TB OR NOT TB Dr Katie Devlin and
TB OR NOT TB? Dr Katie Devlin and Dr Myriam Guessoum (Radiology Sp. Rs), Dr Jaymin Patel and Dr Nirav Patel (Consultant Radiologists) St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
CLINICAL INFORMATION • 54 y/o male originally from Somalia • Presented initially in 2011 with significant weight loss • Background of PUD & cholecystectomy 1 year prior (gallstones) • Incidentally found to have deranged LFTs on admission • US abdomen demonstrates splenomegaly, multiple hypoechoic splenic and liver lesions and periportal lymphadenopathy
FIGURES - CT HEAD, THORAX ABDOMEN AND PELVIS (i) (i) Axial image, arterial-enhanced CT thorax: Enlarged pre- and paratracheal nodes, measuring up to 18 mm in short axis. Small calcified left hilar node. Lungs unremarkable. (ii, iii and iv) Axial images, portal-venous CT abdomen and pelvis: Multiple hypodense hepatic and splenic lesions with splenomegaly and bulky precaval, gastrohepatic and portocaval nodes; (iii) Soft tissue mass closely related to the rectosigmoid colon and (iv) Lytic lesion within the right sacral ala. (iii) (iv)
WORKING DIFFERENTIALS • • Differentials following an US and CT • Haematological malignancy e. g. lymphoma • Metastatic malignancy • TB Biopsy diagnosis: • “Good cellular aspirate contents from spleen and liver revealing caseating granulomatous splenitis and hepatitis. No malignant cells seen. The features are those of mycobacterial infection. Conclusion FNA spleen and liver: Caseating granulomatous inflammation indicating mycobacterial infection” • AAFB blood culture and AFB induced sputum negative • Lytic bone lesion underwent MR and Bone scintigraphy investigation, features felt consistent with cold abscess from TB.
FINAL DIAGNOSIS - PART 1 • Working diagnosis as per Clinical follow up documentation: Presumed disseminated TB. Managed with quadruple therapy. • 6 month follow-up CT TAP performed demonstrated reduction in all sites of disease in keeping with a response to antituberculous therapy 2011 2012
CLINICAL RE-PRESENTATION • Re-presented in 2018 with grumbling ongoing right-sided abdominal pain • Several interim investigations were performed including US abdomen and pelvis (x 4) • Persistent splenic lesions led to an MRI liver and spleen, splenic lesions reported as indeterminate but with no sinister features. • With no underlying cause found for symptoms and treated for presumed TB, the diagnosis was in question ? Sarcoid ? lymphoma ? Ig. G 4 • A PET-CT was performed in July 2018
PET-CT, MR AND TRUS IMAGING (i) (iii) (i) PET-CT: 49 x 85 x 56 mm PET avid (SUVmax 13. 2) retrovesical pouch mass. ‘? peritoneal TB given the clinical context’ (ii) MR axial T 2: Large lobulated mass with predominantly intermediate signal with central areas of low and high T 2 signal, separate to the rectum, bladder and seminal vesicles. ‘? large lymph node mass likely secondary to TB’ (iii) Transrectal US-guided biopsy of the mass.
2011 FINAL DIAGNOSIS: TB OR NOT TB? • “Pelvic mass biopsy: In keeping with germ cell tumour, likely seminoma” • Classical seminoma in an undescended testis • Underwent robotic assisted excision of ectopic testis and two enlarged right external iliac nodes and completed adjuvant carboplatin February 2019. • Pathological staging p. T 1 N 0 • Follow-up October 2019, patient well with symptoms of abdominal pain resolved, up-to-date imaging and tumour markers normal.
DISCUSSION & LEARNING POINTS • Tricky case owing to the distracting history of presumed TB alongside the clinical and radiological improvement following antibiotic treatment, particularly with reduction in the size of the pelvic mass • It was felt with hindsight that this tumour was present and reflective of the pelvic mass on the CT of 2011 • The diagnosis of hepatic and splenic TB remains presumed, but nil grew in blood cultures or sputum. Not typical sites for metastatic spread. • The findings of a large pelvic mass within the pelvis with no additional peritoneal abnormality are not typical features of TB peritonitis (including features of wet, dry-type or fibrotic-fixed type) which should raise the question about an alternate diagnosis • In any male pelvic mass and in general, it is important to review the spermatic cord and testes as often only partimaged on the last few axial slices of a CT abdomen and pelvis!
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