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Renal involvement in patients with lymphoproliferative disease is an uncommon radiological finding. To determine its prevalence and radiological appearances in a patient population. All forms of lymphoproliferative disease (ICD: C81-C96) were considered. From January 2005 to January 2010, 668 consecutive patients with lymphoproliferative disease were identified with the help of the radiological database and patient records. Inclusion criteria were complete staging including appropriate CT scan and/or MRI. All stored images (initial staging and follow-up examinations) were reviewed. Review of all stored images revealed renal infiltration in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma (11 of 364 = 3.0%; median age = 65 years, m:f = 6:5) but also multiple myeloma (2 of 162 = 1.2%; median age = 72 years; m:f = 1:1) and leukemia (5 of 101 = 4.9%; median age = 12 years; m:f = 2:3). There were no cases of renal infiltration in 41 patients with Hodgkin's disease. In total there were six patients with solitary lesions, five patients with diffuse renal enlargement, four patients with perirenal lesions, and two patients with direct invasion of the kidney. In leukemia the most common imaging pattern is diffuse enlargement. In the other subtypes of lymphoproliferative disease no specific correlation between typical CT patterns and subtype of lymphoproliferative disease can be found. The prevalence of renal involvement is in line with earlier studies. Contrary to earlier reports, multiple lesions were not found to be a common pattern.

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Andreas Gunter Bach, Curd Behrmann, Hans Jürgen Holzhausen, Michaela Katzer, Dirk Arnold, Rolf Peter Spielmann, Alexey Surov. Prevalence and patterns of renal involvement in imaging of malignant lymphoproliferative diseases. Acta radiologica (Stockholm, Sweden : 1987). 2012 Apr 1;53(3):343-8

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PMID: 22287149

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