Terminal ileal lymphoma

Discussion:

CT features are in keeping with terminal ileitis, where there are a myriad of differential diagnoses. However, with the presence of adjacent necrotic abdominal lymphadenopathy and characteristic aneurysmal dilatation of the terminal ileum without proximal ileal dilatation, this is likely to represent small bowel lymphoma. Another differential diagnosis to consider in this part of the world where tuberculosis is endemic, is infectious ileitis by Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

The patient proceeded to right hemicolectomy.

Histopathology of the surgical sample:

Microscopic description
The ileal tumor is composed of atypical lymphoid cells infiltrating through the bowel wall into peri-ileal fat. The cells are medium to large sized with mildly pleomorphic round to oval nuclei showing coarse chromatin pattern and 1-2 nucleoli. Mitoses are seen. The resected lymph nodes are invaded by tumor cells. Most of the nodes show loss of normal nodal architecture and an infiltrate of similar cells are seen in most with some matter nodes. A few of the nodes are necrotic. The bowel resection margins are free of malignancy.
The appendix shows intact mucosa and muscle layers with congested serosa infiltrated by scattered polymorphs.

Immunohistochemistry:
The cells are positive for CD20, MUM-1, BCL-2 and >60% of cells show Ki-67 activity. The cells are negative for CD3, Cd10, Cd5, cyclin D1 and Tdt.
Right hemicolectomy for ileal tumor- ileal diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, activated B-cell phenotype. The excision margins are free of malignancy.

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