scholarly journals Extranodal marginal zone non Hodgkin's lymphoma of the lung: A ten-year experience

2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 150-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Violeta Milosevic ◽  
Andrija Bogdanovic ◽  
Snezana Jankovic ◽  
Maja Perunicic-Jovanovic ◽  
Biljana Mihaljevic

Background/Aim. Bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue (BALT) lymphoma is a rare subtype of low grade marginal zone B cell lymphoma representing 10% of all MALT lymphomas. The purpose of this study was to analyze the outcome of this group of patients comparing prognostic parameters and therapy modalities. Methods. A total of eight patients with BALT lymphoma had diagnosed between January 1998 - April 2008 at the Institute of Hematology, Clinical Center of Serbia, Belgrade, and they were included in this retrospective analysis. Results. Male/female ratio was 2/6, the median age was 64 years (range 37-67 years). Six patients had nonspecific respiratory symptoms and all of them had B symptoms. The patients were seronegative for HIV, HCV and HBsAg. Three patients had Sjogren's syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis and pulmonary tuberculosis, respectively. Seven patients were diagnosed by transbronchial biopsy and an open lung biopsy was done in one patient. Patohistological findings revealed lymphoma of marginal zone B cell lymphoma: CD20+/CD10-/CD5-/CyclinD1- /CD23-/IgM- with Ki-67+<20% of all cells. According to the Ferraro staging system, five patients had localized disease (CS I-IIE) and three had stage IVE; bulky tumor mass had 3 patients. All patients had Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status (PS) 0 or 1. Five patients received monochemotherapy with chlorambucil and 3 were treated with CHOP regimen (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone). A complete response (CR) was achieved in 5 patients and a partial response (PR) in 3 of them, treated with chlorambucil monotherapy and CHOP regimen. All patients were alive during a median follow-up period of 49 months (range 6- 110 months). Three patients relapsed after monochemotherapy into the other extranodal localization. They were treated with CHOP regimen and remained in stable PR. Conclusion. BALT lymphoma tends to be localised disease at the time of diagnosis, responds well to monochemotherapy with chlorambucil and has a favourable prognosis.

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 760-760
Author(s):  
Silvia Zibellini ◽  
Daniela Capello ◽  
Francesco Forconi ◽  
Sara Rattotti ◽  
Silvia Franceschetti ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 760 Splenic marginal zone B-cell lymphoma (SMZL) is frequently associated with HCV infection and with autoimmune disorders. Subsets of “stereotyped” Complementarity-Determining Region 3 (HCDR3) sequences are a frequent feature of CLL patients. The aim of this study was to perform clustering analysis of HCDR3 aminoacid (AA) sequences in SMZL. We characterized IGHVDJ rearrangements from 133 SMZL patients diagnosed according to Matutes criteria (Leukemia, 2008) and performed clustering analysis of SMZL HCDR3 AA sequences. Sources for analysis were bone marrow and peripheral blood in 106 cases and spleen tissue + lymph node in 27 cases. SMZL HCDR3 sequences were also compared to 27,413 productive, non redundant HCDR3 AA sequences retrieved from public databases (EMBL, NCBI, IMGT/LIGM-DB; 25,655 sequences) and from our unpublished laboratory databases (1,758 sequences), including sequences from malignant B-cell clones (3,197 CLL, 86 SMZL, 1,131 other B-cell malignancies) and from non malignant B-cell repertoire (22,999 sequences). Alignments were performed using the multiple sequence alignment software ClustalX (2.0). Criteria for assigning HCDR3 AA sequences to stereotyped subsets included AA identity ≥60%, sharing of junction residues and/or usage of the same IGHD-J genes (Stamatopoulos et al, 2007). Male/female ratio of the 133 SMZL patients was 0.7:1; median age at diagnosis was 67 years (40-82 years). HCV serology was positive in 25/125 cases (20%). Median follow-up was 2.7 yrs (range 1-20 yrs); 5-yrs OS for the entire series was 80% and 5-yrs PFS was 39%. The most frequent IGHV families were IGHV3 (n=66, 50%), IGHV1 (n=40, 30%) and IGHV4 (n=23, 17%); the most frequent IGHV genes were IGHV1-2 (n=26, 20%), IGHV 3-23 (n=24, 18%), and IGHV 4-34 (n=10, 8%). Using the 98% identity cut-off value, 40/133 (30%) sequences were “unmutated” (15 with 100% identity, 10 with 99-99.9%, 15 with 98-98.9%). By means of clustering analysis, 16/133 SMZL cases (12%) met the minimal criteria to be included in subsets with “stereotyped” HCDR3. Additional 7/86 (8%) SMZL public sequences were included in subsets. We identified 3 major groups of HCDR3 subsets: 1) “SMZL-biased subsets”: 5 novel subsets were composed only by HCV-negative SMZL cases: 9 from this study cohort and 3 from public databases. Two subsets included both SMZL cases from this study series and SMZL cases from public databases, while 3 subsets were composed by 3 pairs of SMZL from the present study series; 2) “CLL subsets”: 4 SMZL cases (2 from our series) were assigned to 4 subsets previously reported in CLL (subsets 1, 6, 9, 25). In addition, 2 SMZL cases (1 from our series) formed 2 novel subsets with CLL cases; 3) “Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma subsets”: in 5 new subsets HCDR3 of 5 SMZL cases (4 from present series) were homologous to HCDR3 of non-splenic MZL and extranodal indolent lymphomas; in particular 2 HCV+ SMZL clustered with 1 HCV-related lymphoma and 1 HCV+ low grade B-cell lymphoma with splenomegaly, respectively. Distribution of mutated and unmutated cases did not differ between SMZL cases belonging or not to HCDR3 subsets. PFS was statistically shorter for cases belonging to “SMZL-biased subsets” (5-yrs PFS 14%) compared to the remaining cases of the series (5-yrs PFS 41%) (p=0.04). Mutational status was not predictive of OS and PFS. Multivariate analysis selected “SMZL-biased” clustering [hazard ratio (HR), 2.4; 95% CI: 1.003-5.684; p = 0.04], but not mutational status, as predictor of PFS. Sequencing of light chains and 3D modeling of cases belonging to subsets are ongoing. In conclusion, 1) “SMZL-biased” stereotyped HCDR3 sequences appear to be unique to HCV-negative SMZL and suggest a potential role for antigen(s) different from HCV in SMZL lymphomagenesis, and may determine a worse outcome in a subset of SZML patients; 2) only a small number of SMZL cases is related to previously reported CLL subsets; 3) SMZL also share stereotyped HCDR3 sequences with non-splenic MZL and extranodal indolent lymphomas, suggesting a role for a common antigen stimulation in the pathogenesis of these B-cell malignancies. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2000 ◽  
Vol 118 (4) ◽  
pp. A1385
Author(s):  
Michele De Boni ◽  
Francesco Bertoni ◽  
Roman Mullenbach ◽  
Enrico Roggero ◽  
Angelo Bellumat ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. e243751
Author(s):  
Nabin Raj Karki ◽  
Peyton McElhone ◽  
Natasha Savage ◽  
Nagla Abdel Karim

A 65-year-old with non-small cell lung cancer developed autoimmune haemolytic anaemia while receiving pembrolizumab containing chemoimmunotherapy. Initially thought to be due to pembrolizumab induced haemolysis, he was treated with steroids, and pembrolizumab was held. Haemolysis was refractory to steroids and blood was observed to agglutinate in cold room temperatures. Cold agglutinins in high titre and monoclonal serum IgM kappa protein were detected. Bone marrow biopsy showed marginal zone lymphoma confirming low grade B-cell lymphoma causing cold agglutinin disease. B-cell depletion by rituximab stopped haemolysis, and pembrolizumab was safely continued for lung cancer.


Blood ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petr Starostik ◽  
Jochen Patzner ◽  
Axel Greiner ◽  
Stephan Schwarz ◽  
Jörg Kalla ◽  
...  

Low-grade marginal zone B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) type can transform into high-grade diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Up to 60% of the MALT lymphomas contain the recently described t(11;18). However, this translocation has not been detected in any DLBCL so far. To elucidate the pathogenesis of these tumors, microsatellite screening of 24 gastric MALT lymphomas was performed and the results were compared with aberrations detected in a previous study on gastric DLBCL. The most frequent aberration, found in 21% of the MALT lymphomas that were exclusively t(11;18)-negative cases, was amplification of the 3q26.2-27 region (harboring the locus of the BCL6 gene). Allelic imbalances in regions 3q26.2-27, 6q23.3-25, 7q31, 11q23-24, and 18q21 were shared by both MALT lymphoma and DLBCL. Loss of heterozygosity in regions 5q21 (APC gene locus), 9p21 (INK4A/ARF), 13q14 (RB), and 17p13(p53) and allelic imbalances in 2p16, 6p23, and 12p12-13 occurred exclusively in DLBCL. Only one of 10 t(11;18)-positive MALT lymphomas showed an additional clonal abnormality. These tumors thus display features of a clonal proliferation characterized by the presence of the t(11;18). However, they only rarely display secondary aberrations and do not seem to transform into DLBCL. In contrast, t(11;18)-negative MALT lymphomas show numerous allelic imbalances—some of them identical with aberrations seen in DLBCL—suggesting that this group is the source of tumors eventually transforming into high-grade DLBCL.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 260-260
Author(s):  
Eloy F Robles ◽  
Beatriz Aldaz ◽  
Takashi Akasaka ◽  
Laura Macri Pellizzeri ◽  
Eduardo Martinez-Anso ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 260 While the molecular study of the common immunoglobulin (IG) translocations, hallmarks of B-cell lymphomas, led to the discovery of seminal cancer genes such as MYC and BCL2, cloning of other less frequent rearrangements has also identified genes with critical biological functions, including BCL10 and BCL11A. Therefore, molecular cloning of rare IG-related translocations may still pinpoint genes with unappreciated roles in lymphomagenesis. We identified a novel chromosomal translocation t(10;14)(q24;q32) involving the IGH locus in a case of mature B-cell lymphoma in leukemic phase. Molecular cloning by long-distance inverse PCR revealed involvement of NKX2-3. Subsequent screening of lymphoma cases with 10q chromosome breaks using fluorescence in situ hybridization identified a t(10;14)(q24;q12) translocation fusing NKX2-3 with TCRA. Both cases were classified as atypical low-grade mature B-cell lymphoma and exhibited increased expression of NKX2-3 with respect to normal B lymphocytes. In addition, NKX2-3 over-expression using quantitative RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry was detected in 42 of 166 (25%) primary mature B-cell lymphoma samples, including 15 of 29 (51%) splenic marginal zone lymphomas (SMZL), 14 of 46 (30%) mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphomas, and 13 of 42 (31%) diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs), but not in follicular lymphomas (0 of 18), mantle cell lymphomas (0 of 8) or chronic B-cell lymphocytic leukemias (0 of 23). NKX2-3 belongs to the NKX family of homeodomain transcription factors that regulate cell-specific gene expression during differentiation and development. In mice, Nkx2-3 is essential for spleen and MALT development by regulating lymphocyte migration and homing to these sites. To determine whether NKX2-3 might, like some other family members, play an oncogenic role in hematopoietic neoplasms, Eμ-NKX2-3 transgenic mice were generated in which the EμSR enhancer drove restricted expression of human NKX2-3 to lymphocytes. Mice were fertile and developed normally. However, from 4 months of age, a progressive block in the pro-B (B220+CD19+Kit+) to pre-B cell (B220+CD25+) transition was detected in the bone marrow (BM), accompanied by a decrease in the number of circulating B220+IgM+B lymphocytes. Notably, an expansion of CD21highCD23low marginal-zone splenic B cells was identified, which correlated with progressive spleen enlargement upon ultrasound monitoring of transgenic animals. From ∼12 months of age, mice started to develop clinical signs of disease and were euthanized, showing massive splenomegaly (5–10 times larger than normal controls) in all cases (n=46). Histolopathological analysis of enlarged spleens revealed a complete red pulp infiltration of large and irregular nodules composed of cells with a biphasic morphology comprising an inner zone of small lymphocytes and a peripheral zone of larger lymphoid cells. Immunohistochemical studies showed that the infiltrating cells were mature CD20+IgM+IgD− B lymphocytes, with reactive CD3+ T lymphocytes, results that were concordant with flow cytometry studies. In 55% of the mice, additional extranodal tumors involving the lungs, liver and kidneys were detected, showing infiltrates of small mature B lymphocytes. Study of Igh, Igk and Igl rearrangements by PCR and sequencing revealed that most lymphomas were of clonal origin. Using gene expression microarray analysis, a significant overlap was found between the transcriptional signatures of the mouse NKX2-3 splenic lymphomas and human SMZLs, including genes known to be involved in human SMZL pathogenesis such as Notch2, Jun, Junb, Cyclin-D2, Ikzf3, Cxcr4, Traf5 and Maml2, as well as other genes implicated in mature B-cell lymphoma development such as Bcl3, Pax5, Bcl11a, Foxo3, Cebpb, Litaf, Socs1, IL10, Ccl5 and Cdkn1a. Taken together, these data indicate that the murine tumors closely resembled human splenic and extranodal marginal-zone (MALT) lymphomas. Furthermore, analysis of splenic and extranodal lymphomas from mice older than 18 months revealed areas of high-grade transformation to DLBCL, further highlighting the parallelism between splenic and human lymphomas. In conclusion, NKX2-3 protein is over-expressed in a subset of patients with SMZL, MALT lymphoma and DLBCL, and that the ectopic expression of NKX2-3 in mouse B lymphocytes recapitulates the main features of the human lymphoma counterparts. Disclosures: Siebert: Abbott/Vysis: Speakers Honorarium.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 4956-4956
Author(s):  
Darcie Deaver ◽  
Kenneth S. Zuckerman ◽  
Celeste M. Bello ◽  
Eduardo M. Sotomayor ◽  
Salvador Bruno ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4956 Background: The incidence of ocular adnexal lymphoma (OAL) is rare and usually presents in the setting of central nervous system (CNS) involvement. There are no rigid guidelines for the treatment of OAL, most probably because of the variety of characteristics of the disease. Objectives: To analyze clinical pathological features, therapy and outcomes of patients with primary and secondary OAL. Research Design and Methods: Retrospective chart review of 17 consecutive patients diagnosed with OAL at Moffitt Cancer Center from 2004–2011. Characteristics of the participants were median age 68 years, 15 (88%) white, 2 (12%) Hispanic, and 11 (65%) male. Chlamydia serology testing was negative in all patients tested. Secondary OAL patients were staged per the Ann Arbor Staging System, 2 (22%) stage III and 7 (78%) stage IV. The primary OAL patients were staged utilizing the TNM staging system for OALs (Coupland et al, Arch Pathol Lab Med, 2009). Six (75%) patients were stage T1 and 2 (25%) patients were stage T2. Results: Seventeen patients with a diagnosis of OAL were evaluated in our institution. Patients with OAL are commonly stratified into 2 groups, primary and secondary. Eight (50%) of the patients were diagnosed with primary OAL; of these there were 4 (50%) marginal zone, 3 (37%) diffuse large B cell, and 1 (12%) follicular lymphoma. Nine (50%) patients were diagnosed with secondary OAL; 4 (44%) marginal zone, 1 (11%) diffuse large B cell, 1 (11%) mantle cell, 1 (11%) CLL, and 2 (22%) progressed from low grade to diffuse large B cell lymphoma. In the primary OAL, radiation in combination with systemic chemotherapy was the preferred treatment in diffuse large B cell lymphoma and radiation was preferred in patients with low-grade lymphoma. In secondary OAL, systemic chemotherapy was the preferred treatment for aggressive lymphoma. The choice of systemic Rituximab, radiation, or observation was the preferred treatment of low-grade lymphoma. Aggressive primary OAL had a relapse rate of 2 (66%) patients with a median time to progression of 8 months. Aggressive secondary OAL demonstrated a relapse rate of 50% with median time to progression 6 months. All patients who experienced relapsed disease received salvage chemotherapy. No cases of relapse were observed in the low-grade, primary or secondary, OAL patients. Median duration of response in low-grade primary lymphoma was 6 months and the low-grade secondary lymphoma was 54 months. Conclusion: In our patient population diffuse large B cell lymphoma and marginal zone lymphoma were the most common diagnoses. Ocular adnexal lymphoma has been associated with the presence of CNS disease and it is estimated that 80–90% of patients diagnosed with OAL will experience progression to the CNS. Treatment depends on the extent of disease and the subtype of lymphoma that is histologically identified. Treatment may consist of involved field radiation in localized disease and has approximately less than 10% local recurrence rate. Intravitreal methotrexate and itraorbital injections of Rituximab or a combination of localized radiation and systemic high dose methotrexate are also options for treatment. In the event that there is systemic disease, single agent IV Rituximab or standard chemotherapy regimens such as CHOP-R or CVP-R in conjunction with ocular directed therapy. When disease is localized to the ocular compartment, the burden of disease is low and there is a greater chance of eradicating the disease. The delay in diagnosis increase the risk of CNS involvement and decreases overall survival. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document