A 49-year-old man with no medical history presented to the hospital with headache, altered mental status, and episodic left-sided weakness. MRI brain with and without contrast showed two subtle areas of restricted diffusion, with abnormal leptomeningeal enhancement. Lumbar puncture revealed elevated protein and lymphocytic pleocytosis. Given these findings, cerebral angiography was performed to evaluate for vasculitis.
Digital subtraction angiography demonstrated multifocal cortical arterial irregularities within the quaternary distal cortical segments of bilateral MCA and ACA arteries that did not resolve with intraarterial verapamil administration, consistent with a small vessel arteriopathy. A brain biopsy revealed luminal infiltration with invasive atypical B lymphocytes, confirming a diagnosis of IVLBCL.
The patient was treated with methotrexate and CHOP chemotherapy, resulting in an improvement in mental status.