Abstract

Patients with HIV infection often have generalized lymphadenopathy and/or other lymphoid proliferation and are at significantly increased risk for lymphoma. This study retrospectively evaluated the diagnostic value of concurrent nasopharyngeal lesion and lymphadenopathy on positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) with fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG PET-CT) imaging. The eligible cases were from patients with HIV infection and lymphadenopathy and referred for FDG PET-CT to evaluate lymphoma or other malignancies prior to pathological investigation. FDG PET-CT images and interpretation reports were correlated with clinical information and pathological diagnoses. Among 22 eligible patients, FDG avid nasopharyngeal lesions were incidentally noted in 7 on PET-CT imaging, and all had lymphomas diagnosed with subsequent biopsies (6 diffuse large B-cell lymphomas and 1 Hodgkin's lymphoma). In the remaining 15 patients with adenopathy but no visible nasopharyngeal lesion or uptake on PET-CT imaging, 9 had biopsies and lymphomas were diagnosed in 4. The patients with FDG avid retroperitoneal or intra-abdominal lymphadenopathy had a greater possibility of lymphoma, compared to those with adenopathy localized only in the upper torso. Coexistent FDG avid nasopharyngeal lesion and generalized lymphadenoapthy on PET-CT imaging are indicative of a malignant lymphoma rather than benign lymphproliferative disease or nasopharyngeal carcinoma.

Highlights

  • Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) leads to selective depletion of the helper/inducer lymphocyte subset and a subsequent acquired cellular immunodeficiency

  • This study retrospectively evaluated the diagnostic value of incidentally noted, concurrent FDG avid nasopharyngeal lesion combined with lymphadenopathy on Positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) imaging in HIV-infected population

  • Group A consisted of 7 patients with incidentally noted, concurrent FDG avid nasopharyngeal lesions in addition to generalized lymphadenopathy on PET-CT imaging

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Summary

Introduction

Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) leads to selective depletion of the helper/inducer lymphocyte subset and a subsequent acquired cellular immunodeficiency. Many patients infected with HIV have persistent generalized lymphadenopathy and/or other lymphoid proliferation and are at significantly increased risk for lymphoma [2]. In HIV-infected patients, the uptake pattern of lymph nodes might indicate anatomical sites of viral replication, and the degree of FDG uptake is related to viral load [5]. Sparse studies exist about the specific role of FDG PET-CT in the diagnosis of lymphoma in HIV-infected patients with lymphadenopathy. There are no reports about observation of nasopharyngeal lesion in HIV infection on FDG PET-CT imaging. This study retrospectively evaluated the diagnostic value of incidentally noted, concurrent FDG avid nasopharyngeal lesion combined with lymphadenopathy on PET-CT imaging in HIV-infected population

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