Lanier Wolff (gripsatin83)

Thus, more attention should be paid to the risk of DHTR redevelopment by repeated transfusions.We report a case of Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) complicated with central diabetes insipidus that was refractory to several treatments. A 58-year-old female suffered from fatigue, fever, thirst, polyuria, leg pain, xanthoma of her upper eyelids, and disturbance of consciousness. Computed tomography (CT) imaging showed infiltration of perivascular soft tissue surrounding the aorta, hydronephrosis, and sclerotic lesions of the femurs and tibias. Magnetic resonance imaging showed the enhancement of expansile pachymeningeal lesions. A water deprivation test revealed the presence of central diabetes insipidus. The results of skin and bone marrow biopsies were consistent with ECD. The patient was treated with prednisone (30 mg daily) and interferon-α (6 mIU three times/week). The perivascular soft tissue showed a slight improvement, but she experienced cerebral hemorrhage 4 and 8 months later. Subsequently, she was treated biweekly with IV tocilizumab (8 mg/kg). Although her clinical symptoms improved, enlargement of the meningeal tumor and hydrocephalus led to disturbance of consciousness 6 months later. After the surgical debulking of the intracranial lesion, she was treated with two cycles of IV cladribine (0.12 mg/kg for 5 d). She had a transient clinical improvement but developed central nervous system disease marked by progressive neurological symptoms.A 45-year-old man initially diagnosed with aplastic anemia had been receiving treatment for >4 years when he visited our hospital for a detailed examination. On admission, bone marrow (BM) aspiration showed erythroid dysplasia and chromosomal abnormalities, including trisomy 3 in 1/20 cells. After 3 months of observation, BM aspiration showed the involvement of 5% abnormal lymphocytes, and flow cytometry revealed a monoclonal B-cell phenotype. After a further 5 months of observation, his blood test showed a sudden elevation in white blood cell (WBC) count and the presence of villous lymphocytes. Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) only revealed strong uptake by systemic BM, and BM aspiration showed the involvement of 76.4% abnormal lymphocytes, which were positive for CD19 and dim CD11c; negative for CD25, CD103, cyclin D1, and BRAF-V600E; and exhibited light chain restriction. The patient was diagnosed with marginal zone lymphoma-like primary bone marrow (BM) lymphoma. Treatment with R-CHOP and R-cladribine failed. He then underwent an allogeneic peripheral blood stem cell transplantation from a human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-identical sibling, and he has since remained in good health and without relapse for 9 years. Further clinical and biological analyses are necessary to establish an optimal treatment strategy for this disease.Immunosuppressive therapy (IST) is the first-line treatment for young patients with severe aplastic anemia (AA) when a human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-matched related donor (MRD) is unavailable. Fulminant AA (FAA) is defined as AA with a complete absence of neutrophils at presentation and no response to granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) treatment. Here we report a 38-year-old male FAA patient who underwent allogeneic stem cell transplantation from an HLA haplotype-mismatched donor as first-line treatment. The patient had no remarkable disease history and was referred to our hospital because of a peritonsillar abscess and severe pancytopenia. Bone marrow biopsy revealed marked hypocellularity without dysplasia. His neutrophil count remained 0.0×109/l following G-CSF administration, and he was diagnosed with FAA. His siblings were not MRDs, but his sister had haploidentical HLAs. After administering a conditioning regimen, the patient received a transplant of peripheral blood stem cells donated by his sister. Neutrophil engraftment was observed on post-transplant day 16, and he experienced acute graft-versus-host disease (gr