Primary lymphomatous presentation of hairy cell leukemia as osteolytic vertebral lesions: a case report

AbstractHairy cell leukemia (HCL) is a rare and indolent mature B cell neoplasm. Most patients with HCL have excellent response to purine analogs and BRAF inhibitors. Therefore, it is clinically important to identify and differentiate HCL from other B cell neoplasms. HCL is predominantly found in the peripheral blood, bone marrow, or spleen. HCL presenting initially or solely in unusual sites is extremely rare (approximately ten or fewer). We hereby report a unique case of HCL presenting as vertebral osteolytic and epidural mass lesions without bone marrow, spleen, or peripheral blood involvement. The patient was a 53-year-old male with acute and chronic radicular pain down the posterior aspect of bilateral thighs. Imaging study with MRI demonstrated a L4 posterior vertebral osteolytic mass lesion, extending into the spinal canal, and a second right sacral S1 lesion extending into the sacral iliac joint. These two noncontiguous lesions were thought to be consistent with metastatic cancer or sarcoma, and the specimen was submitted to non-hematopoietic pathologist for diagnosis without flow cytometry. Initial immunohistochemical stains were ordered for solid tumor markers, which were all negative. As part of the workup, immunostain for BRAF V600E (VE1) was ordered for melanoma, and CD138 and cyclin D1 for myeloma, which returned positive and suggested the possibility of hairy cell leukemia. Additional workup for hairy cell leukemia confirmed the diagnosis. HCL typically present...
Source: Journal of Hematopathology - Category: Pathology Source Type: research