Epstein Barr virus-associated primary CNS lymphomas in elderly patients on immunosuppressive medications.
Overview
abstract
Unlike primary central nervous system lymphomas (PCNSLs) in patients with AIDS or organ transplants, PCNSLs in the elderly are usually not considered to be mediated by Epstein Barr virus (EBV); hence, diagnostic studies for EBV are not routinely performed. We encountered 4 patients, 65 years or older, who developed EBV-associated PCNSLs and who had been treated with a variety of immunosuppressive drugs for different autoimmune/collagen vascular disorders, including autoimmune polyneuropathy (mycophenolate mofetil for 5 years), polymyositis (prednisone for 16 years with intermittent methotrexate, azathioprine, and cyclophosphamide), myasthenia gravis (azathioprine >10 years), and rheumatoid arthritis (methotrexate >10 years). All patients had multifocal, necrotic brain lesions typical of EBV-positive PCNSLs on neuroimaging. Withdrawing immunosuppressives lead to PCNSL regression in some patients. The patient who had received mycophenolate mofetil was treated successfully for his EBV-associated PCNSL with rituximab and methotrexate, but later developed fatal systemic malignant melanoma, which was likely immunosuppression related. The striking feature of these cases is the variety of underlying diseases-and hence accompanying medications-that can be associated with EBV-associated PCNSLs. They serve as a diagnostic alert for neuropathologists and suggest that increased testing of PCNSLs for EBV by immunohistochemistry or in situ hybridization may be warranted in any patient on any immunosuppressive medication, but particularly the elderly.