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1.
The heterogeneity of the posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) is well recognized. However, in contrast to other immunodeficiency-associated lymphomas or diffuse large B-cell lymphomas in general, studies of the histogenetic spectrum of the large category of monomorphic B-cell cases have been more limited, produced conflicting results, and have paid little attention to the impact of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Therefore, 30 monomorphic B-cell PTLD from 27 patients were analyzed using EBER in situ hybridization for EBV and a panel of antibodies directed against CD20, CD3/bcl-6, CD10, MUM-1/IRF4, CD138, and bcl-2. The results were correlated with the histopathologic features and clinical outcome. All PTLD were CD20 with 23% CD10, 53% bcl-6, 67% MUM-1/IRF4, 13% CD138, 83% bcl-2 and 67% EBV. 30% of the PTLD had a germinal center (GC) profile (CD10, bcl-6, MUM-1/IRF4, CD138), 53% a "late GC/early post-GC" profile (CD10, bcl-6, MUM-1/IRF4, CD138), 13% a post-GC profile (CD10, bcl-6, MUM-1/IRF4, CD138) and 3% an indeterminate profile (all markers negative). EBV positivity was associated with MUM-1/IRF4 expression (P=0.005) and with a non-GC phenotype (P=0.01). All CD138 cases were EBV. The cases with a GC phenotype were the most likely to resemble transformed GC cells (P=0.023). No statistically significant survival differences could be documented between those with a GC versus non-GC phenotype. These results highlight the broad histogenetic spectrum of monomorphic B-cell PTLD. They demonstrate the association of EBV positivity with a non-GC phenotype and suggest that EBV PTLD are more like lymphomas that arise in immunocompetent individuals. The lack of a demonstrable correlation with survival may relate to the relatively small number of cases studied.  相似文献   

2.
Recent studies with cDNA microarrays showed that diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) cases with gene expression profiles similar to germinal center (GC) B cells had much better prognosis than DLBCL cases with gene expression profiles resembling activated B cells. The goal of the current study is to evaluate if using a panel of GC B-cell (CD10 and Bcl-6) and activation (MUM1/IRF4 and CD138) markers by immunohistochemistry defines prognosis in patients with de novo DLBCL. Immunohistochemical stains for the above markers were performed on paraffin-embedded tissues from 42 de novo DLBCL patients. Median follow-up in all patients was 41 months (range, 1-103 months) and in surviving patients was 65 months (range, 14-103 months). These cases could be classified into three expression patterns: GC B-cell pattern (pattern A) expressing CD10 and/or Bcl-6 but not activation markers; activated GC B-cell pattern (pattern B) expressing at least one of GC B-cell markers and one of activation markers; and activated non-GC B-cell pattern (pattern C) expressing MUM1/IRF4 and/or CD138 but not GC B-cell markers. Patients with pattern A had much better overall survival than those with the other two patterns (Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, P < 0.008, log rank test). Using multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression analysis, the international prognostic index scores and the expression pattern of these markers were independent prognostic indicators. Our results suggest that expression patterns of this panel of GC B-cell and activation markers by immunohistochemistry correlate with the prognosis of patients with DLBCL. Immunohistochemical analysis on paraffin-embedded tissues is more readily available than gene expression profiling by cDNA microarray and may provide similar prognostic information.  相似文献   

3.
Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) are usually but not invariably associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). The reported incidence, however, of EBV-negative PTLDs varies widely, and it is uncertain whether they should be considered analogous to EBV-positive PTLDs and whether they have any distinctive features. Therefore, the EBV status of 133 PTLDs from 80 patients was determined using EBV-encoded small ribonucleic acid (EBER) in situ hybridization stains with or without Southern blot EBV terminal repeat analysis. The morphologic, immunophenotypic, genotypic, and clinical features of the EBV-negative PTLDs were reviewed, and selected features were compared with EBV-positive cases. Twenty-one percent of patients had at least one EBV-negative PTLD (14% of biopsies). The initial EBV-negative PTLDs occurred a median of 50 months post-transplantation compared with 10 months for EBV-positive cases. Although only 2% of PTLDs from before 1991 were EBV negative, 23% of subsequent PTLDs were EBV negative (p <0.001). Of the EBV-negative PTLDs, 67% were of monomorphic type (M-PTLD) compared with 42% of EBV-positive cases (p <0.05). The other EBV-negative PTLDs were of infectious mononucleosis-like, plasma cell-rich (n = 2), small B-cell lymphoid neoplasm, large granular lymphocyte disorder (n = 4) and polymorphic (P) types. B-cell clonality was established in 14 specimens and T-cell clonality was established in three (two patients). None of the remaining specimens were studied with Southern blot analysis and some had no ancillary studies. Rearrangement of c-MYC was identified in two M-PTLDs with small noncleaved-like features, and rearrangement of BCL-2 was found in one large noncleaved-like M-PTLD. Ten patients were alive at 3 to 63 months (only three patients received chemotherapy). Seven patients, all with M-PTLDs, are dead at 0.3 to 6 months. Therefore, EBV-negative PTLDs have distinct features, but some do respond to decreased immunosuppression, similar to EBV-positive cases, suggesting that EBV positivity should not be an absolute criterion for the diagnosis of a PTLD.  相似文献   

4.
We report 12 European cases of pyothorax-associated lymphomas occurring 30-67 years following artificial pneumothorax for pleuropulmonar tuberculosis. Eleven patients presented with a localized pleural tumor mass, whereas one patient also had liver involvement. Histologic examination showed a diffuse proliferation of large lymphoid cells with frequent plasmacytoid differentiation (n = 8), expressing CD20 (n = 10), CD79a (n = 11), and/or CD138 (n = 5) B-cell antigens. Aberrant expression of T-cell markers (CD2, CD3, CD4) was noted in five cases. The B-cell origin of lymphoma cells was confirmed by the demonstration of immunoglobulin light chain restriction or clonal B cell population in six cases. In 11 of 12 cases in situ hybridization disclosed Epstein-Barr virus genome in most tumor cells and immunohistochemistry a type III LMP-1+/ EBNA-2+ latency profile. HHV-8/ORF73 antigen was not detected in all tested cases (n = 11). All investigated cases (10 of 10) disclosed a uniform CD10-/BCL-6-/MUM1+/CD138+/- phenotype, consistent with a derivation from late germinal center (GC)/post-GC B cells. Clinical outcome was poor with a median survival time of 5 months. Only one patient was in complete remission after 34 months. This study further confirms that pyothorax-associated lymphoma represents a distinct clinicopathologic entity among diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, which is characterized by a peculiar clinical presentation, frequent plasmacytoid features, and a strong association with EBV. Moreover, we show that this lymphoma entity likely originates from B cells at a late stage of differentiation and occasionally shares an aberrant dual B/T phenotype.  相似文献   

5.
胃肠道弥漫性大B细胞淋巴瘤免疫表型与预后的研究   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
目的 探讨胃肠道弥漫性大B细胞淋巴瘤(diffuse large B-cell lymphoma,DLBCL)免疫表型与患者预后的关系.方法 收集2000年6月至2007年6月我院普外科收治的胃肠道DLBCL63例,应用免疫组化方法检测抗体CD10、Bcl-6和MUM1在胃肠道DLBCL中的表达,并根据检测结果进行分型.结果 本组63例中CD10表达阳性13例,Bcl-6阳性53例,MUM1阳性52例.根据检测结果将胃肠道DLBCL分为生发中心B细胞型(GCB型)17例(27%),非GCB型46例(73%).GCB型局部淋巴结受累患者的比例(35%)显著低于非GCB型(70%)(P<0.05);肿瘤大小及浸润深度在两种亚型之间的差异无统计学意义.CD10表达阳性者的中位生存时间(76个月)显著长于阴性者(24个月)(P<0.01);GCB型胃肠道DLBCL患者的中位生存时间(76个月)显著长于非GCB型(28个月)(P<0.05);接受CHOP化疗方案的患者中GCB型的中位生存时间(76个月)显著长于非GCB型(24个月)(P<0.05);8例术后接受利妥昔单抗联合CHOP方案治疗的患者中GCB型和非GCB型各4例,目前均存活(22~47个月).结论 胃肠道DLBCL的免疫表型与局部淋巴结是否受累密切相关;CD10表达阳性者的生存时间显著长于阴性者;胃肠道DLBCL免疫表型分型对患者预后判断具有重要意义.  相似文献   

6.
Angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL) is an uncommon, but aggressive nodal peripheral T-cell lymphoma. Little is known of its biology and its natural history has been poorly studied. We report the first comprehensive study on the natural history/histologic progression of AITL by reviewing consecutive biopsies in 31 cases. Immunostaining for CD3, CD20, CD10 and CD21, CD23, CNA-42, CD4, CD8, and Ki 67, in situ hybridization for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-encoded RNA and polymerase chain reaction for T-clonality and B-clonality were performed. Histologic progression from AITL with limited nodal involvement and hyperplastic follicles (pattern I) to typical AITL with or without regressed follicles (patterns II and III) was observed in 7 cases, one of which relapsed subsequently as pattern I. Thirteen cases showed typical AITL at presentation and follow-up. Eleven cases where polymerase chain reaction results for T-cell receptor-gamma gene rearrangement were directly compared showed an identical band-size in the initial and follow-up biopsies. Seven cases (23%) developed EBV-associated B-cell lymphomas [5 diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and 2 classic Hodgkin lymphoma]. In 4 cases, a dominant B-cell clone was observed in biopsies lacking evidence of DLBCL. A single case was complicated by EBV-negative DLBCL, whereas another with large cell transformation had a T-cell phenotype. In conclusion, AITL represents a clonal T-cell proliferation with a stable T-cell clone throughout the disease. Partial nodal involvement with hyperplastic follicles is seen in early AITL and at relapse. When "morphologic high-grade transformation" occurs, it is usually due to a secondary (often EBV-associated) B-cell lymphoma, rather than a T-cell neoplasm.  相似文献   

7.
Plasmablastic lymphoma was initially described as a variant of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) involving the oral cavity of HIV+ patients and characterized by immunoblastic morphology and a plasma cell phenotype. However, other lymphomas may exhibit similar morphologic and immunophenotypic features. To determine the significance of plasmablastic differentiation in DLBCL and examine the heterogeneity of lymphomas with these characteristics, we examined 50 DLBCLs with low/absent CD20/CD79a and an immunophenotype indicative of terminal B-cell differentiation (MUM1/CD38/CD138/EMA-positive). We were able to define several distinct subgroups. Twenty-three tumors were classified as plasmablastic lymphoma of the oral mucosa type and showed a monomorphic population of immunoblasts with no or minimal plasmacytic differentiation. Most patients were HIV+ and EBV was positive in 74%. Eleven (48%) cases presented in the oral mucosa, but the remaining presented in other extranodal (39%) or nodal (13%) sites. Sixteen cases were classified as plasmablastic lymphoma with plasmacytic differentiation. These were composed predominantly of immunoblasts and plasmablasts, but in addition exhibited more differentiation to mature plasma cells. Only 33% were HIV+, EBV was detected in 62%, and 44% had nodal presentation. Nine cases, morphologically indistinguishable from the previous group, were secondary extramedullary plasmablastic tumors occurring in patients with prior or synchronous plasma cell neoplasms, classified as multiple myeloma in 7 of the 9. Two additional neoplasms were an HHV-8+ extracavitary variant of primary effusion lymphoma and an ALK+ DLBCL. HHV-8 was examined in 39 additional cases, and was negative in all. In conclusion, DLBCLs with plasmablastic differentiation are a heterogeneous group of neoplasms with different clinicopathological characteristics that may correspond to different entities.  相似文献   

8.
Posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) encompass a spectrum of heterogeneous entities ranging from benign lymphocytic proliferations to high-grade malignant lymphomas. The majority of PTLDs are associated with reactivation of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), which induces B-cell proliferation and occurs in the setting of severe immune suppression after solid organ or bone marrow transplantation. T-cell/natural killer cell PTLDs are relatively rare, constituting ~15% of all cases. T-cell PTLDs are usually aggressive, and outcomes are poor. This article describes an unusual case of T-cell PTLD with a favorable outcome. The patient is a 57-year-old man who underwent a liver transplantation due to hepatitis C cirrhosis. He developed graft-versus-host disease with skin and gastrointestinal involvement and generalized lymphadenopathy 4 months after transplantation. Histologic sections of an excised axillary lymph node showed atypical medium and larger T-lymphocytes that were positive for CD3, CD5, CD43, and CD8 but were negative for B-cell antigens, CD56, and in situ hybridization for EBV-encoded RNA. Polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed monoclonal T-cell receptor gamma chain gene rearrangement. A diagnosis of high-grade T-cell PTLD was made. The patient was treated with 4 cycles of cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone and is currently in remission, 4 years after therapy. The rapid presentation of an EBV-negative T-cell PTLD with a nonaggressive course and complete response to treatment is an unusual presentation of posttransplantation T-cell lymphoma, which is usually associated with a high mortality rate.  相似文献   

9.
Posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) eventually occur in approximately 5% of all organ transplant recipients. Most of cases are B-cell proliferations associated with the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). T-cell PTLDs are relatively rare, although some estimate that up to 14% of posttransplantation malignant lymphomas are T-cell lymphomas even though only a few of these cases are described in the literature. A literature review found only 77 cases of T-cell PTLD, including 1 case following cardiac transplant, 15 cases associated with EBV, and only 1 case of anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL). This single ALCL case followed a liver transplant, was of the T-cell phenotype, and was EBV negative. In this report, we describe a 14-year-old male who developed an EBV-positive, T-cell PTLD of the ALCL subtype after a period of 14 years following cardiac transplant. Immunohistochemical staining established the T-cell origin of the neoplasm with strong expression of CD45, CD3, CD43, and CD2 and also showed expression of CD30 consistent with the histologic features that suggested ALCL. EBER in situ hybridization detected the presence of the EBV. Polymerase chain reaction analysis for T-cell receptor-gamma gene rearrangements confirmed the T-cell lineage of this lymphoma. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of an EBV-positive T cell lymphoma of the anaplastic large cell subtype following organ transplant.  相似文献   

10.
Twenty-nine patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphomas presenting with bone involvement, including 18 localized primary bone lymphomas (group 1), 2 multifocal primary bone lymphomas (group 2), and 9 patients with extraskeletal disease at diagnosis (group 3), were studied. The tumors were subclassified according to the criteria of the WHO classification and evaluated by immunohistochemistry for expression of antigens associated with germinal center (GC) and non-GC stages of B-cell differentiation (bcl-6, CD10, MUM-1, VS38c, CD138, bcl-2, and CD44). The presence of a BCL-2/IgH gene rearrangement was investigated by polymerase chain reaction. All cases were characterized by similar clinicopathologic and morphologic features and had similarly good overall outcome. The patients (23 males, 6 females, median age 44 years) had tumors in long bones (14), axial skeleton (8), limb girdles (3), and multiple sites (4). Most tumors (24) were centroblastic, with multilobated cells in 12 cases. Almost half of the tumors (14 of 29, 48%) were bcl-6+CD10+ (GC-like), 9 of 29 cases (31%) were bcl-6+CD10- (indeterminate phenotype), and 6 of 29 cases (21%) were CD10-bcl-6- (post-GC like). The indeterminate phenotype was seen only in primary bone lymphoma. MUM-1 was frequently expressed in GC-like and non-GC-like categories. We found no evidence of plasmacytic differentiation by CD138, and VS38c immunoreactivity was distinctly rare (2 of 29 cases). CD44 was detected in 6 tumors, all CD10-. Bcl-2 was expressed by 70% of the tumors, but only 1 of 23 cases tested had a Bcl-2/JH rearrangement by polymerase chain reaction. A survival analysis showed that GC-like tumors had a longer overall survival duration compared with non-GC-like tumors (P = 0.0046). In conclusion, a GC-like immunophenotype characterizes roughly half of large B-cell lymphomas of bone and is associated with an improved survival.  相似文献   

11.
Sirtuin1 (SIRT1) is a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent deacetylase. Recently, it is suggested that SIRT1 may be involved in the development of malignant tumors including mouse lymphoma. Therefore, we investigated the prevalence and the prognostic impact of SIRT1 expression in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Immunohistochemical expression of SIRT1, p53, bcl2, CD10, bcl6, and multiple myeloma-1 (MUM1) were evaluated by using a 2 mm core from 104 DLBCL patients for tissue microarray. Positive expression of SIRT1 was seen in 74% (77/104) of patients. In total DLBCL patients, SIRT1 and p53 expression were significantly associated with shorter overall survival (OS) by univariate analysis (P=0.001 and P=0.011, respectively). SIRT1 was also an independent prognostic factor by multivariate analysis (P=0.01). According to the expression patterns of CD10, bcl6, and MUM1, germinal center B cell (GCB) types were represented in 38 cases (37%) and non-GCB types were represented in 66 cases (63%). In the GCB type, only p53 expression was associated with a significantly shorter OS (P=0.032). In the non-GCB type, expression of SIRT1 correlated with shorter OS by univariate analyses (P=0.005) and multivariate analyses (P=0.049). In conclusion, we showed that SIRT1 expression is a clinically significant prognostic indicator for DLBCL patients.  相似文献   

12.
Although primary cutaneous diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs) except for those of the leg are grouped together with primary cutaneous follicle center cell lymphoma in the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer classification of primary cutaneous lymphomas, they typically lack the usual phenotypic profile of follicular lymphoma. Whether they are truly of follicular center cell origin, have a molecular pathogenesis similar to nodal follicular lymphoma, or have any biologic features that distinguish them from secondary DLBCL involving skin remains uncertain. To address these issues, a retrospective multiparameter study of 25 patients including clinical, histologic, immunophenotypic, and cytogenetic analyses was performed. A classic CD10+, bcl-6+ follicular center cell profile was found in 10 (40%) cutaneous DLBCL (2 of 11 primary, 5 of 8 secondary, 3 of 6 unclassified) with bcl-2 expression seen only in the nonprimary cases. Of the remaining cases, 14 cases (56%) were CD10-, bcl-6+, bcl-2+/- (9 primary) and one case (4%) was CD10-, bcl-6-, bcl-2+ (0 primary). Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis showed a t(14;18) in 0 of 9 primary and 3 of 5 secondary cases. Primary cases were frequently found in the head/neck region, whereas secondary cases were more common on the trunk and extremities. Patients with primary disease were all alive, usually having received only local therapy, at a median follow-up of 19 months. Most secondary cases were treated with chemotherapy with only one untreated patient dead of disease at a median follow-up of 5 months. Primary cutaneous DLBCLs therefore appear to be distinctive as they have fewer features of follicular lymphoma than do secondary cases. Nevertheless, some appear to be of follicular center cell origin, even though they probably have a different molecular pathogenesis than most nodal follicular lymphomas.  相似文献   

13.
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) of the gastrointestinal tract is heterogeneous, including mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) origin and non-MALT, and they are indistinguishable. MALT lymphoma is a tumor of a post-germinal center (GC) memory B-cell origin, which is negative for Bcl-6 protein expression in low-grade but may become positive in high-grade tumors. Because Bcl-6 expression patterns in lymphoma of GC and non-GC B-cell origins have recently been characterized and CD10 is generally regarded as a specific marker for GC B cells, we critically evaluated gastric and small intestinal DLBCLs to see whether it is possible to identify tumor of GC B-cell origin by immunostaining in archival specimens. High-grade MALT lymphoma (H-ML) of the stomach (n = 20) was defined by the presence of a concomitant lymphoepithelial lesion and/or follicular colonization; and DLBCLs de novo, both gastric (n = 31) and intestinal (n = 21), were defined by the absence of the above features. Immunostaining for Bcl-6 and CD10 was done using formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections and was examined independently by three pathologists. Staining for Bcl-6 was positive (>10% of tumor cells) in 55 of 72 cases. However, two distinct patterns were recognized among those positive: diffusely dense (>75%) and sporadic (<75%). The former was further characterized by a consistency of Bcl-6+ tumor cell density at any given area, resembling the staining pattern of the GC or follicular lymphoma (FL) (GC/FL pattern), whereas the latter was, besides less dense population, by variable density from area to area. The GC/FL pattern was observed in 36% and 38% of gastric and intestinal DLBCLs de novo, respectively, but in none of the gastric H-ML. CD10 was positive in 12 of 71 cases (17%), all coexpressing Bcl-6. CD10+ tumors were more frequent in the intestinal (33%) than in gastric DLBCLs ( approximately 15%). Significantly, CD10 expression was observed in three gastric H-MLs, including one that displayed a distinct lymphoepithelial lesion. In conclusion: 1). tumors showing a diffusely dense pattern of Bcl-6 expression should be distinguished from those showing a sporadic pattern; for the former most likely represents the tumor of GC B-cell derivation, and the latter non-GC, including MALT lymphoma; 2). tumor of GC B-cell origin thus defined accounted for about one third of gastric as well as intestinal DLBCLs de novo but none of the gastric H-ML; and 3). CD10 expression can be seen in MALT lymphomas and should not be used as the marker for GC B cells.  相似文献   

14.
BACKGROUND: Posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) are a spectrum of lymphoid proliferations, occurring in immunosuppressed organ transplant recipients. They comprise early lesions, polymorphic (P-PTLD), monomorphic (M-PTLD), and Hodgkin/Hodgkin-like lymphoma PTLD (HL-PTLD) lesions. Most of them are associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Little is known about their genetic changes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We have studied 35 PTLDs[7 P-PTLDs (3/7 polyclonal IgH), 26 M-PTLDs (22 B-cell PTLD, 4 T-cell PTLD), 2 HL-PTLDs], using comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), a DNA-based technique allowing a screening of chromosomal imbalances without needing cultured cells. RESULTS.: Overall incidence of chromosomal imbalances: 51.5 %. The most frequent gains involved 8q24, 3q27 [4 cases each]; 2p24p25, 5p, 9q22q34, 11, 12q22q24, 14q32, 17q, 18q21 [2 cases each]. Nonrandom losses were 17p13 [4 cases]; 1p36, 4q [3 cases each]; 17q23q25, Xp [2 cases each]. Three high-level amplifications were detected: 4p16, 9p22p24, 18q21q23. In this latter imbalance, involvement of Bcl2 has been confirmed by FISH. The nonrandom CGH imbalances occurring in M-PTLD are usually described in lymphomas of immunocompetent patients and contain genes known to be involved in lymphomagenesis, while genomic abnormalities detected in half cases of EBV positive P-PTLD are mostly unknown. CONCLUSION: This study reported nonrandom chromosomal imbalances in PTLD and also identified early genomic alterations in EBV positive P-PTLD. These results raise two questions: the role of such lesions in the development and progression of those EBV induced-lymphoproliferations and their clinical significance especially in P-PTLD.  相似文献   

15.
Occasionally, primary large B-cell lymphomas (LBLs) arising in the spleen present with a micronodular pattern involving the splenic white pulp but sparing the red pulp. Histologically, the nodules contain scattered large B cells in a background of numerous T cells and histiocytes. They can cause substantial difficulty in histologic diagnosis as the morphology can mimic reactive and inflammatory lesions as well as other lymphoid neoplasms. In this study, we examined the histology and immunophenotype of the micronodular T-cell/histiocyte-rich LBL (MTLBL) of the spleen with a view to establish the characteristics that may be helpful in diagnosis. Paraffin-embedded material from 17 cases of MTLBL was studied. Clinical features and histology were reviewed and immunohistochemistry was performed for immunoglobulins, CD20, CD79a, CD3, CD68, CD10, BCL6, BCL2, OCT-2, epithelial membrane antigen, CD30, CD138, and EBV markers. The median age of presentation was 56 years, and the most frequent presenting features were anemia and B symptoms. All cases showed a micronodular pattern of involvement. The tumor nodules comprised a mixture of numerous CD3+ T cells and CD68+ histiocytes and scattered large CD20+ B cells with immunoglobulin light chain restriction. They were positive for BCL6 and OCT2 but negative for CD10, CD138, and EBV markers. There was variable expression of epithelial membrane antigen, Bcl-2, and CD30. No follicle dendritic cell meshwork infrastructure underlying the nodules could be demonstrated by staining for CD21 or CD35 antigens. The prognosis was poor; seven of the 12 cases with follow-up were dead within 2 years. MTLBL is unique variant of T-cell/histiocyte-rich diffuse LBL, characterized by primary splenic presentation and a micronodular architecture. The main differential diagnoses include granulomatous inflammation, Hodgkin's lymphoma, follicular lymphoma, and peripheral T-cell lymphomas.  相似文献   

16.
T-cell-rich B-cell lymphomas (TCRBCLs) are recently described, unusual non-Hodgkin's lymphomas that have a diffuse morphology, a predominance of reactive T-cells, and a minority of neoplastic B-cells. The clinical and pathological features of 19 TCRBCLs, all of which demonstrated B-cell clonality, are presented. These lymphomas generally affected older patients by widespread disease and usually were nodal in origin. Treatment varied, but continuous complete remissions (eight patients) were achieved only in those receiving chemotherapy directed at intermediate-grade lymphomas. Although morphologically heterogeneous, all cases resembled peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCLs); several TCRBCLs also contained Reed-Sternberg-like cells. Flow cytometry or frozen-section immunoperoxidase failed to detect monotypic immunoglobulin (Ig) in eight of eight cases tested. In contrast, paraffin immunoperoxidase was very useful diagnostically, showing large L26 (CD20-associated) positive cells scattered singly or in small clusters among numerous small T-cells (UCHL1[CD45RO] positive) in all cases. Monotypic cytoplasmic Ig was present in 16 of 19 cases, one of which exhibited plasmacytic differentiation. Southern blot analysis demonstrated relatively faint Ig JH and/or JK bands, indicating a small monoclonal B-cell population in nine of 11 cases, one of which also showed a bcl-2 rearrangement. No T-cell receptor gene rearrangements were observed. These results showed that TCRBCLs may be easily confused with PTCLs or occasionally confused with Hodgkin's disease. TCRBCLs are probably heterogeneous biologically; some cases are of follicular center cell origin. These lymphomas respond to chemotherapy directed at intermediate-grade lymphomas, apparently have a better prognosis than PTCLs, and seem to represent morphological variants of different types of large B-cell lymphomas.  相似文献   

17.
Cutaneous follicular lymphomas (FLs) and cutaneous B-cell lymphomas of extranodal marginal zone (MZL)/mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) type may have morphologic overlap, despite the fact that they are thought to be of distinct derivation (germinal center vs. postgerminal center). The problem is compounded by the reported absence of bcl-2 expression by many cutaneous FLs, leading to speculation that cutaneous FL may be unrelated to nodal FL. The authors analyzed the expression of the germinal center-associated antigens bcl-6 and CD10 and of bcl-2 in 18 cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (10 FLs and eight MZLs), in relationship to CD21+ follicular structures, to clarify the relationship of nodal to cutaneous FLs and to explore the value of these antigens in differential diagnosis. The authors studied 10 cutaneous FLs (seven primary and three secondary) and eight MZLs (six primary and two secondary). The FLs (found in six men and four women age 45-75 years) involved the trunk (n = 3) and scalp, face and neck (n = 7). The MZLs (found in five women and three men age 34-81 years) involved the trunk (n = 4), face and neck (n = 2), and arm (n = 2). Immunostaining for CD21, bcl-6, CD10, and bcl-2 allowed the delineation of compartments within the tumors and yielded distinct patterns of staining in FL and MZL. In both follicular and interfollicular/diffuse areas of FL the neoplastic cells were bcl-6+ (10 of 10), often CD10+ (seven of 10, four of seven primary), and bcl-2+ (nine of 10, six of seven primary). Only three of seven cases (one of five primary) had bcl-2 rearrangement detectable by polymerase chain reaction. In the MZLs, the neoplastic B-cells were bcl-6-, CD10-, and bcl-2+ (eight of eight). Three patterns of CD21+ follicles were identified in MZL: reactive germinal centers, uniformly bcl-6+, CD10+, and bcl-2- (five of eight MZLs); colonized follicles, both bcl-6-, bcl-2+, and L26+ cells, and bcl-6+ and bcl-2- cells (five of eight MZLs); and expanded/colonized follicular dendritic cell meshworks, bcl-6- and bcl-2+ B cells with rare residual bcl-6+ and bcl-2- cells (four of eight MZLs). The authors conclude that cutaneous FLs express bcl-6 uniformly, usually express CD10 and bcl-2, and have a follicular pattern similar to nodal FL and consistent with a germinal center origin. The immunophenotype of cutaneous FL is distinct from that of cutaneous MZL, which is negative for bcl-6 and CD10. Colonized follicles in MZL, identified by CD21+ follicular dendritic cell meshworks, contained numerous bcl-6- and bcl-2+ B cells, and were readily distinguished from neoplastic follicles in FL. Conversely, CD21- interfollicular and diffuse areas in FLs contained bcl-6+ and CD10+ cells, which were not seen in diffuse areas of MZLs. Thus, the combination of bcl-2, bcl-6, and CD21 staining is useful for the distinction of cutaneous MZL from cutaneous FL.  相似文献   

18.
The growth of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AIL) in lymph node often produces complex patterns of neoplastic T cells and nonneoplastic B cells that complicate diagnosis. To understand better how these different patterns of B-cell expansion arise, we compared the microanatomic localization of B cells and T cells within the follicular, paracortical, and sinusoidal compartments in 30 patients with AIL (including 10 with multiple sequential samples) with that seen in 33 cases of other types of T-cell lymphoma. With early or partial nodal involvement in AIL, germinal center B-cell expansions were relatively undisturbed and often associated with a variably distended D2-40+ CD31+ perifollicular sinus that surrounded most of the follicular compartment. Identifiable tumor T cells resided mostly in the paracortex. In later stages of AIL with more complete nodal effacement, bcl-6+ follicular B-cell proliferations shifted to distorted FDC networks arrayed along patent trabecular sinuses and were more intermixed with tumor T cells. In both AIL and other T-cell lymphomas, the density and locations of follicular B cells as well as bcl-6-negative monocytoid B cells were largely related to the patency of adjacent sinuses, except in Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)+ and histiocyte-rich B-cell proliferations, which arose in paracortical locations. The prominence of the perifollicular sinus in early stages of AIL resembled that seen in reactive lymphadenitis during conditions of lymphatic engorgement and implicates cytokines within lymph fluid in maintaining both the normal and altered germinal center reactions. Patterns of sinus drainage largely explain the useful changes in B-cell distribution that occur in nodal T-cell lymphomas and represent an important tool in classification and diagnosis of these tumors.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmablastic lymphoma (PBL) is a rare acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-associated non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (AIDS-NHL), with predilection for the mucosa of oral cavity. It usually has a plasmablastic morphology, expressing plasma cell-associated antigens with weak or absent expression of B-cell-associated markers. To further define the immunophenotypic and molecular genetics of these tumors, we investigated two cases of plasmablastic lymphomas of the head and neck for c-myc gene rearrangement and immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgVH) hypermutation status. For the first time we report a case of AIDS-related PBL that, by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), shows a c-myc gene rearrangement. Although current literature suggests that most cases of c-myc gene rearranged AIDS-NHL are Burkitt’s lymphoma, our case has an immunophenotype characteristic for PBL. In this case, IgVH hypermutation analysis showed a somatic hypermutation, indicative of germinal center transit. The concurrent B-cell immunophenotype of BCL-6/CD138+/MUM-1+ also suggests a post-germinal center B-cell origin of this lymphoma. The immunophenotype of our second case (BCL-6/CD138+/MUM-1+) also suggests a post-germinal center B-cell origin. However, IgVH hypermutation analysis was not possible in this case.  相似文献   

20.
Primary lymphomas of the oral cavity are rare and the most frequent type is diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Recently, several reports have highlighted the value of classifying DLBCL into prognostically important subgroups, namely germinal center B-cell like (GCB) and non-germinal center B-cell like (non-GCB) lymphomas based on gene expression profiles and by immunohistochemical expression of CD10, BCL6 and MUM-1. GCB lymphomas tend to exhibit a better prognosis than non-GCB lymphomas. Studies validating this classification have been done for DLBCL of the breast, CNS, testes and GI tract. Therefore we undertook this study to examine if primary oral DLBCLs reflect this trend. We identified 13 cases (age range 38–91 years) from our archives dating from 2003–09. IHC was performed using antibodies against germinal center markers (CD10, BCL6), activated B-cell markers (MUM1, BCL2) and Ki-67 (proliferation marker). Cases were sub-classified as GCB subgroup if CD10 and/or BCL6 were positive and MUM-1, was negative and as non-GCB subgroup if CD10 was negative and MUM-1 was positive. Immunoreactivity was noted in 2/13 cases for CD10, in 12/13 for BCL6, in 8/13 for MUM-1, and in 6/13 for BCL2. Therefore, 8/13 (58%) were sub-classified as non-GCB DLBCLs and 5/13 (42%) as GCB subgroup. All tumors showed frequent labeling with Ki-67 (range 40–95%). Four of the 8 patients with non-GCB subgroup succumbed to their disease, with the mean survival rate of 16 months. Two patients in this group are alive, one with no evidence of disease and another with disease. No information was available for the other 3 patients in this group. Four of the 5 patients in the GCB subgroup were alive with no evidence of disease and one patient succumbed to complications of therapy and recurrent disease after 18 months. In conclusion, our analysis shows that primary oral DLBCL predominantly belongs to the non-GCB subgroup, which tends to exhibit a poorer prognosis. These findings could allow pathologists to provide a more accurate insight into the potential aggressive behavior and poorer prognosis of these lymphomas.  相似文献   

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