Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2864321 The American Journal of the Medical Sciences 2013 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundRosai-Dorfman disease (RDD) is a rare, idiopathic, histiocytic proliferative disorder, the infrequent occurrence of which limits in-depth studies. Consequently, many characteristics of this disease remain unknown, restricting early diagnosis and proper treatment.MethodsIn this study, the literature was reviewed and a retrospective analysis of the medical records of 13 patients with RDD conducted to investigate the demographic data, clinical data, laboratory and imaging results, treatment, and prognosis of this disease.ResultsOf the 13 cases in our sample, 10 (77%) were purely extranodal RDD, 2 (15%) were both nodal and extranodal, and 1 (8%) was purely nodal. The locations of the 10 purely extranodal RDD lesions included the central nervous system (n = 6, 60%), nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses (n = 3, 30%), and the cutis (n = 1, 10%). The locations of the central nervous system-related RDD lesions included the cerebral subdura (n = 2, 29%), the sellar region (n = 3, 14%), the cerebral parenchyma (n = 1, 14%) and the spinal subdura (n = 1, 14%). Ten patients (77%) had stable conditions, 3 (23%) experienced recurrence, and 2 (15%) experienced recurrence and lesion metastasis.ConclusionsRDD is rare, requiring knowledge of its clinical manifestations for a rapid and correct diagnosis. In light of the possibility of recurrence and lesion metastasis, long-term follow-up is needed. Treatment is still controversial. Future efforts should be directed at investigating the etiology and postoperative treatment for relapsing cases or those with subresected lesions.

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