CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Subcutaneous panniculitic T-cell lymphoma developing in a child with idiopathic myelofibrosis.

PURPOSE: Subcutaneous panniculitic T-cell lymphoma is reported in a child with idiopathic myelofibrosis. Both disease entities are rarely seen in children.

PATIENT AND METHODS: A girl aged 5 years and 9 months had pancytopenia and severe constitutional symptoms. Idiopathic myelofibrosis was subsequently diagnosed.

RESULTS: A transient response was achieved after treatment with a course of high-dose methylprednisolone therapy. However, proptosis and skin nodules developed during tapering of steroid therapy. A computed tomography scan of the orbit also revealed a mass lesion in the right lacrimal gland region. A skin biopsy specimen showed a subcutaneous panniculitic T-cell lymphoma. The clinical course was marked by high fever, profound pancytopenia, massive gastrointestinal bleeding, and severe, recurrent infections. Her condition rapidly deteriorated, and she died from polymicrobial sepsis 4 months after her initial examination.

CONCLUSIONS: Subcutaneous panniculitic T-cell lymphoma is a distinctive clinicopathologic entity that is rarely seen in children. The association of myelofibrosis and peripheral T-cell lymphoma as seen in this has been rarely reported.

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