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Cytologically Yours: CoW: 20131202

Revision as of 20:09, 14 January 2014 by Stephanie Simmons (talk | contribs)

Contents

Clinical Summary

The patient is an 60 year old male with a remote history of an abdominal melanoma that was excised with negative margins. The patient has been experiencing lower back pain for the past several months and has received epidural injections. As a part of the workup, the patient had a CT which revealed retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy. A CT guided fine needle aspiration and biopsy of a paracaval lymph node was performed.

Past Medical History

  • 2003 Melanoma
  • Diabetes
  • Hypertension

Past Surgical History

  • 2013 Arthroscopic knee surgery
  • 2003 Excision of melanoma
  • 2002 Discectomy


Clinical Plan

The differential diagnosis for otherwise asymptomatic lymphadenopathy in this patient is melanoma, lymphoma, or occult malignancy.

Radiology

  • PET CT showed hypermetabolic activity with an SUV of 12.7.
  • CT of abdomen and pelvis showed adenopathy adjacent to the aorta and inferior to the vena cava at the level of the right kidney. The largest node measured 4 cm in greatest dimension.

CT

Pathology

Cytology

Resident Questions


Biopsy

Immunohistochemistry

Resident Questions
Click here to toggle the diagnosis and case discussion.

Final Diagnosis

Cytology

  • Positive for malignancy, the differential diagnosis includes melanoma and Hodgkin lymphoma.

Biopsy

  • Classical Hodgkin lymphoma, favor mixed type.

Case Discussion

This is a classic case of prostatic adenocarcinoma, metastatic to the spine.