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Morphology in Ki-1(CD30)-positive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is correlated with clinical features and the presence of a unique chromosomal abnormality, t(2;5)(p23;q35)
Authors:M A Bitter  W A Franklin  R A Larson  T W McKeithan  C M Rubin  M M Le Beau  J K Stephens  J W Vardiman
Institution:Department of Pathology, University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine, Illinois.
Abstract:Ten patients with strongly Ki-1(CD30)-positive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) were identified at our institution during the past 5 years. Based on morphology, the lymphomas of five of these patients were classified as anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (ALCL); the lymphomas of four patients lacked the morphologic features of ALCL (non-ALCL); and the lymphoma of one patient was unclassifiable. Significant clinical and cytogenetic differences were observed between patients with ALCL and those with non-ALCL. The patients with ALCL tended to be young at the time of diagnosis. They presented with peripheral lymphadenopathy, and two of the five patients had skin involvement. An identical reciprocal translocation involving chromosomes 2 and 5 t(2;5)(p23;q35)] was observed in lymph nodes from each of the two ALCL patients whose chromosomes were studied. Four of the five patients with ALCL are alive and in complete remission 10-27 months after receiving systemic chemotherapy. In contrast, the patients with non-ALCL were heterogeneous with respect to clinical findings. All of the non-ALCLs were histologically aggressive; however, their morphology varied. The t(2;5) was absent in the lymphoma specimens from each of three non-ALCL patients studied. Three of the four patients died within 17 months after receiving systemic chemotherapy. Thus, differences in morphology are correlated with differences in the clinical findings, karyotype, and outcome in Ki-1-positive NHL.
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