Introduction: Who Should Seek Diagnostics
Not everyone needs to rush to the doctor for testing, but certain signs should prompt you to schedule an appointment. If you notice that your abdomen feels unusually full or swollen, especially on the left side under your rib cage, it’s worth getting checked. Many people with splenic marginal zone lymphoma experience an enlarged spleen, which can create a hard feeling or discomfort when lying on the left side.[1]
Unexplained weight loss, persistent tiredness that doesn’t improve with rest, or night sweats that drench your sheets are other important warning signs. About one in four people with this condition don’t have symptoms at first, which is why routine blood work sometimes catches problems before you feel unwell.[4] If you develop unusual bruising or bleeding, feel your heart racing even when resting, or notice you’re becoming breathless with minimal activity, these could indicate that your blood cell counts are affected.[6]
Certain people face higher risks and should be especially attentive. If you have hepatitis C virus infection, about one in five people with this type of lymphoma also have this infection. Those with autoimmune conditions like rheumatoid arthritis or primary biliary cirrhosis also have increased risk. Having a family member with lymphoma is another reason to be vigilant about symptoms.[6][4]
Classic Diagnostic Methods
Physical Examination and Initial Assessment
Your doctor will start with a thorough physical examination. They’ll carefully feel your abdomen to check if your spleen is larger than normal. An enlarged spleen is found in nearly everyone with splenic marginal zone lymphoma, making this a key diagnostic clue.[9] The doctor will also check for swollen lymph nodes in your neck, underarms, and groin, though lymph node involvement outside the abdomen is rare with this type of lymphoma.[10]
During the exam, your healthcare provider will ask detailed questions about your symptoms. They want to know if you’ve had fevers, drenching night sweats, or unintentional weight loss—these are called B symptoms and help doctors understand how active the disease is. However, these symptoms are not common in splenic marginal zone lymphoma compared to other lymphomas.[4]
Blood Tests
Blood testing plays a central role in diagnosing this condition. A complete blood count (CBC) shows the number of different blood cells in your body. Many people with splenic marginal zone lymphoma have increased numbers of white blood cells called lymphocytes circulating in their blood—this is known as lymphocytosis.[4] Sometimes these lymphocytes have a distinctive appearance with small projections that make them look “villous” under the microscope.[9]
Low blood cell counts are also common. About one quarter of patients have cytopenias, meaning reduced numbers of red blood cells, white blood cells, or platelets. This can happen because the enlarged spleen is trapping and destroying blood cells, a process called hypersplenism, or because lymphoma cells are crowding out normal blood cell production in the bone marrow.[4]
Additional blood tests check for specific markers. About one third of people have small amounts of monoclonal protein in their blood, usually a type called immunoglobulin M (IgM) kappa. Your doctor will also test for hepatitis C virus since this infection is linked to the disease. Blood tests measuring lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), liver function, kidney function, and other markers help doctors understand the overall impact on your body.[5][9]
Bone Marrow Testing
Bone marrow aspiration and biopsy are procedures that collect samples from inside your bones where blood cells are made. The soft, spongy tissue inside bones is called bone marrow, and it has both liquid and solid components. During aspiration, a needle draws out liquid marrow; during biopsy, a needle removes a small core of solid tissue. These samples typically come from your hip bone.[10]
The bone marrow is frequently affected in splenic marginal zone lymphoma, showing a nodular pattern where clumps of lymphoma cells appear scattered throughout. Looking at these samples under a microscope helps confirm the diagnosis and shows how extensively the disease has spread. The appearance of the lymphoma cells in bone marrow often mirrors what’s seen in the spleen.[9]
Imaging Tests
Various imaging tests create pictures of what’s happening inside your body. Ultrasound uses sound waves to visualize organs and is often used to measure spleen size. CT scans (computed tomography) use X-rays and computers to create detailed cross-sectional images of your body, helping doctors see the spleen, liver, and lymph nodes in the abdomen. An enlarged spleen measuring more than normal is a requirement for diagnosing splenic marginal zone lymphoma.[9][10]
PET scans (positron emission tomography) show areas where cells are particularly active by detecting how much sugar they consume. Because cancer cells often use more energy than normal cells, they appear as bright spots on PET scans. This helps determine the extent of disease and whether lymphoma has spread to other areas.[10]
Tissue Biopsy and Laboratory Analysis
If doctors find enlarged lymph nodes, they may perform a lymph node biopsy by removing all or part of a lymph node for examination. When lymph nodes near the spleen (called hilar lymph nodes) are involved, their normal structure becomes completely replaced by lymphoma cells.[9]
Sometimes examining the actual spleen tissue provides the most definitive diagnosis. This might happen if your spleen is removed surgically, a procedure called splenectomy. Looking at spleen tissue under the microscope, pathologists see that the normal white pulp areas are taken over by small lymphoma cells that spread outward, eventually invading the red pulp areas of the spleen. These cells have specific characteristics that help distinguish this lymphoma from other types.[9]
Laboratory specialists perform special tests called immunophenotyping on the cells. This identifies specific proteins on the cell surface that act like fingerprints to confirm the diagnosis. Splenic marginal zone lymphoma cells are positive for markers CD20, CD79a, and surface immunoglobulin, but negative for CD5, CD10, CD23, CD43, and cyclin D1. This pattern helps doctors distinguish it from other B-cell lymphomas that might look similar.[9]
Genetic testing looks for clonal rearrangements in immunoglobulin genes, which are frequently found and confirm that all the abnormal cells came from a single cancerous cell. Some patients have a deletion on chromosome 7, which appears in about 40% of cases.[9]
Tests for Autoimmune Complications
Because autoimmune problems occur in about one in five people with this lymphoma, your doctor may order tests to check for conditions like autoimmune hemolytic anemia (where your immune system destroys your red blood cells), autoimmune thrombocytopenia (destruction of platelets), or other autoimmune disorders. These tests look for specific antibodies or other signs that your immune system is attacking your own cells.[9][6]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
When patients consider joining clinical trials testing new treatments, additional diagnostic requirements often apply. Clinical trials use standardized criteria to ensure all participants have similar disease characteristics, making the research results more reliable and meaningful.
Staging becomes particularly important for trial enrollment. Staging determines how far the lymphoma has spread through your body. Most people with splenic marginal zone lymphoma are diagnosed at an advanced stage because the disease by definition affects the spleen and often the bone marrow and blood. However, trials may accept only certain stages or exclude patients whose disease has spread to specific organs.[4]
Clinical trials typically require recent imaging to document the exact size and location of disease. PET-CT scans are commonly requested because they provide both metabolic activity information (from the PET component) and detailed anatomical pictures (from the CT component). Baseline measurements of your spleen size and any enlarged lymph nodes establish starting points to track whether treatments are working.[10]
Blood tests confirming adequate organ function are standard trial requirements. Your liver and kidneys need to work well enough to process medications safely. Blood counts must meet minimum thresholds—though they may be low due to lymphoma, they can’t be so low that treatment would be dangerous. Specific test results like hemoglobin levels, albumin levels, and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) may be used both as entry criteria and as prognostic markers.[9]
Some research studies specifically test for minimal residual disease, which means tiny amounts of lymphoma that remain after treatment but are too small to detect with regular methods. Advanced molecular techniques can find these remaining cancer cells in blood or bone marrow samples. Achieving “unmeasurable minimal residual disease” status—meaning no cancer cells can be detected even with sensitive tests—predicts better long-term outcomes and is increasingly used to assess treatment success in clinical trials.[12]
Testing for hepatitis C is particularly important before trials begin because treating this viral infection sometimes leads to lymphoma improvement. Some clinical trials require hepatitis C treatment first, then observe whether the lymphoma responds before starting other therapies.[7][15]
Tissue samples stored from your original diagnosis may need to be sent to central pathology laboratories that specialize in lymphoma diagnosis. These expert reviewers confirm you have the correct lymphoma subtype since treatment approaches differ between various marginal zone lymphomas and other indolent B-cell lymphomas.



