A case of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma diagnosed by thoracoscopy under local anesthesia
Satoru Ishii Akihiro Ichikawa Satoshi Hirano Yuichiro Takeda Nobuyuki Kobayashi Haruhito Sugiyama
Department of Respiratory Medicine, National Center for Global Health and Medicine
The patient was an 84-year-old man with a chief complaint of exertional dyspnea. Chest X-radiographies showed a right pleural effusion. Chest computed tomography also revealed a right pleural effusion, with a nodular shadow in the anterior mediastinum and a 40-mm×30-mm mass shadow at the cardiophrenic angle. A maximum standardized uptake value of 8 to 10 at both lesions was shown by an 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET). A thoracoscopy was performed under local anesthesia to investigate the imaging findings. A tumor was evident in the right cardiophrenic angle, with the surface covered in fine blood vessels and adipose tissue on the outer border. A biopsy was attempted, but the tumor was hard and could not be sampled using regular biopsy forceps. Marberger biopsy forceps were therefore used to successfully sample tissue. Pathological findings showed a diffuse proliferation of small atypical lymphocytes that were positive for CD20 on immunostaining, and extranodal marginal-zone, mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma was made. After this we will need to consider various biopsy methods.
Thoracoscopy under local anesthesia MALT lymphoma Marberger biopsy forceps
Received 16 Jan 2012 / Accepted 15 Nov 2012
AJRS, 2(3): 193-198, 2013