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934 Lymphomas
■MRI in selected cases, only useful in identifying bone or CNS involve-
ment
■FDG PET scan
➣provides functional rather than purely anatomic information
➣most useful in monitoring HD and aggressive NHL
Other
■Lumbar puncture (mandatory with certain NHL subtypes, such as
Burkitt’s, recommended with referable symptoms, or in patients with
high risk of CNS disease [see above])
differential diagnosis
■Benign etiologies of lymphadenopathy – infections, autoimmune
diseases (rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus), sar-
coid, medications (phenytoin)
■Metastatic carcinomas
■Lymph node biopsy used to differentiate lymphoma from carcinoma
or benign lymphadenopathies
management
■Therapeutic approaches to HD and NHL based on specific subtype,
stage of disease, prognosis and physiologic status of the patient
■HD and NHL subtypes identified according to updated WHO patho-
logic classification
➣HD – classic HD (nodular sclerosis and mixed cellularity) and
nodular lymphocyte predominance HD
➣NHL – most common entities include
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic lym-
phoma (SLL), plasma cell myeloma, follicular lymphoma (FL) –
indolent lymphomas with natural histories measured in years
Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), diffuse large B-cell lym-
phoma (DLBCL), Burkitt’s lymphoma, peripheral T-cell lym-
phomas (PTCL) – aggressive/highly aggressive lymphomas
with untreated natural histories measured in months or weeks
Stage (Ann Arbor)
■I – single lymph node
■II–2ormorelymphnodes, same side of diaphragm
■III – lymph node involvement on both sides of the diaphragm
■IV – disseminated involvement of extranodal sites with or without
lymph node involvement
■A – absence of B symptoms (fever, night sweats, or weight loss)