Clinical Case Reports (Aug 2023)

An atypical promyelocytic sarcoma and pleural effusion in a patient with Gorham's disease: Efficiency of ATRA/ATO‐based treatment

  • Romain Loyaux,
  • Solène Lecolant,
  • Leila Cysique Foilan,
  • Caroline Pradon,
  • Sophie Cotteret,
  • Jean‐Baptiste Micol,
  • Annabelle Stoclin,
  • Véronique Saada,
  • Christophe Marzac,
  • Ahmadreza Arbab

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.7785
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Key Clinical Message This is the first case of a promyelocytic sarcoma diagnosed on pleural effusion and exposed the difficulty of demonstrating a leukemic phase in patients with bone diseases, such as Gorham's disease. It also showed that promyelocytic sarcoma can be treated by ATRA/ATO‐based therapy with an efficient and tolerated response. Abstract Myeloid sarcoma (MS) is a rare extramedullary tumoral infiltration of immature myeloid cells and can occur in different sites of the body, without leukemic infiltration. A 38‐year‐old woman patient presented at emergency with a pleural effusion, bicytopenias, and Gorham's disease, a very rare bone disorder. In the following days, she worsened with a chylothorax and pancytopenias. Pleural puncture cytologically revealed promyelocytes with Auer rods. Cytogenetic and molecular analyses subsequently confirmed the presence of the t(15:17) translocation. However, no circulating phase of these atypical promyelocytes was found. Similarly, no other origin was identified. We conclude that the patient had a MS of unknown etiology in the form of a pleural effusion with pathological promyelocytes. The patient was treated with a combination of oral all‐trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and arsenic trioxide (ATO) with a cytological and molecular remission persisting 3 months after diagnosis. We report here the first case of a promyelocytic MS of pleural origin without concomitant evidence of acute promyelocytic leukemia. We also show the efficacy of ATRA/ATO treatment in this etiology.

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