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Acta Medica Medianae
Vol. 51, No 3, September, 2012

UDK 61
ISSN 0365-4478(Printed version)
ISSN 1821-2794(Online)

 

Correspondence to:

Ivan Petković

Oncology Clinic

Clinical Center Niš

Bulevar Dr Zorana Đinđića 48

18000 Niš, Serbia

E-mail: ivan76.unsu@yahoo.com

Case report                                                     

UDC: 616.33/.34-006.44-08

doi:10.5633/amm.2012.0307

 

Primary mantle cell lymphoma of gastrointestinal tract-

A case report

 

Ivan Petković1, Dragan Mihailović2, Miljan Krstić2, Ivica Pejčić1, Svetislav Vrbić1 and Mirjana Balić1

 

Oncology Clinic, Clinical Center Niš, Serbia1

Center for Pathology, Clinical Center Niš, Serbia2

 

 

   Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) represents a relatively rare type of mature B cell neoplasm, which arrises from the CD5+ cells of the mantle zone of lymph follicles. It often has the extranodal or leukemic presentation. It is characterized by the relative insensitivity to applied chemotherapy and high relapse rate after treatment. Median survival is about 3-4 years, and highly aggressive protocols may shift the median up to 5 years.

Our patient was a typical example of the natural biological course of MCL. A male patient, 57 years old, was admitted to the Clinic for Oncology CC Nis, after he was diagnozed with primary mantle cell lymphoma of the digestive tract in the form of multiple lymphomatouos polyposis (MLP) of the colon and small intestine. After the colonoscopic biopsies, he was diagnosed with MCL. This case was regarded as advanced stage of lymphoma, with low MIPI index. He received 8 cycles of immunochemotherapy CHOP+Rituximab with excellent clinical response determined as complete remission (CR). After disease-free interval of two years, a relapse occurred in the stomach, which was histopathologically verified.

    MCL is still a disease with poor prognosis. Therapeutic approach, given the poor prognosis and resistance to conventional immunochemiotherapy and even high dose therapy followed by the autologuos stem cell transplantation, still remains insufficiently  defined. Newer therapeutic agents which are found in a large number of clinical trials provide relatively encouraging results. Acta Medica Medianae 2012;51(3):41-46.

 

      Key words: mantle cell lymphoma, multiple lymphomatous polyposis, gastrointestinal

tract