5/2012
vol. 16
Case report
Primary lymphomas of the prostate: two case reports and a review of the literature
Wspolczesna Onkol 2012; 16 (5): 456–459
Online publish date: 2012/11/20
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IntroductionNon-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) is a common disease and about one third of cases occur in extranodal sites. Primary lymphoma of the prostate is rare; it comprises about 0.1% of all NHLs and 0.09% of all prostatic malignancies [1]. Diagnosis of primary lymphomas in the prostate must combine the patient’s symptoms, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and pathology examination. We present two cases of primary NHL of the prostate and a review of the literature.Case reportsCase 1
A 61-year-old man was hospitalized because of pain of the lower abdominal region and the left abdominal wall lasting about two months. He also had dysuria and a weak urinary stream. Digital rectal examination (DRE) showed a hard and voluminous prostate; the edge of the prostate was not clearly defined. Neither abnormality of lymph node nor enlargement of liver and spleen could be found by general examination.
The prostate-specific antigen (PSA) value was 2.3 ng/ml, Hb was 10.9 g/dl and WBC 7.9 × 103/L (neutrophils 73.6%, lymphocytes 13.6%, monocytes 6.8%). Routine ultrasound of the urinary tract showed uretero-hydronephrosis on the left side. A huge occupation, also to the left of the prostate, was measured at 9.7 × 7.5 × 6.7 cm. Urinary tract radiography examination showed delayed visualization and hydronephrosis in the left kidney and ureter. The pelvic and the kidney CT scan showed evidence of a huge expanded and infiltrative lesion of the prostate which involved the bladder neck. Bone scintigraphy was negative and did not show any other lesions. Prostate biopsy was performed according to the CT scan. The histology examination identified the diagnosis of NHL in the prostate. The patient underwent chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide (750 mg/m2/d), vincristine (1.4 mg/m2/d), doxorubicin (50 mg/d), prednisone (60 mg/m2/d) and etoposide (100 mg/m2/d) three times. The clinical result suggested a significant improvement after one cycle. The pain symptoms had disappeared, micturition improved and the ureter-hydronephrosis was decreased. Transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) examination showed the size of the prostate to be decreased from 234 to 203 ml. To decrease the possibility of recurrence, radical cystoprostatectomy and ileal bladder was performed three months later.
Macroscopically, the tumor was less elastic, measuring 9.7 cm in the maximal dimension. The cut surface of the tumor was gray-white, with areas of necrosis. Histological examination of the tumor revealed that the normal prostatic tissues were diffusely infiltrated by large lymphoid cells, with vesicular nuclei, fine chromatin and scanty cytoplasm, either amphophilic or basophilic (Fig. 1). Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were strongly positive for CD45, CD20, CD79a and negative for CD10, CD5, CD23, CD3, CD45RO, PSA, P504S, 34E12, CKpan, Syn and CgA (Fig. 2). The pathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of a primary NHL (diffuse large B-cell type) of the prostate.
Case 2
A 56-year-old man presented with dysuria in the form of urgency lasting for 2 weeks. He had no fever, no abdominal pain or any other complaint. General physical examination was unremarkable. DRE revealed an enlarged indurate prostate. The surface was tuberous and irregular. The central groove was disappeared. PSA was 0.328 ng/ml and TRUS of the urinary tract showed that the prostate volume was 233 ml (8.4 × 7.2 × 7.7 cm). The pelvic CT showed lack of prostate capsule integrity and that the tumor had invaded the seminal vesicle. Bone scintigraphy was negative. No evidence of tumor in other anatomical locations was found. The biopsy sample indicated that it was a malignant tumor but it could not be stated with certainty which kind. The tumor was located in the prostate without bladder infiltration. Therefore we performed a radical prostatectomy. Macroscopically, the tumor tissues were fragmentized and the cut surface was gray-white and elastically soft. Histologically, the tumor was composed of large atypical cells with vesicular nuclei, abundant cytoplasm, and a high mitotic rate. It had a diffuse infiltrating pattern (Fig. 3). A few entrapped prostate gland cells were seen within the tumor. In immunohistochemistry, CD45, CD20, CD79a were positive in tumor cells while CD10, CD5, CD23, CD3, CD45RO, PSA, P504S, 34E12, CKpan, Syn and CgA were negative (Fig. 4). Pathologic examination confirmed the diagnosis of primary NHL (diffuse large B-cell type) of the prostate.
The patient was postoperatively treated with combined chemotherapy using rituximab (375 mg/m2/d), cyclophosphamide (750 mg/m2/d), vincristine (1.4 mg/m2/d), doxorubicin (50 mg/d), prednisone (60 mg/m2/d) and etoposide (100 mg/m2/d) three times. The disease remitted after treatment, but the patient died half a year later due to cerebrovascular accident.DiscussionThe definition of primary lymphoma of the prostate must be consistent with three criteria, recommended by Bostwick and Mann: 1) presenting symptoms attributable to prostatic enlargement; 2) involvement of the prostate predominantly, with or without involvement of adjacent tissue; and 3) absence of involvement of the liver, spleen or lymph nodes within one month of diagnosis of the prostatic involvement [2]. Some investigators suspected the existence of primary extranodal prostatic lymphoma because of the deficiency of lymphoid tissue in the prostate, while others believe the primary lymphoma in the prostate to be due to rudimentary lymphoid nodules and extramedullary hematopoiesis in the prostate. The patient’s clinical histological documentation shows that the disease is limited in the prostate without retroperitoneal lymph node involvement [3]. It can happen at any age between 18 and 89 years old and the means is 57 years old [4].
There are no systemic symptoms of this disease. Frequency and urgency may be the most common symptoms and hematuria sometimes is an early presenting symptom. It is very difficult to distinguish from other prostate diseases, such as prostate carcinoma or nodular hyperplasia, because all of these diseases can cause lower urinary tract obstruction. It often shows diffusely enlarged, non-tender, firm or rubbery consistency and obliteration of the median sulcus when examined by DRE. Though the prostate is hard, it is usually not as hard as the typical prostate carcinoma [5, 6]. The serum acid phosphatase value and PSA in general are usually within the normal range, but Tomaru et al. reported on an 84-year-old patient, diagnosed with a primary low-grade B-cell lymphoma of the prostate, who had a very high PSA (903 ng/ml). The PSA decreased to 8.6 ng/ml three months after transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) [7]. Oosterheert et al. recently reported on another follicular NHL of the prostate which had high levels of serum PSA (62 ng/ml). The PSA decreased to the normal level after lymphoma-specific treatment [8].
Rainwater and Barrett have described hypoechoic appearance of prostatic lymphoma during TRUS because the prostatic lymphoma destroys the normal prostatic architecture, replacing it with malignant cells without glandular structure [9]. However, Terris et al. suggested that the lower echogenicity associated with the inflammatory lymphocytic infiltrate and prostate cancer might be caused by the echotexture of the glands and the periglandular area rather than the abnormal cellularity within the stroma of the prostate [10]. The CT and MRI scan appearance is non-specific, but may help to evaluate the stage.
Almost all reported cases could not be diagnosed correctly before the tissue sections were examined. But the sensitivity of TRUS guided prostate needle biopsy is lower (only 22.2%) for detecting hematolymphoid malignancies involving the prostate because prostatic infiltration by malignant lymphocytes is irregular [10]. For a pathologist the most difficult situation to obtain an accurate histological diagnosis is highly undifferentiated NHL occurring only in the prostate, without any other evidence, or any other tissue involved in another part of the body [5, 11]. Differential diagnosis includes prostatitis, prostate cyst or abscess, small cell carcinoma, lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma and Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). Sometimes doctors must be aware of existing neoplasms originating from seminal vesicles and Mullerian duct relics.
Another two rare diseases must be considered when the final diagnosis can be made according to the histopathology, immunophenotypic or molecular technique. One is co-existing lymphoma and adenocarcinoma in the same prostate [12]; the other is prostatic infiltration by leukemic cells [13]. All types of lymphoma have been described. They are chronic lymphocytic leukemia, diffuse centroblastic/centrocytic, small lymphocytic lymphoma, diffuse small-cleaved cell, diffuse mixed small and large cell, diffuse large cell, Burkitt’s small non-cleaved cell, non-Burkitt, lymphoblastic and monocytoid B-cell lymphoma, while diffuse large B-cell lymphoma is the most common one [4, 5, 14].
NHL of the prostate sometimes may co-exist with prostate adenocarcinoma [2, 15, 16]. Ballario et al. reported a patient who had urinary obstructive symptoms with an enlarged prostate after TURP [12]. The pathological examination showed an adenocarcinoma with 5% of the tissue material associated with infiltration of low-grade NHL. Another situation which should be paid more attention is prostate carcinoma sometimes mimicking malignant lymphoma, especially when it presents with generalized lymphadenopathy [17]. Lymph node involvement in prostate carcinoma may be present in 8-20% of stage B and 40–80% of stage C patients with negative bone studies. Prostate carcinoma sometimes metastasizes to the lymph nodes earlier than skeletal metastases, which may lead to misdiagnosis as lymphoma before the lymph biopsy [18]. It is difficult to distinguish them because a small percentage of high-grade prostatic carcinomas cannot be stained due to the absence of PSA, even though biopsy samples are used [19].
There are many therapeutic methods including chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgical operations. Before treatment of patients, the tumor should be precisely categorized according to certain guidelines, such as patient’s age, tumor bulk, clinical stage and histological classification. Accurate staging can be achieved exactly if the tumor is distant or shows regional dissemination to nodal sites or to bone marrow [15]. Chemotherapy is suitable for high-grade tumors, bulky tumors and disseminated disease. Aggressive regional therapy such as transurethral or segmental resection followed by radical radiotherapy to the whole pelvis may benefit small and localized lower grade tumors [20]. Though surgery and radiotherapy will not get the best results they can relieve the distressing symptoms of bladder outlet obstruction [2]. One of our patients underwent cystoprostatectomy because the disease was infiltrated into the bladder neck and orifice of the left ureter, causing some obstruction symptoms. Another had radical prostatectomy because the first biopsy sample was misdiagnosed as prostate cancer. The question of which operation can be done and may be beneficial to patients should be critically discussed. The operation indications depend on local findings and the prognosis of the patients and there are no standard operation methods to treat prostate NHL.
The extent of this disease at the diagnosis is the most important prognostic factor and is affected by two factors: 1) stage and bulk of the disease at diagnosis; 2) the tumor’s histological classification. Tumor categories of low, intermediate or high grade correlate well with prognosis [20]. The prognosis is generally very poor because at the time that diagnosis is established, 40–50% of these patients have presented with metastasis [11]. Bostwick et al. found that the average survival period is 14 months and most patients died within two years [2].
Early diagnosis depends on the doctors’ awareness of this disease, especially in young and middle-aged men who have a refractory “prostatitis” which does not respond to any antibiotic therapy. DRE shows a soft, enlarged prostate similar to a prostate abscess which is encountered on rectal examination. Early and appropriate treatment can extend the survival time and improve the quality of life.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.References 1. Antunes AA, Dall’Oglio M, Srougi M. Primary lymphoma of the prostate: a rare case of urinary obstruction. Int Braz J Urol 2004; 30: 410-2.
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Address for correspondence
Dr. Peng Jiang
Department of Urology, First Affiliated Hospital,
College of Medicine, Zhejiang University
No. 79 Qing Chun Road,
HangZhou City, 310029
ZheJiang Province, PR China
tel. 86-571-87236133
fax 86-571-87236594
e-mail: bellrin@163.com
Submitted: 10.11.2011
Accepted: 5.12.2011
Copyright: © 2012 Termedia Sp. z o. o. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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