Atypical lymphocytes in Hodgkin disease

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Atypical lymphocytes in Hodgkin disease
● Neil Abramson, Baptist Cancer Institute
A
28-year-old woman with Hodgkin disease was about to begin her final course of chemotherapy when afternoon
fevers, nausea, lethargy, and mild dyspnea developed. During previous treatments, her adenopathy and hepatomegaly
resolved and chest x-rays showed a disappearance of the mediastinal mass. Along with the development of new symptoms,
she had tender nodes in the neck and axilla. There were no new medications and no contact with people who were ill. Her
cat had been in her house for several years. Complete blood count showed a mild anemia, normal platelets, and mild leukocytosis. The absolute lymphocyte count was 8.2 ⫻109/L (blood smear shown). Prior to an extensive reassessment for a presumed relapse of Hodgkin disease, laboratory tests were ordered for connective tissue diseases, thyroid disorders, viral infections including HIV, and serologic tests for toxoplasmosis. The toxoplasmosis test was IgM positive with a low titer positive
IgG. When retested 2 weeks later, along with the first specimen, IgM was still positive and the IgG titers had significantly
increased. Chemotherapy was held and she was placed on antibiotics.
Atypical lymphocytes can be found in viral and protozoal infections. Toxoplasmosis may develop in immunocompromised
hosts, such as Hodgkin disease, as a new infection or from reactivation of latent toxoplasmosis.
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5416
BLOOD, 1 JUNE 2008 䡠 VOLUME 111, NUMBER 11
From www.bloodjournal.org by guest on June 14, 2017. For personal use only.
2008 111: 5416
Atypical lymphocytes in Hodgkin disease
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