Bing-Neel syndrome (BNS) is a rare disease manifestation of Waldenström's macroglobulinemia characterized by abnormal lymphoplasmacytoid cells infiltration of the central nervous system. In September 2019, a 46-year-old man presented to a previous hospital with hand tremors, nausea, and dysuria. Demyelination of cerebral white matter and the spinal cord was discovered using MRI. Steroid pulse therapy was used to treat inflammatory demyelinating disease, and it provided temporary relief, but the symptoms returned when the steroids were stopped. He was referred to our hospital in June 2020, for further evaluation with the possibility of hematological malignancy. BNS was diagnosed based on the presence of abnormal lymphoplasmacytoid cells in the bone marrow and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), as well as the presence of the MYD88L265P mutation in the CSF specimen. In July 2020, BR (bendamustine, rituximab) therapy was administered, but it was ineffective. Oral administration of tirabrutinib, which was recently approved for WM, began in August 2020. He has achieved long-term remission and steroid withdrawal, with no notable side effects. This is the second report of successful treatment of BNS with tirabrutinib. More research is needed to confirm tirabrutinib's efficacy in the treatment of BNS.
Keywords: Bing-Neel syndrome; MYD88L265P mutation; Tirabrutinib; Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia.