RESUMO
Peripheral T-cell lymphoma, not otherwise specified (PTCL-NOS) is the most common subgroup of peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCL), and constitutes a diagnosis of exclusion. At presentation, most patients exhibit B symptoms and generalized lymphadenopathy, with or without concomitant extra-nodal involvement. We present a case of a man admitted to the hospital with B symptoms, generalized lymphadenopathy and a pruritic exanthema. Laboratory workup reveled persistent eosinophilia and malignant hypercalcemia. The excisional lymph node biopsy diagnosed PTCL-NOS, and the skin biopsy demonstrated a lichenoid dermatitis, compatible with the presumptive clinical diagnosis of a drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) syndrome. The patient was treated with topical betamethasone with good overall response, and initiated the first cycle of chemotherapy before discharge. This case report describes a PTCL-NOS with a concomitant non-lymphoproliferative disease, the challenging diagnostic workup of the two diseases and reinforces the most important features of the lymphoproliferative neoplasm.