Granulomatous inflammation in lymph nodes of the head and neck—a retrospective analysis of causes in a population with very low incidence of tuberculosis

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the risk of the patient having: (1) TB, (2) sarcoidosis, (3) atypical mycobacteria, or (4) malignant disease, if FNAC or histology from a cervical lymph node shows granulomatous inflammation (GI). And to elucidate clinical characteristics associated with these causes of GI, patients with a pathological diagnosis of GI in head and neck lymph nodes were identified though a search of the Danish national pathology database. Charts were reviewed to identify the final clinical diagnosis and specific clinical characteristics. For the most common clinical diagnoses, association to clinical characteristics was analyzed using logistic regression (Odense University Hospital January 2006 to December 2015). We included 121 patients. Clinical diagnoses fell into the following categories: sarcoidosis (26%), tuberculosis (TB) (22%), cat scratch disease (6%), atypical mycobacteriosis (7%), malignancy (2%), and other (4%). In 33% of cases, the diagnosis was unknown. In the pediatric group, atypical mycobacteriosis was the most frequent clinical diagnosis (50%). TB and sarcoidosis were dependent variables in regression analysis. Characteristics significantly related to TB were histology showing necrotizing GI, gland localization in level 3–6, and origin other than Danish and TB being the tentative diagnosis. Characteristics significantly related to sarcoidosis were histology showing non-necrotizing GI, gland localization in level 3–6, the patient being of Danish origin, and unknown duration of symptoms. TB and sarcoidosis were the most common clinical diagnoses, and they were associated with specific clinical characteristics. In a third of cases, a specific clinical diagnosis was never given.

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Flyger, T. F., Larsen, S. R., & Kjeldsen, A. D. (2020). Granulomatous inflammation in lymph nodes of the head and neck—a retrospective analysis of causes in a population with very low incidence of tuberculosis. Immunologic Research, 68(4), 198–203. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12026-020-09144-6

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