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1.
Indian J Cancer ; 2018 Apr; 55(2): 134-136
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-190334

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Skin is the second most common site for extranodal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Most primary cutaneous NHLs are of T-cell origin (70%). Primary cutaneous B-cell lymphoma (PCBCL) is a rare entity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients diagnosed with PCBCL between January 2012 and July 2017 at our center were retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS: Eight patients of PCBCL were diagnosed. Three patients (37.5%) were males while 5 patients (62.5%) were females. The median age at diagnosis was 45 years (range, 18–60 years). Scalp was the most common site of involvement (50% of the patients). Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) was the most common histology (63%), with leg-type DLBCL diagnosed in 1 patient. Two patients had primary cutaneous follicle center lymphoma, whereas the remaining 1 patient had precursor B-lymphoblastic lymphoma. All 5 DLBCL cases were treated with CHOP chemotherapy, and rituximab was given to 3 patients. Of the primary cutaneous follicle center lymphomas, 1 patient with stage II disease was treated with CHOP and is alive without recurrence for the past 5 years, whereas the other patient is on observation alone. The patient with precursor B-lymphoblastic lymphoma was started on MCP-841 protocol; however, the patient did not complete the treatment and died after 11 months. CONCLUSIONS: PCBCL is a heterogeneous group of diseases and dividing them into subtypes, based on morphology and immunophenotype, has therapeutic implications.

2.
Urology Annals. 2014; 6 (3): 231-234
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-152664

ABSTRACT

Primary testicular lymphoma constitutes 1-2% of Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas affecting elderly men >60 years of age. Most often it is a Diffuse large B cell lymphoma [DLBCL] and treatment involves multimodality approach involving surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Outcome remains poor in spite of aggressive therapy. We retrospectively reviewed 286 registered cases of DLBCL [aged >14 years] from 2007 to 2011 and found nine primary testicular involvement patients. These cases were analyzed for baseline clinical features, investigations, staging, treatment and outcome. Median age was 58 [46-76] years. All patients presented with testicular swelling, two had the presence of B symptoms, and three with abdominal lymphadenopathy. Six had stage IE disease and three patients had stage IIE. All patients underwent orchiectomy. Eight patients received combination chemotherapy and six completed three or more cycles. Four achieved complete response, among these three relapsed after 32, 42, 70 months and one was lost to follow up. Two had a progressive disease, among these one died of disease and one alive with disease. Complete follow up was available from five patients and median survival was 36 months [11-78 months]. Primary testicular DLBCL is uncommon, needs multimodality treatment and central nervous system prophylaxis to improve the survival. The outcome needs to be further investigated using biological approaches [Rituximab based] and/or more aggressive management

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