From the archives of MD Anderson Cancer Center Castleman disease involving the thymus gland: Case report and literature review

Daniel Rivera, Wei J. Wang, Kok Hoe Chan, Haval Ali, Wei Wang, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Zhihong Hu

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Castleman disease is a nodal based disease and very rarely involves the thymus gland. We report a 52-year-old man who was found incidentally to have a single thymic mass by computerized tomography scan. Thymectomy was performed, and the gross specimen showed a well-circumscribed, multi-loculated cystic mass. Histologic examination showed thymus involved by Castleman disease, hyaline-vascular variant. The lesion was characterized by lymphoid follicles with wide mantle zones, variably lymphocyte-depleted germinal centers with sclerotic radial blood vessels, and prominent interfollicular/stromal changes including numerous endothelial venules with sclerotic walls and hyaline sclerosis, scattered and frequent dysplastic follicular dendritic cells and foci of dystrophic calcification. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that the follicle mantle zones were composed of numerous B-cells positive for CD20, PAX5, and IgD. Antibodies specific for CD21 and CD23 highlighted prominent follicular dendritic cell networks within follicles. There was no evidence of human herpes virus 8. We searched the literature and could identify only 10 additional cases of thymic CD. Previously reported cases included 8 unicentric and 2 multicentric, classified pathologically as plasma cell variant (n = 4), hyaline vascular variant (n = 3), and mixed (n = 3). Thymectomy, as was done in the currently reported case, most often leads to the diagnosis of Castleman disease and was a mainstay of treatment in other reported cases.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number152136
JournalAnnals of Diagnostic Pathology
Volume65
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2023

Keywords

  • Castleman Disease
  • Hyaline-Vascular Variant
  • Microcalcification
  • Multicentric
  • Plasma Cell Variant
  • Thymectomy
  • Thymus
  • Unicentric

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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