Sunday Poster Session
Category: Colon
Shany Quevedo, MD
Aventura Hospital
Miami, FL
Patient is a 69-year-old male with no significant past medical history who was transferred via Jet ICU from a cruise due concerns for small bowel obstruction. For four days prior to presentation, the patient was with reports of mid-epigastric pain with associated nausea and coffee-ground emesis and imaging on the ship revealed findings concerning for obstruction. Once admitted, abdominal Computerized Tomography (CT) revealed a large 8 cm partially obstructing cecal mass. EGD was performed with findings of LA Grade C esophagitis. Patient was discharged as he had pre-established care with GI in his hometown. Colonoscopy there revealed a large cecal mass and biopsy was positive for Diffuse Large B-cell lymphoma. Patient underwent surgical resection and subsequent management with oncology. Several months later the patient and his wife informed us he was doing well, and the treating physicians were pleased with prompt management and guidance of our team.
Discussion:
Lymphoma of the colon is rare and often a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge given the difficulty in diagnosis and lack of treatment standardization. Currently, treatments range between chemotherapy with R-CHOP with or without surgical interventions depending on associated complications such as obstruction or perforation.. Ongoing challenges include distinguishing lymphoma from other GI malignancies and optimizing therapy in elderly or immunocompromised patients1,2. Our case highlights the need for ongoing research needed for more diagnostic and therapeutic guidance especially in otherwise healthy patients.
Figure: 8 centimeter cecal mass consistent with Large B cell lymphoma
Figure: 8 centimeter cecal mass consistent with Large B cell lymphoma
Disclosures:
Shany Quevedo indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Ramasamy Nathan indicated no relevant financial relationships.
Shany Quevedo, MD, Ramasamy Nathan, MD. P0395 - When the Cecum Hides a Lymphoma: A Diagnostic Challenge, ACG 2025 Annual Scientific Meeting Abstracts. Phoenix, AZ: American College of Gastroenterology.