scholarly journals Skin changes in hairy cell leukemia

Author(s):  
Ewa Robak ◽  
Dorota Jesionek-Kupnicka ◽  
Tadeusz Robak

AbstractSkin lesions have been reported in about 10–12% of hairy cell leukemia (HCL) patients. Most are etiologically related to autoimmune or infectious processes, although secondary cutaneous neoplasms and drug-induced lesions are also reported. However, leukemia cutis with the direct infiltration of the skin by leukemic cells is extremely rare in HCL patients. This paper reviews the epidemiology, pathogenesis, clinical symptoms, diagnosis, and approach to treating skin lesions in HCL. A literature review of the MEDLINE database for articles in English concerning hairy cell leukemia, skin lesions, leukemia cutis, adverse events, infectious, cutaneous, drug reactions, neutrophilic dermatoses, secondary neoplasms, and vasculitis was conducted via PubMed. Publications from January 1980 to September 2020 were scrutinized. Additional relevant publications were obtained by reviewing the references from the chosen articles.

2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 559-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Čolović ◽  
M. Peruničić ◽  
V. Jurišić ◽  
M. Čolović

Blood ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 747-749 ◽  
Author(s):  
JW Fay ◽  
JO Moore ◽  
GL Logue ◽  
AT Huang

Abstract Intensive leukopheresis has been valuable in the short-term palliation of chronic lymphocytic and granulocytic leukemias. A 47-yr-old man with refractory leukemic reticuloendotheliosis (hairy cell leukemia) manifested by anemia, thrombocytopenia, elevated peripheral leukemia cell counts, generalized lymph node enlargement, and leukemic infiltrative skin disease was treated with serial leukopheresis. Removal of approximately 7 X 10(11) peripheral leukemia cells resulted in marked clinical and hematologic improvement with resolution of enlarged lymph nodes and clearing of skin infiltrates. At the time of this reporting, more than 400 wk since the last leukopheresis, the patient continues to do well. The improvement in all blood counts, reduction in lymph node size, and clearing of skin lesions paralleled the reduction of peripheral leukemia cell load by leukopheresis, suggesting mobilization of leukemia cells from marrow, lymph nodes, and skin. Removal of large numbers of leukemia cells in hairy cell leukemia has the potential of achieving sustained clinical improvement and may be a useful alternative therapy for these patients.


Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 949-956 ◽  
Author(s):  
CC Sohn ◽  
DW Blayney ◽  
JL Misset ◽  
G Mathe ◽  
G Flandrin ◽  
...  

Abstract We report two cases of a T cell lymphoproliferative disease not previously described, with cytologic and clinical features similar to those associated with Galton's “prolymphocytic” leukemia (PL). Our patients, like those with Galton's PL, had massive splenomegaly and minimal or absent hepatomegaly and lymphadenopathy. In contrast, however, our patients had leukopenia, as well as low percentages of leukemic cells in the peripheral blood and in the bone marrow. In splenic imprints, the nuclear chromatin pattern of most of the leukemic cells was intermediate between those of mature lymphocytes and those of lymphoblasts, and the nuclei contained single, centrally located, conspicuous nucleoli. In sections of the spleen, the leukemic cells diffusely infiltrated the red pulp in a pattern strikingly similar to that of hairy cell leukemia; however, when the leukemic cells were studied cytochemically, the cytoplasmic acid phosphatase positivity was punctate and tartrate-sensitive. The leukemic cells were sheep erythrocyte rosette-positive and expressed T cell-associated antigens. Initially, both patients responded well to therapeutic splenectomy. One patient received combination chemotherapy after splenectomy and is alive and well 24 months after diagnosis. The other patient was in complete clinical remission for one year after splenectomy and received chemotherapy at relapse. He died, however, 23 months after splenectomy, with disseminated disease. IgG antibody titers against human T lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) were detected in one patient and against HTLV-II in the other. The leukemia in these patients represents a distinct clinicopathologic entity within the spectrum of peripheral T cell lymphoproliferative diseases that includes Galton's PL of T cell derivation, T cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia, T cell hairy cell leukemia, and adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma.


Blood ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Yachnin ◽  
HM Golomb ◽  
EJ West ◽  
C Saffold

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (9) ◽  
pp. 1002-1010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrico Tiacci ◽  
Valentina Pettirossi ◽  
Gianluca Schiavoni ◽  
Brunangelo Falini

Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is a chronic mature B-cell neoplasm with unique clinicopathologic features and an initial exquisite sensitivity to chemotherapy with purine analogs; however, the disease relapses, often repeatedly. The enigmatic pathogenesis of HCL was recently clarified by the discovery of its underlying genetic cause, the BRAF-V600E kinase-activating mutation, which is somatically and clonally present in almost all patients through the entire disease spectrum and clinical course. By aberrantly activating the RAF-MEK-ERK signaling pathway, BRAF-V600E shapes key biologic features of HCL, including its specific expression signature, hairy morphology, and antiapoptotic behavior. Accompanying mutations of the KLF2 transcription factor or the CDKN1B/p27 cell cycle inhibitor are recurrent in 16% of patients with HCL and likely cooperate with BRAF-V600E in HCL pathogenesis. Conversely, BRAF-V600E is absent in other B-cell neoplasms, including mimickers of HCL that require different treatments (eg, HCL-variant and splenic marginal zone lymphoma). Thus, testing for BRAF-V600E allows for a genetics-based differential diagnosis between HCL and HCL-like tumors, even noninvasively in routine blood samples. BRAF-V600E also represents a new therapeutic target. Patients’ leukemic cells exposed ex vivo to BRAF inhibitors are spoiled of their HCL identity and then undergo apoptosis. In clinical trials of patients with HCL who have experienced multiple relapses after purine analogs or who are refractory to purine analogs, a short course of the oral BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib produced an almost 100% response rate, including complete remission rates of 35% to 42%, without myelotoxicity. To further improve on these results, it will be important to clarify the mechanisms of incomplete leukemic cell eradication by vemurafenib and to explore chemotherapy-free combinations of a BRAF inhibitor with other targeted agents (eg, a MEK inhibitor and/or an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody).


2018 ◽  
Vol 96 (7) ◽  
pp. 667-672
Author(s):  
A. N. Khvastunova ◽  
L. S. Al-Radi ◽  
O. S. Fedyanina ◽  
F. I. Ataullakhanov ◽  
A. I. Vorobiev ◽  
...  

Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is a chronic lymphoproliferative disorder constituting about 2% from all leukemia cases and characterized by typical “hairy” morphology of tumor lymphocytes. We describe an HCL case with atypical nuclear shapes (lymphocytes with clover-leaf-like, horse-shoe-like, ring-shaped nuclei and binuclear cells were present). Morphology and immunophenotype of circulating leukemic cells were studied using a cell-binding microarray - a transparent plastic slide with immobilized monoclonal antibodies against surface antigens of lymphocytes. The cell-binding microarray with immobilized anti-CD11c, anti-CD103 and anti-CD123 permits to study a lymphocyte population enriched with hairy cells. Hairy cells with atypical nuclei constituted 3% of all lymphocytes and 15% of all hairy cells. This unusual hairy cell morphology is the first described in Russia and was found in one out of 85 HCL cases in our practice.


2003 ◽  
Vol 127 (4) ◽  
pp. e209-e211
Author(s):  
Nadine P. Kelly ◽  
Serhan Alkan ◽  
Sucha Nand

Abstract We report a case of hairy cell leukemia variant developing in a background of polycythemia vera in a 77-year-old man who presented with lymphocytosis and splenomegaly. Classic hairy cell leukemia in a patient with polycythemia vera has been reported previously, but hairy cell leukemia variant arising in a patient with polycythemia vera has never been described to the best of our knowledge. Initial testing of the peripheral blood showed circulating medium to large leukemic cells with large, centrally placed nuclei, each containing a prominent nucleolus, and some cells showed cytoplasmic projections. A bone marrow biopsy had marked myeloid and erythroid hyperplasia and interstitially distributed cells with a fried-egg appearance. We verified a monoclonal B-cell population by flow cytometric analysis, which revealed expression of bright CD11c, CD22, and CD103 expression, and a lack of CD25 expression. The patient received a 5-day course of cladribine and subsequently had a complete remission. Approximately 2 months later, he had a relapse and was treated with pentostatin; however, he had no clinical response and died.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2679-2679
Author(s):  
Susanne Schnittger ◽  
Frank Dicker ◽  
Christiane Eder ◽  
Sabine Jeromin ◽  
Tamara Alpermann ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2679 Background: The BRAF V600E mutation has recently been discovered in nearly all cases of hairy cell leukemia (HCL), but not in cases of HCL-variant (HCL-v). However, this perfect correlation has been challenged by studies reporting HCL cases without BRAF V600E. Interestingly, the immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region gene IGHV4–34, which has been associated with poor prognosis in HCL, appeared exclusively and to a high percentage in these BRAF V600E-negative cases of classic HCL and also in HCL-v (Xi et al., Blood, 2011). Further, splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL) is a disease closely related to HCL and HCL-v and BRAF has been shown to be unmutated in this entity. Aims: 1. To characterize our cohorts of HCL, HCL-v and SMZL for the presence of BRAF V600E and to correlate the results with IGHV gene usage. 2. We hypothesized that other genes of the RAF/RAS pathway might be affected. Thus we analysed NRAS, and KRAS in addition to BRAF for mutations in all three entities. Methods: We analyzed the bone marrow or peripheral blood of 314 cases (182 cases with HCL, 49 cases with HCL-v, and 83 cases with SMZL) at diagnosis as confirmed by multiparameter flow cytometry and cytomorphology. The BRAF V600E mutation was analyzed by an mRNA-based reverse transcription allele-specific real-time quantification (RQ-PCR) assay. The BRAF V600E expression was calculated as %BRAF V600E/BRAF wt. NRAS and KRAS were analyzed by melting curve analysis and subsequent Sanger sequencing. IGHV genes and mutation status were analyzed by the use of Biomed-2 primers. An identity of ≥98% of the analyzed IGHV sequence compared to published germline sequences was considered an unmutated IGHV status. Results: In our cohort the median percent leukemic cells was 16% (range 0.2–74%) for HCL, 33% (range 5–59%) for HCL-v and 29% (range: 1–84%) for SMZL as determined by multiparameter flow cytometry. The BRAF V600E mutation was detected in 178/182 (97.8%) of HCL cases, whereas 0/49 of HCL-v and 0/83 SMZL were positive. Thus, the BRAF V600E mutation is 100% specific for HCL regarding these three entities. The median BRAF V600E expression ratio of positive cases was 14.2 (range 0.22 – 280.3). After normalization to % pathological cells as assessed by multiparameter flow cytometry the median ratio was 173 (range:22–1,788). However, in 4 cases with 4%, 8%, 28% and 66% percent leukemic cells by multiparameter flow cytometry, which is within the clone size that can be clearly detected by the BRAF V600E-specific RQ-PCR assay, no mutation was detected. Thus, BRAF V600E detection used for the identification of HCL has a sensitivity of 97.8%. Further, NRAS and KRAS mutation screening in all cases with HCL, HCL-v, and SMZL did not detect any mutation except for one case with SMZL that harboured an NRAS Gly12Asp mutation. This case was found to have an MDS in parallel and thus the mutation more likely belongs to the MDS clone. Thus, analysis of NRAS and KRAS mutations does not further improve diagnostics in these diseases. Further, we analyzed the IGHV usage in all 4 BRAF unmutated HCL and in additional 60 cases (total n=64) with HCL and 41 cases with HCL-v. IGHV4–34 usage was very frequent in HCL-v with 14/41 (34.1%). In contrast, it was never detected in HCL including the BRAF wildtype cases. Thus, we were not able to confirm the usage of the IGHV4–34 gene, which was previously suggested for BRAF V600E negative HCL. On the other hand IGHV5–51 was most frequently found in HCL (9/64, 14.1%) but never detected in HCL-v. We detected an unmutated IGHV status in 12/62 (19.4%) of HCL, which was less frequent compared to 14/40 (35.0%) in HCL-v (p = 0.095). The IGHV mutation status was unmutated in 9/11 (81.8%) IGHV4–34 cases (100% identity to germline each). The four cases of HCL, which lacked BRAF V600E mutation, expressed the IGHV genes IGHV1–3*01 (96.5% identity), IGHV1–69*02 (94.0% identity), IGHV3–9*01 (96.9% identity) and IGHV6-1*01 (99.0% identity), which were also expressed by various BRAF V600E positive HCL cases in our cohort. Conclusions: 1) In our cohort of 314 cases with HCL, HCL-v, and SMZL we confirm a high specificity (100%) and sensitivity (97.8%) for BRAF V600E mutations to detect HCL. 2) Other RAS pathway mutations (NRAS, KRAS) were not detected in any of the three analysed entities. 3) In the 4 rare cases of HCL with BRAF wt we were not able to confirm the previously postulated IGHV4–34 usage. 4) IGHV4–34 further delineates classic HCL from HCL-v. Disclosures: Schnittger: MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Equity Ownership. Dicker:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Eder:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Jeromin:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Alpermann:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Employment. Haferlach:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Equity Ownership. Haferlach:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Equity Ownership. Kern:MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 5112-5112
Author(s):  
Evgeny Arons ◽  
Hong Zhou ◽  
Yonghong Wang ◽  
Daniel Edelman ◽  
Robert J. Kreitman ◽  
...  

Abstract Classic hairy cell leukemia (HCL), comprising 2% of leukemias, is an indolent B-cell malignancy with malignant lymphocytes expressing B-cell antigens CD20 and CD22, CD103, CD11c, CD25, Annexin A1, BRAF V600E mutation, and monoclonal immunoglobulin (Ig) rearrangement. HCL variant (HCLv), which is ~10% as common as HCL, has much poorer response to therapy and more aggressive course, lacks CD25 and Annexin A1, and is wild-type for BRAF. HCLv is considered separate from HCL by the World Health Organization in the unclassifiable splenic B-cell leukemia/lymphomas. Another poor-prognosis group overlaps HCL and HCLv in which unmutated IGHV4-34 Ig rearrangement is expressed. IGHV4-34+ leukemic cells can resemble classic HCL with CD25 and Annexin A1 expression, but are BRAF wild-type. No uniform mutation has been identified for HCLv and IGHV4-34+ HCL, although MAP2K1 (MEK1) mutations have recently been identified in half of cases. Thus HCLv and IGHV4-34+ HCL are less indolent leukemias with few therapy options and no known molecular target. To study HCLv and IGHV4-34+ HCL, leukemic samples were purified by negative B-cell isolation followed by positive CD11c sorting. Following extraction (Qiagene, AllPrep DNA/RNA Kit), RNA samples from patients were analyzed in microarray studies (Human HT-12 v4 BeadChips, Illumina, Inc.). Expression data were compared by unpaired nonparametric analysis using Mann-Whitney. MYC expression using one probe (log2 values, mean +/- standard deviation) was 7.30 +/- 1.51 for 37 HCL vs 9.77 +/- 1.15 for 32 HCLv or IGHV4-34+ HCL (2-sided p<0.0001). For the other probe, expression was 7.07 +/- 1.51 vs 9.44 +/- 1.17 (p<0.0001). Expression data for MYC had previously been submitted for 31 chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and 16 HCL samples (Dataset GSE2350, Basso et al, Nat Genet, 37:382, 2005). By 1 probe for MYC, expression was 8.07 +/- 0.55 for CLL vs 9.31 +/- 1.19 for HCL (p=0.0023). By another MYC probe, expression was 9.28 +/- 0.47 for CLL vs 10.22 +/- 0.98 for HCL (p=0.0032). To investigate potential therapeutic relevance of aberrant MYC expression in HCL, HCLv and IGHV4-34+ HCL, the bromodomain and extra terminal (BET) protein inhibitor JQ1, which has been associated with down-regulation of c-Myc via Brd4, was incubated with primary leukemic cells and ATP incorporation was measured. JQ1 inhibited 12 samples of HCL (IC50s 214 +/- 217 nM) more potently than 14 samples of CLL (IC50s 1.77uM +/-2.62 uM, p=0.020), and also inhibited 14 samples of HCLv or IGHV4-34+ HCL (IC50s 221 +/- 234 nM) more potently than the 14 CLL samples (p=0.0079). However, JQ1 inhibition was similar comparing HCL and HCLv or IGHV4-34+ HCL (p=0.89). To exclude non-specific inhibition of the cells, the inactive control molecule JQ1R was tested and was only 6.0% +/- 4.0% as active as JQ1 toward HCL or HCLv or IGHV4-34+ HCL samples. Normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells were resistant (IC50 > 20 uM). In conclusion, our results show that MYC expression is higher in HCLv and IGHV4-34+ HCL than in classic HCL and higher in classic HCL than CLL. Moreover, JQ1 inhibits HCL or its variants more potently than CLL, although the inhibition assay used does not detect a difference between the variants and classic HCL. Further experiments with other inhibitors will be needed to determine if the increased expression of MYC in HCL and its poor-prognosis variants can be exploited for treatment. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-107
Author(s):  
Eric Wong ◽  
Muhammad N. Mahmood ◽  
Thomas G. Salopek

The development of both a T- and B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder in one patient is an unlikely coincidence due to the low prevalence of each malignancy. We report a 65-year-old man with a previously documented history of B hairy cell leukemia, who presented with a new-onset acneiform eruption of his scalp, face, trunk, back, and extremities. Routine pathology of the skin lesions with immunohistochemical stains and molecular studies were consistent with a folliculotropic mycosis fungoides. B hairy cell leukemia and mycosis fungoides occurring in the same patient seems to be a rare phenomenon with only 5 cases reported in the literature.


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