Introduction: There is little information in the literature on the early, sub-clinical stage and laboratory test results in patients with primary mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma of the lung, a rare disease.

Case Description: In a 75-year-old man, an open lung biopsy-confirmed diagnosis of primary pulmonary lymphoma was preceded by almost six months of anaemia of inflammatory disease and monocytosis without any pulmonary symptoms. When he developed a dry cough, increasing dyspnoea and marked weight loss, these changes deepened and became associated with reactive thrombocytosis; markedly increased ferritin and C-reactive protein (positive acute-phase reactants), as well as reduced albumin and transferrin (negative acute-phase reactants). Globulins increased, due to an increase in the alpha1, alpha2 and gamma fractions, and mild hyponatraemia developed due to the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) secondary to the intrathoracic disease. All these changes were completely reversible following successful treatment and complete remission.

Conclusion: The previously unreported detailed laboratory features of early, sub-clinical and advanced primary pulmonary lymphoma are presented. When a potentially susceptible patient develops an unexplained anaemia of inflammatory disease, primary pulmonary lymphoma should be added to the differential diagnosis.

Learning Points: B-cell pulmonary lymphoma without extra-pulmonary disease (primary pulmonary lymphoma) remains a rare entity, often arising from mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue, presenting with non-specific symptoms (cough, dyspnoea) and imaging (nodules <5 cm or areas of consolidation on CT), and diagnosed by an adequate biopsy.Our patient's course demonstrates early, pre-clinical changes: anaemia of inflammation and monocytosis, which became more severe as symptoms developed and imaging abnormalities progressed, and was associated with marked acute-phase response (for example, substantially increased ferritin levels), increased globulins and hyponatraemia due to the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion.In patients with unexplained anaemia of inflammatory disease, occult pulmonary lymphoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11716307PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12890/2024_004997DOI Listing

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