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Case Reports
. 2018 Oct 9:2018:8627145.
doi: 10.1155/2018/8627145. eCollection 2018.

Pure Red Cell Aplasia Associated with Thymolipoma: Complete Anaemia Resolution following Thymectomy

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Case Reports

Pure Red Cell Aplasia Associated with Thymolipoma: Complete Anaemia Resolution following Thymectomy

David Ferreira et al. Case Rep Hematol. .

Abstract

Pure red cell aplasia is an uncommon cause of anaemia rarely associated with thymoma. A combination of immunosuppressive therapy and thymectomy offers a potential cure. Thymectomy alone rarely results in anaemia resolution. A seventy-three-year-old male with Klinefelter syndrome presented with progressively increasing shortness of breath and anaemia. Serological testing supported primary bone marrow pathology, and a bone marrow biopsy was performed. A pure red cell aplasia was seen on bone marrow examination, and computed tomography of the chest demonstrated a thymoma. Thymectomy was performed, and histology revealed a thymolipoma. Complete anaemia resolution was achieved following thymectomy alone. This suggests that thymomas may directly mediate immune dysregulation resulting in erythroid precursor destruction.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
(a) Normal bone marrow biopsy demonstrating a predominance of erythroid precursors (note cells with round, dark nuclei). This image was originally published in ASH Image Bank. Peter Maslak. Normal adult bone marrow. ASH Image Bank. 2010; Trephine Biopsy-2. ©The American Society of Hematology. (b) Bone marrow biopsy taken from the patient, demonstrating marked reduction in erythroid precursors.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Thymoma on noncontrast chest computed tomography.

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