02447nas a2200301 4500000000100000008004100001260001300042653001000055653001100065653001100076653001300087653002500100653002100125653000900146653001600155653001900171100001800190700001400208700001400222700001200236700001900248700001300267245008000280300001000360490000700370520175400377022001402131 2004 d c2004 Oct10aAdult10aFemale10aHumans10aLymphoma10aLymphoma, Follicular10aLymphoma, T-Cell10aMale10aMiddle Aged10aSkin Neoplasms1 aRongioletti F1 aCerroni L1 aMassone C1 aBasso M1 aCiambellotti A1 aRebora A00aDifferent histologic patterns of cutaneous granulomas in systemic lymphoma. a600-50 v513 a
BACKGROUND: Patients with Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas may develop non-infectious granulomas in both involved and uninvolved organs, but rarely in the skin. Cutaneous granulomas in the setting of a systemic lymphoma are of two types. The first type is characterized by granulomatous infiltrates admixed with neoplastic cells within specific skin lesions of malignant lymphomas. The second type consists of granulomatous skin processes that are non-specific manifestations of the underlying lymphoma.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the variegate histologic patterns of cutaneous granulomatous reactions of the second type in patients with systemic lymphomas.
METHODS: We describe three patients with systemic lymphomas who exhibited three different histologic patterns of cutaneous granulomatous lesions.
RESULTS: The first patient had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with cutaneous tuberculoid-type granuloma mimicking tuberculoid leprosy; the second patient had Hodgkin's lymphoma with palisaded, necrobiotic granuloma of granuloma annulare-type; and the third patient had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with sarcoid-type granuloma. No evidence of the underlying systemic lymphoma was found in the cutaneous lesions involved by the granulomatous process.
CONCLUSIONS: Cutaneous granulomas may be a non-specific sign of an underlying systemic lymphoma. Their histologic patterns are variegate and include sarcoid-type granuloma, palisaded and necrobiotic granuloma of granuloma annulare-type, and tuberculoid granuloma. In patients who present with non-infectious, granulomatous skin reactions in the absence of another sound explanation, the possibility of a systemic lymphoma should be considered.
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