Endoscopy 2025; 57(S 02): S572
DOI: 10.1055/s-0045-1806498
Abstracts | ESGE Days 2025
ePosters

Primary colorectal lymphoma. As an uncommon finding in a colonoscopy

Authors

  • L Peña Tomey

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • A García Rodríguez

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • N J Gascón Meléndez

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • A Cortés González

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • S Martínez-Alcalá García

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • B Bernad Cabredo

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • M Terroba Alonso

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • N Alonso Bilbao

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
  • S Revuelta Martínez

    1   Hospital Universitario San Pedro, Logroño, Spain
 

Case: A 68-year-old male without medical history was referred for a colonoscopy for severe diarrhea, hyporexia, and an 8 kg weight loss over one month.

Endoscopy: Colonoscopy revealed, 2 cm from the anal margin, a whitish 7cm neoformation ulcerated, friable, with complete loss of the mucosal pattern, occupying nearly three-quarters of the colorectal circumference. Pathological analysis confirmed a diagnosis of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, germinal center subtype (DLBCL-GCB). Subsequently, following an episode of upper gastrointestinal bleeding, a gastroscopy was needed and revealed a neoformation in the gastric fundus and body and duodenal ulcerations that covered half the circumference and had an infiltrative appearance, with pathology confirming DLBCL-GCB [1] [2] [3].

Discussion: Primary colorectal lymphoma is a rare entity, accounting for less than 0.5% of primary colorectal neoplasms. The most common subtype is non-Hodgkin lymphoma, which can appear in any part of the gastrointestinal tract, most frequently in the cecum and rectum. Due to its nonspecific clinical manifestations, most cases are diagnosed at an advanced stage. Endoscopic findings are highly variable, ranging from normal-appearing mucosa to ulcerations or neoformations indistinguishable from adenocarcinoma. Therefore, histological and immunohistochemical studies are always necessary to characterize the type of lymphoma. The first-line treatment is chemotherapy with the R-CHOP regimen. Prognosis depends on multiple factors, with worse survival associated with age over 65, advanced stage, and partial or no response to treatment.



Publikationsverlauf

Artikel online veröffentlicht:
27. März 2025

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