Differential diagnosis
Disorders causing cellulitis are the main part of the differential diagnosis. Infectious cellulitis, mainly bacterial, is the usual suspect of such a clinical picture. Always bear in mind predisposing factors such as trauma, venous stasis or lymphatic stasis in the area as well as conditions, which cause them. Non infectious causes of cellulitis should be also taken into account. These include carcinoma erysipelatoides or other metastatic cancers to the skin, erysipelas-like erythema of familial mediterranean fever, Sweet's syndrome, also known as acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis, and eosinophilic cellulitis (Wells' syndrome). Breast cancer should also be included in the differential diagnosis of this patient as well as hematologic and lymphatic malignancies known for skin manifestations (such as Non-Hodgkin lymphoma subtypes). Conditions such as compartment syndrome, giant urticaria, allergic contact dermatitis and fixed drug eruption could look the same as the patient's lesion but are non compatible with patient's history.
Diagnosis
We provided a seven-day intravenous treatment with clindamycin 600 mg every 8 hours and moxifloxacin 400 mg every 12 hours, which did not lead to any improvement of the cellulitis. A CT scan of the chest showed enlarged lymph nodes in the left axilla, a few enlarged lymph nodes in the right axilla and a pathological enlargement of lymph nodes in the upper anterior mediastinum above the carina. No parenchymal lesions of the lungs were found. Finally, a CT scan of the abdomen revealed mild degree of hepatomegaly,borderline size of the left paraaortic lymph nodes and enlarged left inguinal and left iliac lymph nodes.
The mass from the left axilla was removed. The microscopic examination showed the parenchyma of the lymph node having disruption of the architecture due to the development of a malignant lymphoproliferative disease.
The findings were conclusive for unspecified, diffuse, large cell type, peripheral T-cell lymphoma.
Therapy
The patient received follow-up care and the diagnosis of T-cell lymphoma was confirmed by re-examination of the last biopsy slides. Significant improvement of his cellulitis was noted with the initial doses of the administered chemotherapy regimen.
Teaching points
- Skin lesions of different morphologies, including papules, nodules, plaques, or masses, appearing especially in young and middle aged people, which are unresponsive to commonly provided treatment regimens (such as antifungal, antibacterial, steroid and anti-inflammatory agents) are proven sometimes to be due to lymphoma. Although the literature has a few reports about such lesions, we found only one report of cellulitis due to lymphoma [1].
- Three to five per cent of all NHLs are categorized as primary cutaneous NHL, where manifestations are limited to the skin, without extracutaneous involvement at the time of presentation [2].
- Occasionally, lymphoma destructs the architecture of a lymph node to the degree that histological examination does not reveal any lymph node- reminiscent tissue, or even reveals tissue resembling inflammatory lesion [3] just like in the first biopsy of our patient.
Reference List
- Baddour LM, Haden KH, Allen JW. Primary skeletal muscle lymphoma presenting as refractory cellulitis. Cutis 2001; 68(3):223-226.
- Visco C, Medeiros LJ, Jones D, Smith T, Rodriguez MA, McLaughlin P et al. Primary cutaneous non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with aggressive histology: inferior outcome is associated with peripheral T-cell type and elevated lactate dehydrogenase, but not extent of cutaneous involvement. Ann Oncol 2002; 13(8):1290-1299.
- Cheuk W, Hill RW, Bacchi C, Dias MA, Chan JK. Hypocellular anaplastic large cell lymphoma mimicking inflammatory lesions of lymph nodes. Am J Surg Pathol 2000; 24(11):1537-1543.
Acknowledgements
- This case was prepared for our website by I. Bliziotis, MD and P. I. Vergidis, MD.
- A review paper written by our group regarding non-infectious causes of cellulitis is in print in the Annals of Internal Medicine [Falagas ME, Vergidis PI. Diseases that masquerade as infectious cellulitis. Ann Intern Med 2004 (in print)].