Lymphoma
From IDWiki
Classification
- Hodgkin lymphoma (15%)
- Non-hodgkin lymphoma
- B-cell lymphoma
- Aggressive
- Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) (30%)
- Burkitt lymphoma (1-2%)
- Indolent
- Mantle cell lymphoma (5%)
- Follicular lymphoma (25%)
- Marginal cell lymphoma (5-10%)
- Small lymphocytic (5-10%)
- Lymphoplasmacytic/Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia (1-2%)
- Aggressive
- T-cell lymphoma
- Angioimmunoblastic (3%)
- Anaplastic large cell (2%)
- Peripheral T-cell lymphoma NOS (5%)
- Mycosis fungoides / Sezary syndrome (5%)
- B-cell lymphoma
Stages
- I: 1 node
- II: nearby mets (on same side of diaphragm)
- III: distant mets (on other side of diaphragm)
- IV: liver/spleen
- -B: constitutional symptoms, such as weight loss >10% in 6 mo, fevers, night sweats
Risk Factors
- Autoimmune disorders
- Celiac disease
- Sjogren syndrome
- Crohn disease
- Chronic viral infections
- HIV HCV HTLV1 EBV
- Chronic bacterial infections
- H pylori
- Immunocompromised
- Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders
Investigations
- Labs
- Lymph node or tisue biopsy, ideally excisional
- Bone marrow aspiration and biopsy
- CBC + blood film
- Liver panel, creatinine, SPEP, hemolytic workup, LDH
- Hep B, Hep C in preparation for chemo
- HIV, as a secondary cause of lymphoma
- HTLV-1, as a secondary cause of ATLL in Caribbean patients
- Imaging
- CT H&N C/A/P for staging
- PET-CT
- At diagnosis, for DLBCL and HL
- After treatment, for DLBCL and HL
Management
- Establish diagnosis with tissue biopsy
- Staging with CT C/A/P + neck +/- PET scan
Complications
- Tumour lysis syndrome
- Increased risk with Burkitt's, DLBCL, and bulky disease
- Prophylaxis with allopurinol 300mg po daily
- Treat with allopurinol or rasburicase
- Mass effect
- Treat with prednisone