Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One case of T-cell lymphoma with atypical malignant cells is reported. Some of the clinical features, morphological characteristics and functional activity (erythrophagocytosis) of malignant cells suggested malignant histiocytosis. The malignant disease started with splenomegaly and developed with hepatomegaly, bone marrow infiltration, discrete lymphadenopathy and leukaemic picture. Proliferated cells were characterized by ambiguity. In addition to phagocytic capability, presence of complement receptors and ultrastructural features proper to the macrophagic lineage, the cells expressed T-cell determinants (E receptors, T3, T4 and T11 antigens) and were peroxidase and esterase-negative. Erythrocytes were partially or completely dehaemoglobinized and presented the phenomenon of autolysis in different stages of development. Because this lymphoma is difficult to diagnose and apparently resistant to therapy, its recognition and further study are warranted.
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PMID:A case of erythrophagocytic T4 lymphoma. Immunological and morphological peculiarities. 169 69

We analysed the clinical and pathologic features of 42 patients with immunologically confirmed peripheral T-cell lymphoma. The median age was 60 years and the male to female ratio was 1:1. A prior lymphoproliferative or autoimmune disorder was present in 14 per cent of the patients. Signs of advanced disease were usually present from the onset, such as B symptoms (55 per cent), generalized lymphadenopathy (57 per cent), stage III/IV disease (62 per cent), and elevated levels of serum lactate dehydrogenase (68 per cent). Primary extranodal disease (14 per cent), hepatomegaly (12 per cent), splenomegaly (12 per cent), lung/pleural involvement (12 per cent), skin involvement (21 per cent), and bone marrow involvement (28 per cent) were uncommon. Lymphocytopenia was present in 64 per cent of the patients, and none of nine patients tested were serologically positive for human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus (HTLV-I) infection. Among 38 patients receiving combination chemotherapy, 20 (53 per cent) achieved a complete remission. The actuarial median survival of all patients was 17 months. Age greater than 60 years and stage III/IV disease predicted a poor clinical outcome, whereas the large cell histological subtype predicted a favourable outcome. Prospective clinical studies using uniform treatments and a uniform histologic classification scheme are needed to confirm these findings.
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PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphoma: a clinicopathologic study of 42 cases. 288 15

We report a case of an erythrophagocytic T-cell lymphoma with autoimmune hemolytic anemia, osteolytic lesions, hypercalcemia, hepatomegaly, and marrow invasion without evident lymph node, skin or peripheral blood involvement. The malignant cells were large immunoblastic cells with pleomorphic nuclei and occasional phagocytic vacuoles containing erythrocytes. Immunologic studies showed the tumor cells to have the phenotype of activated T-cells of the cytotoxic/suppressor subclass (HLA- Dr-positive, CD8 positive) with surface receptors for IgG Fc but lacking functional activity in assays of natural killer activity and antibody-dependent cytotoxicity. The tumor cells appeared to express receptors for T-cell growth factor (Tac). Cytogenetic study of marrow mononuclear cells revealed complex but non-random karyotypic abnormalities (45 XX, +11, -12, -16, 17 p+). The clinical and laboratory features indicate that erythrophagocytic T-cell lymphoma represents a true clonal malignancy of the CD8-positive subclass of T-lymphocytes.
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PMID:Erythrophagocytic T-cell lymphoma: immunologic and cytogenetic evidence for a clonal malignancy of the CD8-positive T-cell subclass. 313 49

Eight cases of AIL-type T-cell malignant lymphoma are reported. The clinical symptoms are the same as those described in AIL: fever, malaise, weight loss, skin rashes, polyadenopathy, and splenomegaly. However, some differences can be noted: the absence of hepatomegaly in all cases but one, the absence of polyclonal hypergammapathy in all cases but one, and predominance in females. The lymph node modifications comprise diffuse infiltrations of lymphoid cells with irregular nuclei and pale cytoplasm, associated with a large number of immunoblasts and plasma cells. Some eosinophilic granulocytes and epithelioid cells can be seen. Hyperplasia of the vessels and remnants of follicles, sometimes with proliferation of follicular dendritic cells, are prominent features. The immunolabelling study demonstrates the presence of an important T-cell population all expressing a high predominance of CD 4 phenotype. These findings are in accordance with those published in Europe and in contrast with those of some of the Japanese cases, particularly the first patients published by Shimoyama et al. The differential diagnosis with AIL is based on the presence of clusters of mainly large cells with a pale cytoplasm, on the loss of expression of one T cell marker, as in 3 cases of our series, and on the presence of a high percentage of lymphoid cells engaged in the mitotic cycle as demonstrated with the Ki 67 monoclonal antibody. However, to draw a clear cut difference between AIL-type T-cell lymphoma and AIL considered as a prelymphomatous dysimmune lymphadenopathy, only the demonstration of cytogenetic abnormalities, as in one of our cases or of rearrangement of the genes coding for beta and/or gamma chain of the antigen receptor of T-cell are valuable criteria. The follow-up of our series is not long enough to appreciate the prognosis. Three patients died, one from a glioma. All the other cases, treated with polychemotherapy show total remission with an evolution of 10 to 39 months.
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PMID:Angio-immunoblastic lymphadenopathy (AIL) or T-cell malignant lymphoma of AIL-type. A histopathological, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study of 8 cases. 326 11

The authors describe five white patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma. Four patients were older than 65 years. All cases presented with a short clinical course and advanced stage at the time of diagnosis. Clinical manifestations included asthenia, weight loss, peripheral and abdominal lymphadenopathy. One case showed tonsillar involvement and subcutaneous lymph node enlargement; hepatomegaly was present in four cases, two of them with splenomegaly. Only one case presented peripheral lymphocytosis and antibodies to human T-leukemia virus. Although three cases were classified as diffuse mixed lymphomas and two as poorly differentiated lymphocytic lymphomas, there were some common characteristics: diffuse infiltration by different proportions of small lymphoid cells and large immunoblasts, some of them multinucleated and similar to Reed-Sternberg cells; accumulation of histiocytes, plasmacytosis, eosinophilia, venular proliferation and compartmentalization were also found. Bone marrow infiltration was observed in two patients. Results of monoclonal markers showed four cases to be OKT4+ and the other OKT8+. The morphologic and immunologic characteristics of these patients were typical and similar to those reported from other geographical areas.
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PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphoma. A clinical, histologic, and immunologic study of five cases. 387 77

Clinical and histopathologic material from 42 patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) was reviewed. The median age was 63.5 years (range, 11-97 years). The male:female ratio was 2.8:1. Prior immune or lymphoproliferative diseases occurred in 36% of the patients. PTCL was advanced at presentation with B symptoms (67%), generalized adenopathy (69%), and stage III/IV disease (79%). Suspected lung or pleural involvement (21%), hepatomegaly (29%), and splenomegaly (43%) were common; marrow involvement was documented in 37% of the patients at presentation and in 51% of patients during the illness. Hypercalcemia and eosinophilia occurred in 19% and 29% of patients, respectively. Among patients receiving combination chemotherapy (BCOP, CHOP, BACOP, COMLA), eight (24%) of 33 achieved a complete remission and only four (12%) of 33 had a sustained complete remission. The median survival for PTCL was 11 months. Because of the poor response to standard therapy, clinical trials should identify cases of PTCL and evaluate newer regimens in this subset of aggressive lymphoma.
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PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphoma: a clinicopathologic study of 42 cases. 637 20

Previously diagnosed cases of hepatosinusoidal T-cell lymphoma and malignant histiocytosis (MH) may include lymphoid neoplasms of natural killer (NK) cell lineage associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Such hepatosinusoidal neoplasms were found to demonstrate hepatomegaly but not lymphadenopathy, and all were diagnosed by a liver biopsy. Sixteen adult patients diagnosed with hepatosinusoidal leukaemia/lymphoma (six NK-cell leukaemia/lymphomas [NKLLs], five instances of MH, three T-cell malignant lymphomas [T-MLs], and two adult T-cell leukaemia/lymphomas [ATLLs] were examined for EBV by in situ hybridization, then were studied immunohistochemically and subjected to a DNA analysis. Among our five patients with MH, neoplastic cells showed T-cells, but no histiocytic markers, and they were considered to have either a T-cell or NK-cell lineage. All NKLLs, MHs and T-MLs, except for ATLLs accompanied by reactive hemophagocytic histiocytes, varied in number in each case. In situ hybridization revealed the presence of EBV in the nuclei of atypical cells in all of the six lymphoid neoplasms of NK-cell lineage. Each case of MH and each T-ML which represented EBV demonstrated no definite T-cell or histiocytic markers. Patients with ATLL did not reveal EBV. In all patients with hemophagocytosis, EBV was present in the nuclei of the neoplastic lymphocytes, but not in the hemophagocytic cells. Finally, the 16 cases were reclassified into eight cases with EBV-containing NKLLs, six T-MLs, and two ATLLs. In addition, no true histiocytic neoplasms were observed. The mechanism of hemophagocytosis may be therefore the production of lymphokines (macrophage-activating factors) by neoplastic lymphocytes. EBV-associated hepatosinusoidal leukaemia/lymphoma may thus contain a lymphoid neoplasm of NK-cell lineage, which made it difficult to be distinguished from the previously designated malignant histiocytosis.
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PMID:Hepatosinusoidal leukaemia/lymphoma consisting of Epstein-Barr virus-containing natural killer cell leukaemia/lymphoma and T-cell lymphoma; mimicking malignant histiocytosis. 779 96

A 75-year-old woman presented with anemia, lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly and lingual tumor, but no constitutional symptoms. The laboratory data showed pancytopenia and polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia. A bone marrow aspirate represented an apparent myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) feature, specifically, refractory anemia with excess of blasts. A lymph-node biopsy revealed the disappearance of normal architecture, small arborizing blood vessels, large lymphoid cells with prominent cytoplasm (so-called pale cells) and a clonal proliferation of T-lymphocytes. The patient was diagnosed as having MDS associated with immunoblastic lymphadenopathy (IBL)-like T-cell lymphoma. She was subsequently treated with cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, vincristine and prednisolone for lymphoma which successfully induced a remission of not only the T-cell lymphoma but also the MDS. The case suggested that MDS might be a paraneoplastic complication of IBL-like T-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:Myelodysplastic syndrome associated with immunoblastic lymphadenopathy-like T-cell lymphoma: simultaneous clinical improvement with chemotherapy. 815 57

Expression of the natural killer (NK) cell antigen CD56 is uncommon among lymphomas, and those that do are almost exclusively of non-B-cell lineage and show a predilection for the nasal and nasopharyngeal region. This study analyzes 49 cases of nonnasal CD56+ lymphomas, the largest series to date, to characterize the clinicopathologic spectrum of these rare neoplasms. All patients were Chinese. Four categories could be delineated. (1) Nasal-type NK/T cell lymphoma (n = 34) patients were adults 21 to 76 years of age (median, 50 years), including 25 men and 9 women. They presented with extranodal disease, usually in multiple sites. The commonest sites of involvement were skin, upper aerodigestive tract, testis, soft tissue, gastrointestinal tract, and spleen. Only 7 cases (21%) apparently had stage I disease. The neoplastic cells were often pleomorphic, with irregular nuclei and granular chromatin, and angiocentric growth was common. The characteristic immunophenotype was CD2+ CD3/Leu4- CD3epsilon+ CD56+, and 32 cases (94%) harbored Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Follow-up information was available in 29 cases: 24 died at a median of 3.5 months; 3 were alive with relapse at 5 months to 2.5 years; and 2 were alive and well at 3 and 5 years, respectively. (2) Aggressive NK cell leukemia/lymphoma (n = 5) patients presented with hepatomegaly and blood/marrow involvement, sometimes accompanied by splenomegaly or lymphadenopathy. The neoplastic cells often had round nuclei and azurophilic granules in the pale cytoplasm. All cases exhibited an immunophenotype of CD2+ CD3/Leu4- CD56+ CD16- CD57- and all were EBV+. All of these patients died within 6 weeks. (3) In blastoid NK cell lymphoma (n = 2), the lymphoma cells resembled those of lymphoblastic or myeloid leukemia. One case studied for CD2 was negative and both cases were EBV-. One patient was alive with disease at 10 months and one was a recent case. (4) Other specific lymphoma types with CD56 expression (n = 8) included one case each of hepatosplenic gammadelta T-cell lymphoma and S100 protein+ T-cell lymphoproliferative disease and two cases each of T-chronic lymphocytic/prolymphocytic leukemia, lymphoblastic lymphoma, and true histiocytic lymphoma. All of these cases were EBV-. Six patients died at a median of 6.5 months. Nonnasal CD56+ lymphomas are heterogeneous, but all pursue a highly aggressive clinical course. The nasal-type NK/T-cell lymphoma and aggressive NK cell leukemia/lymphoma show distinctive clinicopathologic features and a very strong association with EBV. Blastoid NK cell lymphoma appears to be a different entity and shows no association with EBV.
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PMID:Nonnasal lymphoma expressing the natural killer cell marker CD56: a clinicopathologic study of 49 cases of an uncommon aggressive neoplasm. 919 74

We report a young woman with pancytopenia and huge splenomegaly who was also found to have peripheral T-cell lymphoma with massive infiltration of T-cell evident in the liver and spleen. A liver biopsy showed predominant sinusoidal infiltration of pan-T cell antibody-stained T-lymphoid cells. Histologic examination of the spleen revealed numerous tumor cells predominantly infiltrated in the cords and sinuses of the red pulp, which were identical to those described in the liver. Several clusters of small round abnormal cells were observed in marrow cytology. Although the patient felt well during 18 months after the splenectomy was done, the patient eventually manifested a huge hepatomegaly, showed increasing white blood cell count to 42 x 10(9)/l, and numerous prolymphocytes (66.9%) in the bone marrow. This change represented a prolymphocytic transformation of the patient's original hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:Hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma: prolymphocytic transformation 18 months after splenectomy. 927 54


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