HIV-associated CD8+ T-cell Skin Infiltrative Disease and EBV-associated Polymorphic B-cell Lymphoproliferative Disorder in an AIDS Patient Who Improved Dramatically with Antiretroviral Therapy Alone

Intern Med. 2024 Jan 2. doi: 10.2169/internalmedicine.2687-23. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated CD8+ T-cell skin infiltrative disease with severe erythroderma has rarely been reported. While HIV-positive patients are prone to develop lymphoma, which is often associated with Epstein-Barr virus, polymorphic lymphoproliferative disorder is rare, accounting for <5% of cases. We herein report a 41-year-old HIV-positive man who presented with a fever, erythroderma, and lymphadenopathy and was diagnosed with the coexistence of both diseases. His condition improved significantly with continued antiretroviral therapy. This case suggests that HIV-induced immunodeficiency is central to the pathogenesis of both entities and that improvement of the immunodeficient state is an effective treatment.

Keywords: EBV-associated polymorphic B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder; HIV-associated CD8+ T-cell skin infiltrative disease; antiretroviral therapy; erythroderma.