns of lymphoma subtypes could be identified in liver and spleen. High-grade NHLs most frequently showed large-nodular lesions, whereas low-grade NHLs and HD showed a tendency towards small-nodular or diffuse lesions. The role of ultrasonography in the clinical management of lymphoma patients is discussed.
A case is described of a 71 year old woman with scirrhous breast cancer and multiple hypoechogenic lesions in the spleen. The patient was treated successfully by mastectomy and splenectomy. Morphologic examination of the spleen showed a primary, centroblastic-centrocytic, low grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Eight months after splenectomy the patient still remains in complete remission.
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