Lymphoblastic lymphoma in two young siblings (coincidence or genetics?): a case report

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Abstract

Abstract Background: Non-Hodgkin lymphoma is the fourth most common malignancy in children and it is not considered to be a hereditary disorder. However, it could affect members from the same family.Case presentation: We are presenting two cases of Caucasian female siblings who were diagnosed with mediastinal lymphoblastic lymphoma in the same year. The two young females were presented to the emergency department with respiratory symptoms. After doing radiological investigations and biopsies, the diagnosis of lymphoblastic lymphoma was done. The elder sister died before confirming the diagnosis, and the other one is on chemotherapy now and the treatment outcomes is good.Conclusions: This case emphasize the crucial role of precursor genetics in lymphoblastic lymphomas and suggesting the strong relation between those genetics and the age of symptoms presentation. This is the first report of non-Hodgkin siblings pair in the pediatric population.

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last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00