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Large-cell variants of mantle cell lymphoma: cytologic characteristics and p53 anomalies may predict poor outcome
Authors:Maria Cristina  Zoldan Giorgio  Inghirami Yuichi  Masuda Filip  Vandekerckhove Bruce  Raphael Edward  Amorosi Kenneth  Hymes Glauco  Frizzera
Institution:Department of Pathology, Division of Hematopathology/Molecular Pathology; Department of Medicine, Section of Hematology/Oncology, New York University Medical Center and Kaplan Comprehensive Cancer Center, New York, N.Y., U.S.A.
Abstract:Large-cell variants are uncommon in mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). Here we describe the pathologic and clinical findings in five patients with large-cell lymphoma related to MCL (L-MCL), and compare them to a group of classic small-cell MCL (s-MCL) cases. Histologically, the MC origin of the large cells was evinced by their association with a small mantle cell component in the same tissue, or their distribution in a classic mantle zone pattern, or their development in a patient with previous s-MCL. The large cells were either pleomorphic mantle cells (case 1) or transformed blast-like cells (cases 2–5). The median nuclear diameter, median nuclear area and proliferation index of L-MCLs and s-MCLs, were statistically different. Immunophenotypic characterization of four specimens of L-MCL and 10 of s-MCLs with a large panel of antibodies showed the classic findings of MCL, i.e. the IgM+ D+/?, CD5+, CD10?, CD23? phenotype in all cases except two (one CD5? and one CD23+), and the association with a loose follicular dendritic cell network. Two of four L-MCLs and 5/10 s-MCLs demonstrated rearrangements of the bcl-1 gene by Southern blot or by polymerase chain reaction (PCR); 2/4 L-MCLs and 1/9 s-MCLs had p53 mutations on single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis; none of the 14 specimens showed rearrangement of bcl-2 by PCR or bcl-6 and c-myc by Southern blot. All patients with ‘transformed’ histology (versus 37% of all others) died of lymphoma; their survival (15–18 months; median 17) was much shorter than that of all the others (28–117+ months; median 43) (P = 0.0035). All three patients with p53 anomalies, two of whom had tumours with transformed histology, died of their disease in a short time (15, 18 and 28 months). In contrast, the presence of bcl-1 rearrangements did not have prognostic implications. This study documents the existence of large-cell variants of MCL and the poor prognosis associated with the ‘transformed’ cytologic type and/or p53 abnormalities.
Keywords:mantle cell lymphoma  large-cell lymphoma  centrocytoid centroblastic lymphoma  prognostic factors  p53 abnormalities
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