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Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (
CD10
)
9,792
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to compare primary gastro-intestinal (GI) B-cell lymphomas histomorphologically and immunophenotypically with orthologous steps of B-cell differentiation within the
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
) of the GI tract, a comprehensive panel of well characterized leucocyte differentiation antigens was composed. It comprised immunoglobulin constituents CD5,
CD10
, CD11c, CD20, CD23, CD24, CD30, CDw32, CD38, CD39, CDw75, CD76, and vimentin. These antigens yield characteristic immunoprofiles for the following B-cell compartments of the
MALT
, per se closely linked to cytologically distinct B-cell phenotypes: mantle zone (MZ), extrafollicular compartment (EF), follicle center (FC), and plasma-cell compartment (PC). An unselected series of 31
MALT
B lymphomas (13 of low and 18 of high grade malignancy) was classified histologically in routine preparations and subsequently characterized immunohistochemically using fresh frozen tissue, monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against the antigen panel listed above, and an indirect immunoperoxidase method. The final classification considered both morphology and immunoprofile of tumor cells. Ten tumors were "typical" in both respects: 2 closely corresponded to MZ, 5 to EF, 2 to FC and 1 to PC. The remaining 21 cases were characterized as "atypical" because of anaplastic cytology and/or abnormal co-expression and/or loss of antigens. A hybrid EF/FC phenotype was most frequently observed together with centrocyte-like or centrocytic anaplastic cytology of tumor cells. We conclude that
MALT
B-cell neoplasia comprises a broad spectrum of histo- and immunophenotypes ranging from well differentiated forms closely mimicking normal B-cell development to highly abnormal tumors which cannot be subclassified.
...
PMID:Histomorphologic and immunophenotypic spectrum of primary gastro-intestinal B-cell lymphomas. 170 53
A patient with primary extranodal lymphoma arising in the trachea presented with severe upper airway obstruction. The tumor was localized at presentation. The patient has remained disease-free for 12 months following surgical resection and local radiation treatment. The tumor had distinctive morphologic features characteristic of low-grade lymphomas of
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
), including a diffuse infiltrate of small lymphocytes and centrocyte-like cells surrounding reactive follicles, with plasmacytoid differentiation, and lymphoepithelial lesions. The tumor cells expressed monotypic immunoglobulin but not CD5 or
CD10
. This case provides evidence that primary lymphomas of the trachea in some cases are tumors of
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
.
...
PMID:Primary lymphoma of the trachea with morphologic and immunophenotypic characteristics of low-grade B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue. 172 97
The formation of neoplastic B-cell follicles is universally accepted as diagnostic of a follicle centre cell (FCC) lymphoma. Low-grade B-cell lymphomas of
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
) are characterized by a diffuse infiltrate of cells of uncertain lineage known as "centrocyte-like" cells because of their resemblance to centrocytes (small cleaved cells). Some
MALT
lymphomas, however, contain numerous follicles and may even have a predominantly follicular appearance. These follicles may be reactive or show immunoglobulin (Ig) light-chain restriction, indicating their neoplastic nature. We have proposed that these neoplastic follicles are not composed of follicle centre cells but result from colonization of reactive follicles by CCL cells. In this study, the immunophenotype and genotype of 10 primary gastrointestinal lymphomas with a follicular component have been determined. One case exhibited the morphological, immunophenotypic, and genotypic features of FCC lymphoma (Ig light-chain restriction, CD10+, KB61 (CDw32)-, Jh, and bcl-2 gene rearrangement). Neoplastic follicles in the remaining nine cases, which showed the features of
MALT lymphoma
, were of a different phenotype (Ig light-chain restriction,
CD10
- KB61(CDw32)+), and these lymphomas showed Jh but not bcl-2 gene rearrangement. Taken in conjunction with the morphological features, these findings suggest that in these cases the neoplastic follicles formed as the result of colonization of previously reactive follicles by neoplastic CCL cells. Thus, not all lymphomas containing neoplastic follicles are of FCC origin. Follicular colonization, as seen in low-grade
MALT
lymphomas, is likely to be a recapitulation of an as yet undescribed normal immunological phenomenon that may involve marginal zone B cells.
...
PMID:Follicular colonization in B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue. 195 41
A case of small lymphocytic B-cell lymphoma with seropositivity for human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I), whose clinical features were closely related to those of
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
) lymphoma, is presented. The neoplastic cells of the lymph node were immunologically positive for CD5, in addition to several B-cell markers, but negative for
CD10
, and cytogenetically carried a t(11;14)(q13;q32). These findings were fully consistent with so-called mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). In addition to the lymph nodes and bone marrow, multiple extranodal sites including lacrimal and salivary glands, lung and stomach (where
MALT
is present) were occupied by lymphoma cells. These extranodal lesions were immunologically identical to the lymph nodes (CD5(+),
CD10
(-)), but histologically showed lymphoepithelial lesions (LEL) characteristic of
MALT lymphoma
. These findings suggest a possible relationship between MCL and
MALT lymphoma
, and the neoplastic cells are thought to originate from the CD5-positive B cells, which are present near the areas across the mantle and marginal zones. Furthermore, HTLV-I-infection, which appears to create an immunodeficient state or modulate the B-cell response, is thought to play a role in B-cell lymphomagenesis.
...
PMID:Mantle cell lymphoma with the features of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma in an HTLV-I-seropositive patient. 753 56
Diffuse large B cell lymphomas (DLBLs) represent a heterogeneous collection of aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphomas that can arise either de novo or as a result of transformation from chronic lymphocytic leukemia, small lymphocytic lymphoma, follicular lymphomas, or lymphomas of
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
. A small percentage of DLBLs express the CD5 antigen. The majority of these cases have evolved from a pre-existing low grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (Richter's syndrome). However, we identified and characterized nine CD5-positive DLBLs in which the patients did not have a previous history or concomitant evidence of chronic lymphocytic leukemia, small lymphocytic lymphoma, follicular lymphoma, or
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
-associated non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, suggesting that they arose de novo. All nine cases expressed CD20 and monotypic immunoglobulin, all eight cases examined expressed CD19, CD22 and CD43, eight of the nine cases expressed HLA-DR, and two of eight cases expressed CD11c. None of the cases expressed CD3,
CD10
, CD11b, CD21, CD23 or CD30. CD5 expression by these cells was found to be identical to that of CD5-positive B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia by quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis of CD5 mRNA. These nine de novo CD5-positive DLBLs exhibited clonal immunoglobulin heavy and light chain gene rearrangements but lacked integration of the Epstein-Barr virus genome and structural alterations of the bcl-1, bcl-2, c-myc, H-ras, K-ras, and N-ras proto-oncogenes and the p53 tumor suppressor gene. However, bcl-6 proto-oncogene rearrangement, which is involved in chromosome band 3q27 aberrations, was found in four cases (44.4%). This is comparable with the frequency of bcl-6 gene rearrangement in CD5-negative DLBL. In contrast, bcl-6 gene rearrangement was absent in six cases of DLBL associated with Richter's syndrome. These findings suggest that de novo CD5-positive DLBLs are genotypically similar to CD5-negative DLBLs and may be pathogenetically distinct from the DLBLs associated with Richter's syndrome.
...
PMID:De novo CD5-positive and Richter's syndrome-associated diffuse large B cell lymphomas are genotypically distinct. 754 11
The morphology, phenotype, genotype and clinical behaviour of four cases of mantle cell lymphoma (centrocytic lymphoma) presenting primarily in mucosa (two gastric, one in large bowel and one tonsillar) are reviewed. Their relationship with the broader group of mantle cell and
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
) lymphomas is also discussed. All four tumours showed a monomorphic picture of mantle cells (centrocytes) arranged in a diffuse, or vaguely nodular, pattern. Scattered non-neoplastic germinal centres were entrapped within the tumour cells, although there was no follicular colonization. In two cases distinct epithelial infiltration by tumour cells was observed. All four tumours had a CD19, CD20, CD5, IgD, Leu8 immunophenotype, whereas KiM1P and
CD10
expression were absent. DRC antibody showed loose aggregates of dendritic cells in three of four cases. Three cases showed PRAD-1/Cyclin D1 overexpression by Northern blot analysis. Although we were not able to detect bcl-1 rearrangement in the major translocation cluster (MTC) breakpoint, the possibility of bcl-1 rearrangement involving other cluster breakpoints cannot be ruled out. The four cases evolved as a disseminated disease, involving either peripheral lymph nodes, spleen or bone marrow. The biological behaviour of mantle cell lymphoma presenting in mucosa appears, irrespective of localization or macroscopic presentation, similar to that of nodal mantle cell lymphoma. Their tendency to dissemination contrasts with
MALT
lymphomas, which tend to remain localized, and from which mucosa mantle cell lymphoma must be distinguished. The presence of lymphoepithelial lesions does not seem to be a useful differential feature, since occasional epithelial infiltration was seen in two cases. Reactivity with CD5 appears to be especially useful in distinguishing these, since all four cases were clearly positive, in contrast with what is usually found in
MALT
lymphomas.
...
PMID:Mucosal mantle cell (centrocytic) lymphomas. 765 10
In lymphoproliferative diseases of the skin, DC have a key role in T- and B-cell homing. Furthermore, DC alterations may have a pathogenic role in the natural history of specific disorders, either in the neoplastic lymphoid cell progression or in antitumoral lymphocyte reaction. Finally, the morphoantigenic and topographic features of DC may have diagnostic and histogenetic relevance in specific conditions. In CTCL, dermal CD1a+ DC ("indeterminate cells") seem to play a significant role in the neoplastic progression of MF, whereas the possible pathogenetic role of specific alterations of epidermal LC is yet to be proven. Recently, a possible implication of DD (resident, perivascular factor XIIIa+/CD1a- DC) in the pathogenesis of MF has been also suggested. The presence and possible significance of DC in CTCL non-MF are presently poorly studied. At present, DC number, distribution, and phenotype seem possibly useful in the differential diagnosis between CTCL and pseudo-CTCL, but this hypothesis has to be adequately confirmed. CBCL has been recently proposed as a unique type of clinically low-grade lymphoma, namely, skin-associated lymphoid tissue (SALT)-related B-cell lymphoma. Both SALT- and
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
)-related B-cell lymphoma share with a peculiar nodal lymphoma of follicle mantle origin (parafollicular-monocytoid lymphoma) the nonaggressive clinical behavior and the uniform phenotype (CD5-,
CD10
-) and genotype (lack of bcl-2 gene rearrangement) of neoplastic B cells, despite the wide variability of cytomorphologic appearances. The putative origin of CBCL is further supported by the typical CD14-, nerve growth factor receptor (NGFr)+ immunophenotype of DRC. Moreover, the immunophenotype and architectural fashion of DRC are interesting clues to the differentiation between neoplastic and true reactive folliclelike nodules and may be of help in the differential diagnosis between CBCL and B-cell pseudolymphoma as well as in the correct interpretation of lesions showing monoclonal proliferations of B cells accompanied by polyclonal follicular reactions.
...
PMID:Dendritic cells in T- and B-cell proliferation in the skin. 804 37
The authors studied 56 cases of diffuse low-grade B-cell lymphoma using frozen tissue sections and a large panel of monoclonal antibodies that distinguish subsets of normal B cells. They compared the immunophenotypes with the histologic subtypes defined by the Rappaport classification, Working Formulation, and Kiel classification to correlate antigen expression with the morphologic subtypes defined in these classification schemes and to define the contribution of immunophenotype to clinically relevant subclassification. All categories in all classifications showed some heterogeneity of antigen expression; however, antigen expression correlated better with four major subgroups defined by the Kiel classification: (1) CD5+
CD10
- CD23+ CD43+: chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL); (2) CD5+
CD10
-/+CD23- CD43+: centrocytic (mantle cell) lymphoma; (3) CD5- CD10+/- CD23-/+ CD43-: centroblastic/centrocytic (CB/CC) lymphoma; and (4) CD5-
CD10
- CD23-/+CD43-/+: immunocytoma,
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
)-type, and monocytoid B-cell lymphoma. These subgroups had distinctive clinical features. Patients with centrocytic lymphoma were predominantly male (5.5:1) and had a significantly worse probability of survival than those with either CLL or
MALT
-type lymphoma (P = 0.001). The group with CB/CC lymphoma had an equal male-female ratio and an intermediate prognosis. Most patients with
MALT
-type and nodal monocytoid B-cell lymphomas were female (2:1); the disease-free survival for patients with extranodal
MALT
-type lymphoma was significantly better than that for all patients with other lymphoma subtypes except CB/CC (P < 0.01). The group with non-
MALT
immunocytoma had a slight male predominance, a high frequency of monoclonal gammopathy, and an intermediate prognosis. In differential diagnosis, CD23 was useful in distinguishing B-cell CLL from centrocytic lymphoma (P < 0.0001); CD5 (P < 0.0001), CD6 (P < 0.005), and CD43 (P < 0.0001) distinguish centrocytic lymphoma from CB/CC lymphoma; and
CD10
(P < 0.005), CD43 (P = 0.06), Leu-8 (P = 0.08), and Ig heavy chain (P = 0.01) may help distinguish CB/CC lymphoma from immunocytoma, monocytoid B-cell lymphoma, and
MALT
-type lymphoma. Differences in antigen expression and clinical features among these Kiel classification subgroups suggest that they represent distinct biologic entities. The Working Formulation categories do not delineate these diseases clearly.
...
PMID:Diffuse low-grade B-cell lymphomas. Four clinically distinct subtypes defined by a combination of morphologic and immunophenotypic features. 821 30
The principal objective of this study was to investigate whether follicular center cell lymphomas occur among B-cell lymphoma of
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT
). We used a molecular genetic/immunohistochemical approach and analysed 21 cases with the primary site in the gastrointestinal tract. Only two bcl-2 gene rearrangements were detected in our series and were found in two out of seven lymphomas with a nodular growth pattern. A chromosomal translocation t(14;18) was demonstrated by comigration of rearranged bcl-2 and JH sequences in one of these two cases. Additionally, both lymphomas showed bcl-2 protein positive neoplastic follicles,
CD10
expression, and lack of vimentin. Therefore, these two cases were defined as follicular lymphomas. In contrast to the two follicular lymphomas of
MALT
, three other, nodular growing, bcl-2 protein positive lymphomas were found to have no bcl-2 gene rearrangements, to be
CD10
negative and to express vimentin. These three lymphomas might be composed of neoplastic extrafollicular cells which secondarily invaded reactive follicles. We conclude that the presence of bcl-2 protein positive follicles is consistent with both a follicular and extrafollicular origin of a B lymphoma of
MALT
. However, the detection of a bcl-2 gene rearrangement is the most valuable criterion in such a situation, and additional immunophenotypic criteria, such as
CD10
expression and lack of vimentin within the neoplastic population, further substantiate the diagnosis of a follicular lymphoma in
MALT
.
...
PMID:Bcl-2 gene rearrangements in primary B-cell lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract reveal follicular lymphoma as a subtype. 842 81
We studied the morphologic, immunologic and clinical features of 14 cases of primary non-lymphoblastic non-Hodgkin's lymphomas of the mediastinum. The patients ranged in age from 3 to 76 years, with a median age of 28 years. According to the Ann Arbor classification, 71% of our cases were in an early stage. Three cases were in Stage I, eight in Stage II, one in Stage III and two in Stage IV (one with multiple hepatic lesions and another with bone marrow involvement). The patients were heterogeneous in terms of the disease and were therefore histologically classified into three categories: diffuse large B cell lymphoma with sclerosis (DLS; n = 8); large cell anaplastic lymphoma (LC-Ana; n = 5); and low grade B cell lymphoma of
mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue
(
MALT lymphoma
; n = 1). DLS was the most common group and was characterized as CD5-,
CD10
-, CD19+, CD20+, CD21- and CD22+. Imprint smears showed azurophilic granules in the cytoplasm of the tumor cells of three of four DLS cases. All of the six cases examined were negative when tested for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) sequences after hybridization with the EBV internal repeat probe. DLS and
MALT lymphoma
cases were of a B-lineage lymphoma of the thymus, while most of the LC-Ana cases were of a T-lineage lymphoma. Patients with non-lymphoblastic non-Hodgkin's lymphomas had a relatively favorable prognosis compared with lymphoblastic lymphoma (P < 0.01 by the generalized Wilcoxon test). There was no significant difference in the survival between non-lymphoblastic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and Hodgkin's disease (P > 0.05 by the generalized Wilcoxon test).
...
PMID:Clinicopathologic study of primary mediastinal non-lymphoblastic non-Hodgkin's lymphomas among the Japanese. 846 56
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