Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019625 (Rosai-Dorfman disease)
763 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) involving skin is a rare but well-documented occurrence, mainly reported in advanced disease. In contrast, CLL presenting with skin lesions is exceedingly rare, only few reports existing to date. We report a 70-year-old man who presented with two non-pruritic, papular lesions on the lower abdomen and proximal thigh. Biopsies showed dense lymphohistiocytic infiltrates involving the reticular dermis and subcutis without epidermotropism consisting mostly of small, CD20 and PAX-5-positive B-cells expressing CD5, CD23, CD43 and BCL2. Numerous large B-cells were present in a T-cell, histiocyte-rich background. A staging bone marrow biopsy showed a clonal B-cell proliferation with typical CLL flow cytometry immunophenotyping but neither lymphadenopathy nor absolute lymphocytosis was present. Numerous B and T-cell cutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders can be associated with increased numbers of histiocytes occasionally masquerading as benign disorders. This was the case with our patient's lesions, originally interpreted as cutaneous Rosai-Dorfman disease. A high index of suspicion from both the pathologist and the dermatologist is essential in identifying these rare but probably underrecognized occurrences of early systemic lymphoproliferative disorders presenting as cutaneous lesions with an unexpected cellular composition.
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PMID:Subclinical chronic lymphocytic leukemia with atypical cutaneous presentation. 1971 32

Rosai-Dorfman disease is a rare, idiopathic, benign, and self-limiting histiocytic proliferative disorder. A 26-year-old man presented with a single massive cutaneous nodule (reaching 30 cm in diameter) on the left shoulder and back for 15 months. The routine hematological and biochemical tests were normal. Magnetic resonance scanning showed the lesion involved the skin, subcutaneous tissue, and subjacent muscle group, accompanied by obvious lymph node enlargement in the left part of the neck, supraclavicular fossa, and axillary fossa. The histopathology of the left cervical lymph node revealed diffuse effacement of the normal nodal architecture, with patchy chronic inflammatory cell infiltrates comprising lymphocytes and sheets of histiocytes. Some histiocytes contained lymphocytes within their pale cytoplasm. Many multinucleated giant cells were found; however, caseating granulomas were not seen. The skin and muscle biopsy specimen obtained from the back revealed infiltrating lymphocytes and histiocytes diffusely distributed in the dermis, subcutaneous tissue, and crevices of the muscle fibers. The phenomenon of emperipolesis and the presence of multinucleated giant cells were also seen. Immunohistochemical staining revealed that the histiocytes were positive for S-100 protein and CD68 but negative for CD1a. Immunophenotyping of the infiltrating lymphocytes indicated positive reactions to CD3, CD45RO, CD5, CD7, CD4, CD8 (partly), CD79a, CD20 (partly), and Ki-67 (<1%). The final diagnosis was Rosai-Dorfman disease. Owing to the extensive and deep involvement of the subcutaneous tissue and muscles, the patient did not undergo surgery to excise the massive skin nodule. The lesion showed no obvious change at the 12-month follow-up.
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PMID:Rosai-dorfman disease with massive cutaneous nodule on the shoulder and back. 2567 35

Emperipolesis is a physiologic or pathologic phenomenon characterized by the presence of intact viable cells within the cytoplasm of another cell. It has been described in normal tissues and in a variety of inflammatory and neoplastic lesions such as Rosai-Dorfman disease, tumors, hematopoietic disorders and rarely lymphomas. Emperipolesis by mesothelial cells is rare. Few cases of mesothelial emperipolesis of neoplastic lymphocytes in pleural effusions involved by lymphomas have been reported in the literature. Its etiopathogenesis and significance are controversial and speculative. We report a case of a 36-year-old man who presented with cough, chest pain, breathing difficulty, pericardial, and bilateral pleural effusions secondary to mediastinal T-lymphoblastic lymphoma. Pleural fluid cytology slides and cell block sections showed numerous single dispersed neoplastic lymphoblasts with occasional giant multinucleated mesothelial cells with emperipolesis of lymphocytes. The background showed scattered and clumped apoptotic karyorrhexis debris and reactive mesothelial cells. Cell block immunohistochemistry showed CD3, CD5, CD7, CD10, CD99, and TdT positive lymphocytes, consistent with involvement by T-lymphoblastic lymphoma. The giant cells were positive for cytokeratin, calretinin and WT1 confirming their mesothelial origin. Lymphoid effusions with emperipolesis may raise a potential diagnostic pitfall because they may morphologically be confused with other inflammatory and neoplastic lesions. This cell-in-cell phenomenon can be a helpful clue in the differential diagnosis of lymphocyte-rich effusions since it has been described in association with lymphomas. It might shed some light on the lymphocyte-mesothelial interaction and the potential phagocytic antigen-presenting properties of mesothelial cells under certain circumstances.
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PMID:Emperipolesis of lymphocytes by mesothelial cells in pleural effusion involved by T-lymphoblastic lymphoma. 3262 36