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Query: UMLS:C0019214 (
hepatosplenomegaly
)
4,408
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
CD56
(NKH1) expression is a rare phenomenon in malignant lymphomas, mostly confined to those occurring in the nasal or nasopharyngeal region. In this study we provide a detailed clinicopathologic analysis of nine patients with
CD56
-positive hematolymphoid malignancies occurring in sites other than the upper aerodigestive tract. The disease occurred predominantly in young and middle-aged men (mean age, 40 years) who often presented with swinging fever, skin rash, and/or
hepatosplenomegaly
, usually in the absence of peripheral lymphadenopathy. There was frequent involvement of the skin and mucosal sites, such as the salivary gland, lungs, and small intestine. The disease pursued a highly aggressive course, with most patients dying within weeks despite cytotoxic therapy. Although the cytologic appearances and immunophenotypic profile varied from case to case, the group of tumors could be unified by two morphologic features, namely, the presence of azurophilic granules in the cytoplasm of the neoplastic cells and the frequent occurrence of angiocentric and angiodestructive infiltrates. Since
CD56
reactivity appears to confer a poor prognosis in hematolymphoid malignancies, we recommended inclusion of
CD56
antibody in the routine panel for immunophenotypic analysis.
...
PMID:CD56 (NKH1)-positive hematolymphoid malignancies: an aggressive neoplasm featuring frequent cutaneous/mucosal involvement, cytoplasmic azurophilic granules, and angiocentricity. 137 63
The authors report an autopsy case of CD3- large granular cell leukemia with an aggressive clinical course. A 15-year-old male was admitted to our hospital with complaint of high fever. Clinical examination revealed cervical lymphadenopathy and
hepatosplenomegaly
. His white blood cell count was 7,000/microliters with 45% large granular lymphocytes. A biopsy specimen of the cervical lymph node showed diffuse lymphoma, mixed small and large cells (DM). Surface marker analysis by immunohistochemical technique revealed that neoplastic cells expressed CD2, CD38,
CD56
and HLA-DR but lacked CD3, CD4 and CD8. Southern blot analysis of immunoglobulin (Ig) and T cell receptor (TCR) genes showed germ line of Ig and TCR. These findings indicate that this case was a large granular cell leukemia with the natural killer cell phenotype. Despite anti-leukemic therapy, he died of hyperkalemia and acidosis. Autopsy showed a marked swelling of the liver (3,122 g) and spleen (2,434 g) with leukemic cell infiltration.
...
PMID:[CD3-negative natural killer cell leukemia with aggressive clinical course]. 153 92
Ten leukemia cases with mixed phenotype were investigated in terms of clinical characteristics and cellular origin. Three patients were infants and six patients were older children. Six of them had a high leukocyte count and a mediastinal mass was found in three cases. All but one showed
hepatosplenomegaly
and/or lymphoadenopathy. In spite of intensive chemotherapy, most of them responded poorly. Cytochemical analysis of their leukemic cells revealed a low percentage of positivity for myeloperoxidase reactivity (less than 25%) in two cases and electron microscopic platelet peroxidase reactivity was found in one of three analyzed cases. Phenotypically, these cells all expressed CD7, and other T-lineage-associated, B-lineage-associated, and/or myeloid-associated antigens were also detected to some extent. In addition, three cases expressed CD41 and one case expressed
CD56
. The T-cell receptor (TCR) genes and immunoglobulin gene were in the germline configuration in seven cases. In three rearranged cases, two showed only the TCR-delta gene rearrangement, and one had both TCR-gamma and delta gene rearrangements. Cell culture studies with 12-0-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) revealed differentiation to the T-lineage in two cases and to a myeloid lineage in one case. Megakaryocytic differentiation was detected in two cases in culture without TPA. These results suggest that the cells from these cases arose from stem cells capable of both lymphoid and nonlymphoid differentiation. Although the cells were heterogeneous with regard to their potency of differentiation, they have similar clinical characteristics. Because of poor prognosis, it is important to identify this type of leukemia, and allogenic or autologous bone marrow transplantation should be considered.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of CD7-positive stem cell leukemia. A distinct subtype of mixed lineage leukemia. 171 22
CD56
, a natural killer cell marker reactive with the neuronal-cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), identifies a group of lymphomas with distinctive clinicopathologic features. The disease affects mostly middle-aged adults who often present with fever, skin rash and
hepatosplenomegaly
in the absence of peripheral lymphadenopathy. Extranodal involvement is common, particularly the skin, aerodigestive tract and central nervous system. Histologically, an angiocentric and angiodestructive pattern of infiltrate is often seen, but the cytological spectrum of the lymphoma cells is very broad. Cytoplasmic granules, however, are frequently found when Giemsa-stained cytologic preparations are examined. Immunologically,
CD56
-positive lymphomas can be sub-classified into CD3-positive (T-cell) and CD3-negative (probably true natural killer cell) subtypes. T-cell receptor gene rearrangement can be demonstrated in the former cases, but not in the latter. Clinically,
CD56
-positive lymphomas are aggressive neoplasms.
...
PMID:CD56 (NCAM)-positive malignant lymphoma. 752 19
An 18-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of 39 degrees C fever for over one month, marked
hepatosplenomegaly
, and pancytopenia. Malignant histiocytosis, malignant lymphoma, or hemophagocytic syndrome were ruled out by bone marrow aspiration and liver biopsy. A diagnosis of chronic EB virus infection was made according to his characteristic clinical features, abnormally high titiers of anti-EBV antibodies (VCA-IgG x 2560, EA-IgG x 1280), and the detection of EBV genome in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells by polymerase chain reaction. He also manifested granular lymphocyte proliferative disorder (GLPD). The phenotype of the proliferating granular lymphocytes was CD2 (+), CD3 (-),
CD56
(+), and IL-2R beta (+), showing the NK lineage of these cells. Chromosomal abnormality of the cells cultured for a short time with IL-2 and a monoclonal junctional DNA structure of EB virus terminal repeat analyzed by the Southern blotting provided definitive evidence for the monoclonal expansion of the granular lymphocytes. These findings indicate a causative role of EV virus in NK-GLPD or NK-leukemia.
...
PMID:[Chronic active EB virus infection accompanied by monoclonal proliferation of granular lymphocytes]. 778 25
We report a comprehensive study of a case of aggressive natural killer cell lymphoma/leukemia, which is characterized by young male predominance, rapidly progressive clinical course, and presence of lymphadenopathy,
hepatosplenomegaly
, and bone marrow involvement. The leukemic phase is frequently preceded by pancytopenia. The diagnostic clues are the detection of cytoplasmic granules in tumor cells on Wright-Giemsa-stained tissue imprints or smears and a selective loss of T-cell antigens. Immunophenotyping is decisive in making the final diagnosis by showing positive natural killer cell markers (CD16,
CD56
, and/or CD57), CD2, CD11c, and Ia, but negative CD3, T-cell receptor heterodimers, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, and B-cell markers. Genotyping always shows germline configuration in both immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor genes. The unique feature in this case is its presentation as a testicular lymphoma, which has not been previously reported. Polymerase chain reaction was performed in this case but failed to detect human T-cell leukemia virus type I/II provirus. It is important to recognize this new entity as it is a highly aggressive disease with a rapidly progressive clinical course and fails to respond to any chemotherapeutic regimen available.
...
PMID:Aggressive natural killer cell lymphoma/leukemia. A recently recognized clinicopathologic entity. 855 18
Natural killer (NK)-like T cells are major histocompatibility complex-unrestricted cytotoxic T cells that are surface CD3-positive, express NK-cell antigens, and rearrange their T-cell receptor. Most neoplasms arising from this T-cell subpopulation have been a chronic lymphoproliferative disease referred to as T-large granular lymphocyte (LGL) leukemia. Only 10 NK-like T-cell lymphomas have been described in detail previously; this study presents the clinicopathologic features of six others and distinguishes these lymphomas from T-LGL leukemia. All patients presented with B-symptoms and often had marked
hepatosplenomegaly
without significant peripheral lymphadenopathy. Four of the six patients were immunosuppressed. All had CD3, CD8,
CD56
-positive tumors, presumably of hepatosplenic (n = 3), intestinal (n = 1), pulmonary (n = 1), or nodal (n = 1) origin. Three patients had lymphomatous bone marrow infiltrates, and four had peripheral blood involvement by neoplastic large lymphocytes, some of which had a blastic appearance or resembled virocytes. Azurophilic granules, ultrastructurally corresponding to cytoplasmic dense core and/or double density granules, were seen in all cases. T-cell clonality was shown in five tumors by Southern blot analysis, and three had abnormal karyotypes. Two untreated patients died 20 days after presentation, and three patients who received combination chemotherapy died within 5 months of presentation. One patient remains in complete remission 22 months after treatment. These findings suggest NK-like T-cell lymphomas are aggressive, are clinicopathologically distinct from T-LGL leukemia, and should be in the differential diagnosis of extranodal T-cell lymphoproliferations, including those in immunosuppressed patients. Furthermore, the LGL morphology, phenotype, and tissue distribution of some NK-like T-cell lymphomas suggest they arise from thymic-independent T cells of the hepatic sinusoids and intestinal mucosa.
...
PMID:Natural killer-like T-cell lymphomas: aggressive lymphomas of T-large granular lymphocytes. 860 6
We identified eight cases of T-cell lymphoma with evidence of a gamma delta phenotype over a 13-year period. Seven of these cases conformed to a distinct clinicopathologic entity of hepatosplenic gamma delta T-cell lymphoma. Nearly all of these patients were young adult males (five of seven), with a median age at presentation of 20 years. They presented with marked
hepatosplenomegaly
, without lymphadenopathy or significant peripheral blood lymphocytosis. Thrombocytopenia was seen in all patients, and five of seven were mildly anemic. The clinical course was aggressive, and despite multiagent chemotherapy, the median survival duration was less than 1 year. The morphologic findings were uniform; a monomorphic population of medium-sized lymphoid cells with moderately clumped chromatin and a rim of pale cytoplasm infiltrated the sinusoids of the spleen, liver, and bone marrow. The cells had a characteristic immunophenotype: CD2+, CD3+, CD4-, CD5-, CD7+, CD16+, CD57-, CD25-, T-cell receptor (TCR)delta +, beta F1-. CD8 was positive in four of seven cases tested, and
CD56
was positive in five of six. All cases expressed the cytotoxic granule-associated protein, TIA1, but perforin was detected in only one case. All cases with assessable DNA had a TCR gamma gene rearrangement, and lacked Epstein-Barr virus sequences. Isochromosome 7q was identified in two cases with cytogenetic information. The one case of cutaneous gamma delta T-cell lymphoma differed in its clinical manifestations, histologic appearance, and immunophenotype. We conclude that hepatosplenic gamma delta T-cell lymphoma is a distinct clinicopathologic entity derived from cytotoxic gamma delta T cells, and should be distinguished from other lymphomas of T-cell and natural-killer cell (NK)-like T-cell derivation.
...
PMID:Hepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma: a distinct clinicopathologic entity of cytotoxic gamma delta T-cell origin. 912 60
Lymphoproliferative disorder of natural killer cells is a heterogeneous disorder, and an association with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is suggested in some cases. A Japanese male presenting with recurrent nasopharyngeal problems developed fever, generalized lymphadenopathy, and
hepatosplenomegaly
. Separated cells from lymph nodes were shown to have a natural killer (NK) cell, CD2(+), CD3(-), CD16(+),
CD56
(+), HLA-DR(+) phenotype. A progressive abnormality of hepatic function was associated with hepatorenal failure and death. A serologic study suggested reactivated EBV infection. In situ hybridization (ISH) studies showed Epstein-Barr virus-encoded RNA (EBER)-1 in lymph nodes, with lymphocytes infiltrating the liver and tissue from ethmoid sinus surgery 3 years prior to development of obvious lymphoproliferative disease. Polymerase chain reaction performed on lymph node DNA, using oligonucleotide primers specific for the EBV lymphocyte-determined membrane antigen (LYDMA) gene, revealed a single band, suggesting monoclonal proliferation of the tumor. NK activities of the lymphocytes from the lymph node and peripheral blood were markedly decreased. These findings suggest a close relationship between EBV infection and development of NK cell lymphoproliferative disorder.
...
PMID:Aggressive natural killer cell lymphoproliferative disorder associated with Epstein-Barr viral RNA. 909 88
Hepatosplenic gammadelta T cell lymphoma (TCL) is a rare, aggressive subset of peripheral TCL that presents with
hepatosplenomegaly
and cytopenias. Detailed clinicopathological, ultrastructural, and cytogenetic analyses of these lymphomas are limited; functional characteristics of these lymphomas are unknown. We have undertaken a clinicopathological, immunophenotypic, ultrastructural, cytogenetic, and functional analysis of three hepatosplenic gammadelta TCLs. All patients presented with massive
hepatosplenomegaly
and anemia, thrombocytopenia, or severe neutropenia; terminal blastlike transformation occurred in one patient. Combination chemotherapy had no response in two patients, but induced complete remission in one. gammadelta T cell receptor (TCR) expression and clonal TCRdelta gene rearrangements were documented in each case. Two different subsets of gammadelta TCL were identified based on delta chain variable region usage; two lymphomas were Vdelta1+, whereas the third was negative for both Vdelta1 and Vdelta2. Cytogenetic analysis was performed on two lymphomas; isochromosome 7q and probable trisomy 8 was shown in one of the Vdelta1+ lymphomas, whereas the Vdelta1 negative lymphoma had 14p+ with t(1;14)(q21;p13). NK cell-associated antigens (CD11c, CD16, or
CD56
) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) effector proteins (perforin, granzyme B, TIA-1, and Fas ligand) were expressed by each lymphoma; dense core cytolytic granules were observed by electron microscopy in both lymphomas studied. Functional studies performed in two cases showed TCR-mediated cytolysis of P815 x 2 FcR+ cells induced by anti-CD3 in a redirected cytolysis assay in one of the CD56+, Vdelta1+ lymphomas, whereas IFNgamma secretion was induced by anti-CD3 in the
CD56
-, Vdelta1 negative lymphoma. These studies show that hepatosplenic gammadelta TCLs have CTL differentiation, retain functional activity in vitro, and are derived from at least two gammadelta T cell subsets.
...
PMID:Hepatosplenic gammadelta T-cell lymphoma: ultrastructural, immunophenotypic, and functional evidence for cytotoxic T lymphocyte differentiation. 919 Oct 1
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