The role of gene rearrangements for antigen receptors in the diagnosis of lymphoma obtained by fine-needle aspiration. A study of 63 cases with concomitant immunophenotyping |
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Authors: | R L Katz C Hirsch-Ginsberg C Childs R Dekmezian T Fanning N Ordó?ez F Cabanillis N Sneige |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology, University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77030. |
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Abstract: | To assess the efficacy of performing genotyping in addition to immunophenotyping as an adjunct to cytologic diagnosis, 63 consecutive patients with fine-needle aspirates of lymphoproliferative lesions who had concurrent immunophenotyping and genotyping performed on fine-needle aspirate cell suspensions were studied. Thirty-nine of 63 specimens (62%) that appeared to contain non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and that proved to be of B-cell lineage by genotyping were accurately phenotyped and shown to be monotypic for immunoglobulin light chains by cell suspension immunocytochemistry. Genotyping facilitated lineage assignment and/or confirmed clonality in 17 of 63 specimens (27%) that were difficult to determine based on morphologic data. These include cases of atypical lymphoid proliferations with polyclonal or inconclusive markers (n = 6), peripheral T-cell lymphoma (n = 3), extracutaneous mycosis fungoides (n = 1), lymphoblastic lymphoma (n = 4), null cell lymphoma (n = 1), and specimens with equivocal or technically unsatisfactory markers (n = 2). Based on these results, it is proposed that genotyping for lineage assignment and/or clonality be performed to include cases of atypical lymphoid proliferations, T-cell malignant neoplasms, lymphoid malignant neoplasms with equivocal markers, and differentiation of lymphoid from nonlymphoid neoplasms. Genotyping by antigen-receptor gene rearrangement appears to be redundant in cases with mature B-cell phenotypes that demonstrate monoclonality by immunophenotyping. |
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