• Internal medicine · Sep 2024

    Pure Red Cell Aplasia in a Patient with Thymic Hyperplasia, Hypogammaglobulinemia and Adult T-cell Leukemia/Lymphoma.

    • Yasushi Kubota, Haruhiko Sano, Yuji Takeda, Kyosuke Yamaguchi, Hideaki Nakamura, Keita Kai, Keisuke Kidoguchi, Kana Kusaba, Masako Yokoo, Toshihiko Ando, Eisaburo Sueoka, and Shinya Kimura.
    • Division of Hematology, Respiratory Medicine and Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Saga University, Japan.
    • Intern. Med. 2024 Sep 18.

    AbstractAcquired pure red cell aplasia (PRCA), caused by thymic hyperplasia, is extremely rare. We herein report a previously healthy 41-year-old man who presented with severe anemia, lymphadenopathy, an upper mediastinal mass, and hypogammaglobulinemia. The patient was eventually diagnosed with PRCA and adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). The mediastinal mass was pathologically diagnosed as thymic hyperplasia without clear ATLL invasion. Although his anemia improved rapidly after thymectomy, PRCA recurred approximately 500 days later and was accompanied by ATLL exacerbation. The findings in this patient suggest that the Good's syndrome-like symptoms (thymic hyperplasia and hypogammaglobulinemia) in this patient and PRCA may have been paraneoplastic syndromes caused by ATLL.

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