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Complete remission of a primary effusion lymphoma with antiretroviral therapy

โœ Scribed by Oksenhendler, Eric; Clauvel, Jean-Pierre; Jouveshomme, Stephane; Davi, Frederic; Mansour, Georges


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
278 KB
Volume
57
Category
Article
ISSN
0361-8609

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โœฆ Synopsis


lymph node involvement with rt ureter compression that required a stent insertion. Brain CT showed a suprasellar lesion involving the diencephalic and chiasmatic regions (Fig. 1a). The patient was treated with CdA (2 hr-infusion of 0.14 mg/kg die ร— 7 days) and Dexamethasone (0.3 mg/kg die ร— 4 days). Therapy was well tolerated without significant hematologic toxicity (WHO G4 leukopenia duration, 3 days; no thrombocytopenia). Partial regression of the liver, kidney, and lymph node involvement and complete regression of the brain lesions (Fig. 1b) were documented 1 month later by CT. The patient was discharged on May 24 with complete regression of the neurological symptoms. On June 13 she died from an acute cerebral vascular accident (CVA) of ischemic origin (brain CT not shown). In this patient, a single cycle of CdA induced complete regression of the brain lesion. CVA as a complication of therapy with CdA has not been reported; a relationship between treatment and the final event is unlikely.


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