A 59-year-old man underwent a surveillance colonoscopy after endoscopic resection
of multiple polyps. Colonoscopy showed a reddish and swollen ileocecal valve. Although
the colonoscopy could not be introduced into the terminal ileum, the patient was asymptomatic.
The surface of the swollen ileocecal valve was reddish, rather irregularly shaped,
and nodular-like, mimicking a lump consisting of multiple swollen lymphoid follicles
(Figure [1 ]
a). Small ulcers were also partially evident on the surface, and the mass was demonstrated
to be elastic-hard with biopsy forceps (Figure [1 ]
b). Multiple endoscopic biopsy samples were taken from different areas, including the
small ulcers, for histological evaluation, but no definite diagnosis could be obtained.
As a diagnosis could not be established by repeated biopsies, polypectomy was performed
to remove a larger specimen for histological evaluation. The resected specimen was
sliced into two pieces, and macroscopic observation revealed that it consisted of
round, whitish nodules resembling lymph nodes (Figure [2 ]
a,b). Histologically, the features suggested malignant lymphoma. The patient underwent
surgical resection, and the final diagnosis was diffuse large B-cell-type malignant
lymphoma.
Figure 1 a Colonoscopy showed a reddish and swollen ileocecal valve. b The surface of the swollen ileocecal valve was shaped rather irregularly with small
ulcers in part, and with a nodular-like mass consisting of multiple swollen lymphoid
follicles.
Figure 2 a Endoscopic view of the specimen resected by polypectomy. b The resected specimen was sliced into two pieces and this revealed that the mass
consisted of round, whitish nodules resembling lymph nodes.
The ileocecal area and ileum are the regions most frequently affected by primary small-
and large-intestinal non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and most of such cases, like the present
one, are diffuse large B-cell lymphoma [1]. According to the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE) guidelines,
during colonoscopy, every effort should be made to obtain a tissue diagnosis when
encountering polyps, mass lesions, or colonic strictures [2]. Unfortunately, in the present case, a correct diagnosis could not be established
from multiple biopsy samples. As definitive diagnosis could only be made from large
tissue fragments taken from representative portions of the lesion, polypectomy was
performed and a diagnosis was established successfully. In other cases, endoscopic
ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy may provide an accurate diagnosis,
particularly in patients for whom previous endoscopic forceps biopsy has been unsuccessful
[3]. However, this procedure is not always available, as special equipment and skill
are needed.
Endoscopy_UCTN_Code_CCL_1AC_2AC