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Case Reports
. 2019 Sep 2:6:26.
doi: 10.1186/s40662-019-0151-4. eCollection 2019.

Bilateral benign reactive lymphoid hyperplasia of the conjunctiva: a case treated with oral doxycycline and review of the literature

Affiliations
Case Reports

Bilateral benign reactive lymphoid hyperplasia of the conjunctiva: a case treated with oral doxycycline and review of the literature

Olga Klavdianou et al. Eye Vis (Lond). .

Abstract

Background: To report a case of bilateral benign reactive lymphoid hyperplasia (BRLH) of the conjunctiva treated with oral doxycycline and perform review of the literature evaluating the presentation, treatment and risk of transformation to lymphoma.

Case presentation: A case report is described and review of the literature from January 1975 to January 2019 was performed. A 30-year-old man presented with bilateral enlarging fleshy pink medial canthal conjunctival lesions. Incisional biopsy revealed BRLH. Oral doxycycline was initiated (100 mg two times a day) for a total of 2 months. Both lesions decreased in size significantly at the patient's two-month follow up visit. The residual lesion in the right eye was excised along with an adjacent pterygium and the patient has been free of recurrence for the past 1.5 years. The lesion in the left eye has remained stable in size after cessation of the oral doxycycline. A total of 235 cases of conjunctival BRLH were identified in our literature search. The mean age at diagnosis was 35.2 years (range, 5 to 91 years). BRLH lesions were unilateral in 75% of patients and bilateral in 25% of them. Seven patients (2.9%) had a concurrent Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection at the time of lesion appearance. The most common treatments were surgical excision (155/235 or 65.9%) and corticosteroids (30/235 or 12.7%), while 14% (33/235) of the patients were observed and 4.6% (11/235) received external beam radiotherapy alone. Recurrence occurred in ten patients (10/235 or 4.2%), of whom five had undergone surgical excision alone, two excision followed by external beam radiotherapy, one excision and oral corticosteroids, one radiotherapy alone and one had been treated with topical corticosteroids. Overall, only 2 of the 235 reported cases (0.8%) developed malignancy, one localized to the conjunctiva and one systemic.

Conclusions: Benign reactive lymphoid hyperplasia is one of the lymphoproliferative disorders of the conjunctiva and ocular adnexa. Extensive literature review shows that most cases are treated with surgery, steroids or observation. Oral doxycycline may be considered an alternative non-invasive treatment of BRLH conjunctival lesions. BRLH lesions warrant careful follow up as they can rarely transform into conjunctival or systemic lymphoma.

Keywords: Atypical lymphoid hyperplasia; Conjunctival biopsy; Conjunctival lymphoid lesion; Conjunctival lymphoma; Conjunctival tumor; High resolution anterior segment optical coherence tomography.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interestsThe authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Slit lamp photograph and high resolution anterior segment OCT of the patient’s right eye. a A gelatinous, fleshy, firm, pink conjunctival lesion (asterisk) is present in the medial canthal area of the right eye and a pterygium-type lesion with a leukoplakic head encroaching on the cornea adjacent to it (arrow). b High resolution anterior segment OCT reveals a homogeneous hyporeflective lesion (asterisk) with thin overlying epithelium in the medial canthal area of the right eye. The inset indicates the level of the scan. c Slit lamp photograph of the right eye after 2 months of oral doxycycline 100 mg twice a day. The pterygium (arrow) remains unchanged while the nasal BRLH lesion (asterisk) has decreased in size and appears flatter and smaller. d High resolution anterior segment OCT confirms the reduced size of the nasal BRLH lesion (asterisk) after 2 months of oral doxycycline. The inset indicates the level of the scan
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Slit lamp photograph and high resolution anterior segment OCT of the patient’s right eye. a A gelatinous, fleshy, firm, pink conjunctival lesion (asterisk) is seen in the medial canthal area of the left eye. b High resolution anterior segment OCT reveals a homogeneous hyporeflective lesion (asterisk) with thin overlying epithelium in the medial canthal area of the left eye. The inset indicates the level of the scan. c Slit lamp photograph of the left eye after 2 months of oral doxycycline 100 mg twice a day. Similar to the right eye, the nasal BRLH lesion (asterisk) has decreased in size and appears flatter and smaller. d High resolution anterior segment OCT confirms the reduced size of the nasal BRLH lesion (asterisk) after 2 months of oral doxycycline. The inset indicates the level of the scan
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Histopathology of the incisional medical canthal biopsy specimen from the patient’s right eye. a Hematoxylin-eosin staining of lymphoid follicles composed of small cells with mitotic figures and tingible body macrophages. (× 100 magnification) (b) Dense CD20 staining of B cells. (× 100 magnification) (c) CD3 staining of T cells within the follicles and in the interfollicular zones. (× 100 magnification)

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