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CASE REPORT article

Front. Oncol.

Sec. Hematologic Malignancies

This article is part of the Research TopicCase-based Advances in the Understanding of Rare and Unusual Hematologic Malignancies 2025-2026View all 20 articles

Persistent lactic acidosis in ALK-positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma: A case report and literature review

Provisionally accepted
Haoru  JinHaoru Jin*Zhibin  XuZhibin XuQin  AiQin AiQiangwei  HuangQiangwei HuangXu  ChenXu ChenPeicong  HongPeicong HongYuan  QiuYuan Qiu*
  • First Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Lactic acidosis is common in the ICU, but malignancy-associated type B lactic acidosis mediated by the clinical Warburg effect (CWE) is uncommon and easily missed when infection or organ dysfunction dominates the presentation. We report a 35-year-old man with a month of fever and progressive dyspnea who presented with persistent hyperlactatemia (peak 15.46 mmol/L) and markedly elevated LDH despite stable hemodynamics. Imaging revealed generalized lymphadenopathy, multifocal osteolytic lesions, and bilateral pleural effusions; infectious studies were unrevealing apart from chronic hepatitis B. Cervical node biopsy (CD30⁺, ALK-L⁺, EMA⁺; Ki-67 ~80%; EBER–; pan-B/T and epithelial markers negative) established ALK-positive anaplastic large-cell lymphoma. In the absence of shock or sustained hypoperfusion, CWE/type B lactic acidosis was diagnosed. An etoposide-containing CHOP variant (ECHOP/CHOEP, days 1–5) was initiated with parallel continuous renal replacement therapy (CVVHDF) to stabilize acid–base and electrolytes as a bridge to chemotherapy. Lactate declined from 13.30 mmol/L immediately before chemotherapy to 2.88 mmol/L by day 3, 1.33 mmol/L by day 8, and normalized (0.6 mmol/L) by day 17, closely tracking clinical improvement. The patient was extubated, CRRT discontinued, transferred out of the ICU, and discharged; chemotherapy-related myelosuppression and ICU-acquired weakness were managed with G-CSF, transfusions, and early rehabilitation, and a femoral deep-vein thrombosis was treated with anticoagulation. A focused review of 18 recent case reports (2021–2025) suggests that timely, standardized antitumor therapy is frequently followed by a rapid, time-locked fall in lactate, whereas the absence of definitive oncologic treatment portends uniformly poor short-term outcomes. This case underscores that, in hemodynamically stable patients with refractory hyperlactatemia, early consideration of CWE and prompt tumor-directed therapy — supported by targeted organ support such as CRRT — offer the most reliable path to metabolic reversal and recovery.

Keywords: ALK-positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma, chemotherapy response, tumor metabolism, Type B lactic acidosis, Warburg effect

Received: 11 Nov 2025; Accepted: 16 Feb 2026.

Copyright: © 2026 Jin, Xu, Ai, Huang, Chen, Hong and Qiu. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence:
Haoru Jin
Yuan Qiu

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