Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (CD10)
9,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We encountered a child with an intraosseous small round cell tumor that was negative for LCA, CD20 (L26), and CD3 and positive for vimentin, CD99 (MIC-2), and periodic acid-Schiff. The tumor exhibited rosette-like formations. This case was initially interpreted as Ewing's sarcoma (ES); however, additional studies revealed positivity for CD79a, CD43, and TdT expression, and an immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement (IgH-R) by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) established this to be a precursor B-lymphoblastic lymphoma. Because the differential diagnosis of ES and lymphoblastic lymphoma can be difficult and the differential diagnostic value of leukocyte antigens and immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement studies have not been fully evaluated, we conducted a more extensive investigation on 33 (21 soft tissue and 12 intraosseous) ES cases. Cases were retrieved from the files of the Department of Pathology at Georgetown University and from the Soft Tissue Registry of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. The cases were studied by light microscopy, immunohistochemistry, and PCR for IgH-R and T cell receptor gamma chain gene rearrangement (Tgamma-R). There were 17 females and 16 males; the mean age was 29.3 years. Locations included the extremities (n = 17) and trunk (n = 16). All cases fit the ES spectrum by light microscopy and immunohistochemistry, as previously determined, and were negative for lymphoid markers (LCA, CD3, CD20, CD43, CD79a, and TdT), CD10 and CD34. CD99 was positive in 31/33 and bcl-2 was weakly positive in 13/33 cases. All 21 cases studied for gene rearrangements by PCR were negative for IgH-R and Tgamma-R. Distinction of intraosseous lymphoblastic lymphoma from ES may be difficult because lymphomas may occasionally exhibit unexpected morphologic and immunophenotypic properties including LCA, CD3 and CD20 negativity and cytokeratin positivity. Additional analysis using CD79a, CD43, TdT, and PCR should be performed to avoid misdiagnosis. True ES is negative for lymphoid markers including CD79a, CD43, and TdT, as well as for IgH-R and Tgamma-R.
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PMID:Differentiating lymphoblastic lymphoma and Ewing's sarcoma: lymphocyte markers and gene rearrangement. 1170 81

Although the gastrointestinal tract represents the most common site of extranodal lymphoma, primary follicular lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract is an uncommon and poorly defined disease. We report the clinical and pathologic features of 26 patients with primary gastrointestinal follicular lymphoma. Ten of 26 patients (38.5%) were stage IIE, and 16 patients (61.5%) were stage IE. Of the 26 patients, 13 were female and 13 were male. The age range was 26-81 years (median 54.5 years). Abdominal pain was the most common presenting symptom, seen in 12 of 24 patients (50%). Nodularity of the mucosal surface was the most common endoscopic finding, seen in 10 of 14 patients (71.4%). The majority of cases (22 of 26, 84.6%) involved small bowel, four involved colorectum alone, and two involved the ileocecal valve. Within the small bowel the duodenum was the most commonly involved site (10 cases). Transmural involvement by follicular lymphoma was identified in 11 of the 16 patients who underwent surgical resection; five showed involvement of mucosa and submucosa only. The most common histologic grade was grade 1. Thirteen of 26 cases were grade 1, ten grade 2, and three grade 3. Twenty-one of 26 cases showed a predominantly follicular growth pattern, four mixed follicular and diffuse, and one predominantly diffuse. All cases were positive for CD20 and BCL2 and negative for CD3, CD5, CD23, CD43, and cyclin D1. Twenty-four of 26 were positive for CD10. Four of four cases showed cytogenetic or molecular genetic evidence of t(14;18). Initial treatment modalities included surgery plus chemotherapy (nine cases), surgery alone (seven cases), chemotherapy alone (four cases), observation alone (four cases), and chemotherapy and abdominal radiation (one case). One case presented with rectal polyps and was treated with polypectomy. A complete response was observed in 15 of 22 cases that received treatment, and of the 15 cases, five recurred 27-60 months after the initial diagnosis. Recurrence and progression were associated with histologic transformation to diffuse large cell lymphoma in one case. No significant correlation was identified between treatment response and various clinical and pathologic features. Overall, none of the 26 patients died of lymphoma. One patient died of a concomitant pancreatic carcinoma. Of the remaining 25 patients, 14 were disease free and 11 were alive with disease at a mean follow-up of 43 months. The estimated 5-year disease-free survival was 62%, and median disease-free survival was 69 months. The estimated 5-year relapse-free survival was 54%, and the median relapse-free survival was 63 months.
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PMID:Primary follicular lymphoma of the gastrointestinal tract: a clinical and pathologic study of 26 cases. 1181 43

Precursor B lymphoblastic lymphomas (B-LBL) are generally rare, but appear to have a higher incidence in children than in adults. In this report, we describe in detail six cases of B-LBL presenting with cutaneous lesions. Three occurred in the scalp, one in the skin of the thigh, one in the skin of the face and breast, and one in the subcutaneous tissue of the orbit. All six patients are females ranging in age at presentation from 5 to 15 years (mean = 9.6). None of the cases had bone marrow involvement, while two had bone involvement (maxilla, distal tibia, and distal humerus in one case, and distal tibia and orbital bone in another case); only one case had lymphadenopathy (retroperitoneal). Immunohistochemical staining showed positivity for CD79a and CD43 in all six cases. LCA and L26 positivity were also each seen in one case. Staining for MIC-2 (CD99) showed strong positivity in three cases. Vimentin was positive in four cases and TdT was positive in all five patients tested. Staining for keratin, UCHL-1, or CD30 was not encountered. Cases in which cell marker studies by flow cytometry were performed showed positivity for CD10, CD19 with negative CD20, pan-T-cell, and myeloid markers. The five patients who received multiagent chemotherapy are alive with follow-up intervals of 2 to 18 years. Two patients had local recurrences and were given radiation therapy (one with repeating multiagent chemotherapy). One patient (diagnosed in 1962) died of disseminated disease; she had been treated with radiation therapy and 6MP only. Cutaneous B-LBL must be included in the differential diagnosis of small blue cell tumors, especially in children. In contrast to its T-cell counterpart, B-LBL occurs more frequently in females, tends to present as skin or bone lesions, and is associated with a potential cure, even in cases that relapse.
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PMID:Cutaneous lymphoblastic lymphoma in children: report of six cases with precursor B-cell lineage. 1181 68

Although the neoplasm of relatively mature type plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) was recently reported, that of pDC-precursor has not yet been defined. We experienced two elderly male Japanese patients with reddish skin tumors. The histology of the tumors in both patients showed terminal deoxinucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-positive lymphoblastic lymphoma (LBL). The pathological cells did not express T, B or NK markers, and no rearranged bands were shown for immunoglobulin (Ig)-JH, T cell receptor (TCR)-C beta, J gamma, J delta1, and c-myc. In addition, no Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-derived DNA was detected in either case. The cells were (CD45, CD43, CD74, CD10, and HLA-DR)-positive in both cases, and one of the cases showed (CD4, CD36, CD54, CD58 and CD86)-positive plasmacytoid lymphoblasts, which appeared to be compatible with intermediate cells between human bone marrow lymphoid precursors and mature lymphoid DC. The cutaneous LBL in the two cases may, therefore, have been of pDC-precursor origin.
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PMID:Cutaneous lymphoblastic lymphoma of putative plasmacytoid dendritic cell-precursor origin: two cases. 1200 89

Histologically, the marginal zone pattern of the lymph node is characterized by lymphoid follicles with three distinct layers. The inner layer is composed of follicular center zones, the middle layer of darkly stained mantle zones, and the outer layer of marginal zones. However, the marginal zone pattern is rarely seen in reactive lymph nodes except for mesenteric lymph nodes. We describe the clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical and genotypic findings of six cases of reactive follicular hyperplasia exhibiting the marginal zone pattern. The patients comprised three males and three females (age range 24 to 63 years; medium 56 years). Follow-up data were obtained from five patients. None of them developed malignant lymphomas during the follow-up period of from 5 to 204 months (median 68 months). Histologically, the lesion was characterized by numerous lymphoid follicles and partial distortion of lymph node structure. Varying degrees of progressive transformation of the germinal center (PTGC) were noted in the four cases. The marginal zone pattern was observed in some or most of the lymphoid follicles including PTGC. The marginal zone B cells were small to medium-sized lymphocytes with round or slightly indented nuclei and a broad rim of pale cytoplasm. Some of them had a monocytoid appearance. They were CD20+, CD79a+, sIgM+/-, sIgD-, CD5-, CD10-, CD21-, CD23-, CD43-, CD45RO-, Bcl-6-, cyclin D1-, EMA- and p53-. A portion of them were Bcl-2 positive. Occasional large lymphoid cells with round or indented nuclei and moderate amounts of cytoplasm were observed in the marginal zone in four cases. These large lymphoid cells were usually CD20 positive, but Bcl-6 negative. A small number of them contained polytypic intracytoplasmic immunoglobulins. The polytypic nature of B lymphocytes was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry and polymerase chain reaction. Recognition of unusual marginal zone hyperplasia in reactive lymph node lesions is important to avoid confusion with nodal involvement in various low-grade B cell lymphomas presenting a marginal zone distribution pattern.
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PMID:Follicular hyperplasia presenting with a marginal zone pattern in a reactive lymph node lesion. 1207 68

Follicular lymphoma (FL) is a low-grade lymphoma that typically lacks CD5 antigen expression. We report 3 cases of FL with unusual expression of CD5. All cases showed histologic features of FL, including effaced nodal architecture, follicular growth pattern, and a spectrum of grades from 1 to 3 using World Health Organization criteria. In flow cytometric studies, all 3 cases showed a light chain-restricted, CD19+, CD20+ B-cell population coexpressing CD10 and low-level CD5. Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated an identical B-cell immunophenotype with weak expression of CD5 and coexpression of bcl-2 protein and the germinal center-associated markers, CD10 and bcl-6 protein. None of the cases showed expression of CD43, cyclin D1, or IgD. By molecular analysis, immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements were demonstrated in all 3 cases, and 2 of 3 cases had a t(14;18). These cases highlight the difficulty classifying these lymphomas by flow cytometric studies alone and emphasize the importance of recognizing FL in the differential diagnosis of CD5+ B-cell lymphomas.
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PMID:CD5+ follicular lymphoma: a clinicopathologic study of three cases. 1237 47

The immunohistochemical analysis of lymphoid neoplasms has led to refined classification schemes based on the profile of antigen expression and correlation with morphological, cytogenetic, molecular, and clinical features. Tissue microarrays (TMAs) are a powerful tool to rapidly characterize the phenotypic profile of a large number of samples. We show that this technique can be readily applied to the study of lymphoma by examining the expression profile of a series of 193 B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs) and 29 Hodgkin's lymphomas (HLs) using immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization (ISH). The NHL cases were studied for the expression of commonly used markers-including CD3, CD5, CD10, CD20, CD23, CD30, CD43, Bcl-2, and cyclin D1 by immunohistochemical staining of TMAs-and these results were compared with whole sections (WS) of the same cases. We found a high degree of correlation between the results achieved with TMAs or WS (86% to 100% of cases). P53 and MIB-1 staining were studied, and the results were similar to that reported in the literature. HL cases were stained for CD20, CD30, CD15 (LeuM1), and latent membrane protein 1 expression, and ISH was performed using probes for EBER-1 and-2 transcripts. The results from HL cases on TMA sections matched exactly with those of WS. We correlated cytogenetic results with immunohistochemical stains and morphology in cases of mantle cell lymphoma [t(11;14)(q13;q32)] and follicular lymphoma [t(14;18)(q32;q24)]. This extensive expression profile of B-cell NHLs and HL tissues discloses the ability of TMAs to rapidly screen a large series of cases and represents the first report of method validation for this technique in the study of lymphoma.
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PMID:Application of tissue microarray technology to the study of non-Hodgkin's and Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1239 66

Translocations involving the BCL-6 gene are frequently observed in diffuse large B cell lymphoma, but have rarely been reported in follicular lymphoma (FL). We studied a distinct cohort of FLs with a 3q27/BCL-6 gene rearrangement, but lacking the t(14;18) translocation. In 13/15 cases, translocations involved the 3q27 and the 14q32 regions. All cases displayed a marked follicular growth pattern and, in some instances, a monocytoid component. Tumor cells were CD5(-) CD20(+) CD23(-) CD43(-) BCL-6(+), and in the main CD10 negative (n = 10, 71%) and BCL-2 negative (n = 11, 78%). When compared to 20 typical t(14;18)(+) FLs, the presence of large follicles (P = 0.01) and a CD10(-)/BCL-2(-) phenotype were more frequently observed (P = 0.001) in our cohort. Clonal mutations arising in the BCL-6 first intron were observed in 5/7 cases with evidence of intraclonal heterogeneity, consistent with a germinal center origin. No significant difference was found in comparison to t(14;18)(+) FL regarding age, sex, performance status, bone marrow involvement or overall survival. However, in the 3q27(+) FL group, a stage III/IV disease and a bulky mass were less frequently observed. This study indicates that 3q27(+) FL without t(14;18) translocation have peculiar clinico-pathologic features and may correspond to a rare and distinct subtype of lymphoma originating from the germinal center.
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PMID:Follicular lymphoma without t(14;18) and with BCL-6 rearrangement: a lymphoma subtype with distinct pathological, molecular and clinical characteristics. 1239 77

The incidence of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (B-NHL) at nodal and extranodal sites is fairly different. Follicular lymphomas (FL) occur predominantly at nodal sites and rarely in the gastrointestinal tract, while marginal zone lymphomas (MZL) of the mucosa-associated lymphatic tissue (MALT) type predominate in the digestive organs and especially in the stomach. We report a 72-year-old female patient admitted for gastroscopy because of epigastric pain. The antral biopsies showed dense lymphocytic infiltrates, partially forming follicles with widened marginal zones and monocytoid cells. Multiple lymphoepithelial lesions (LEL) were also observed. A MZL of the MALT type was suspected morphologically. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed the lymphatic infiltrates to be CD20, bcl-2, bcl-6 and CD10 positive, and negative for CD43, CD5 and cyclin D1. PCR-based analysis showed a JH/bcl-2 rearrangement, corresponding to the translocation t(14;18). An extranodal FL mimicking MZL was diagnosed. The present case is remarkable, as it demonstrates that the detection of LEL and monocytoid B-cells, although suggestive for MZL, is not entirely specific and can also be observed in FL. Pathologists should be aware of this diagnostic pitfall in classifying gastric B-NHL. In equivocal cases, a careful morphological examination, supported by specific immunohistochemical and molecular findings, should lead to the correct diagnosis.
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PMID:Primary gastric follicular lymphoma with parafollicular monocytoid B-cells and lymphoepithelial lesions, mimicking extranodal marginal zone lymphoma of MALT. 1246 20

Hematopoietic neoplasm coexpressing CD4 and CD56 includes a subset of acute myeloid leukemia with myelomonocytic differentiation, plasmacytoid monocyte tumor, and other immature hematopoietic neoplasms of undefined origin. Herein, we report a CD4+CD56+CD68+ hematopoietic tumor that was thought to be a tumor of plasmacytoid monocytes. This case is unique in the absence of accompanying myelomonocytic leukemia and the faint expression of cCD3 on the tumor cells. The patient was a 22-yr old man presented with multiple lymphadenopathy and an involvement of the bone marrow. Tumor cells were large and monomorphic with an angulated eosinophilic cytoplasm of moderate amount. Nuclei of most tumor cells were eccentric and round with one or two prominent nucleoli. Rough endoplasmic reticulum was prominent in electron microscopic examination. Tumor cells expressed CD4, CD7, CD10, CD45RB, CD56, CD68, and HLA-DR and were negative for CD1a, CD2, sCD3, CD5, CD13, CD14, CD20, CD33, CD34, CD43, CD45RA, TIA-1, S-100, and TdT. cCD3 was not detected in the immunostaining using paraffin tissue, but was faintly expressed in flow cytometry and immunostaining using a touch imprint slide. T-cell receptor gene rearrangement analysis and EBV in situ hybridization showed negative results. Cytochemically, myeloperoxidase, Sudan black B, and alpha naphthyl butyrate esterase were all negative.
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PMID:CD4+CD56+CD68+hematopoietic tumor of probable plasmacytoid monocyte derivation with weak expression of cytoplasmic CD3. 1248 12


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