Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019829 (Hodgkin's disease)
30,247 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It has been recently demonstrated that the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) can infect human thymocytes and may be involved in the T cell neoplasms, in addition to African Burkitt's lymphoma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma and Hodgkin's disease. Four distinct clinicopathologic categories of EBV-associated T cell malignancies have been recognized. The angiocentric T cell lymphoma or lymphomatoid granulomatosis involving the nose (or midline lethal granuloma) and skin is frequently EBV-associated. The other 3 groups include angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy-like lymphoma, node-based T immunoblastic lymphoma which may contain Reed-Sternberg-like giant cells (Hodgkin's-like lymphoma), and T cell lymphoma resembling malignant histiocytosis. Both the CD4 and CD8 T cell subsets, and a hitherto undefined T lineage lacking CD4/CD8 expression have been involved. The common clinical features are prolonged fever, skin lesions, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and pancytopenia. Serologic assays suggest that a chronic active EBV infection may exist in most of these patients. The EBV genomes appear to proliferate in clonal and episomal form in the neoplastic cells which show expression of latent membrane proteins. Although an indolent local phase may exist, the clinical course is aggressive for most patients with frequent development of drug resistance to conventional chemotherapy. EBV-associated T cell lymphoma constitutes a separate entity of virus-associated human diseases and opens a potential field to investigate the pathogenesis of EBV-associated human malignancies.
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PMID:Clinicopathological spectrum of Epstein-Barr virus-associated T cell malignancies. 133 23

Using a probe for the newly described bcl-3 gene near the breakpoint of the t(14;19), 176 cases of non-Hodgkin lymphoma and B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia were analyzed. Rearrangement of the bcl-3 gene was found in only one case; a follicular lymphoma involving the salivary gland that had progressed to a diffuse large cell lymphoma. We conclude that rearrangement of the bcl-3 gene as detected by our method occurs rarely in mature B or T cell neoplasms.
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PMID:Chromosomal translocation t(14;19) as indicated by bcl-3 rearrangement is a rare phenomenon in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia: a molecular genetic analysis of 176 cases. 224 4

A panel of paraffin effective antibodies recognizing B cells and T cells (LN-2, MB1, L26, MT1, UCHL1, kappa, lambda) was used to characterize the immunophenotypes of 26 sinonasal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. Seventeen tumors were stage I, five were stage II, one was stage III, and three were stage IV. Nine lymphomas were classified morphologically as large cell, six were large cell immunoblastic, six were small cleaved cell, two were mixed small and large cell, two were small noncleaved cell, and one was lymphoblastic. None were follicular. Twenty-two lymphomas had a B cell immunophenotype, three were T cell neoplasms, and one was immunoreactive only for MT1. This predominance of sinonasal lymphomas with a B cell immunophenotype in patients residing in the United States contrasts with the almost exclusive occurrence of T cell sinonasal lymphomas in Chinese patients living in Hong Kong and Japanese patients residing in regions of Japan that are nonendemic for human T cell leukemia virus-1.
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PMID:Immunophenotypic analysis of sinonasal non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 266 7

The presence of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) has been determined in neoplastic cells from 50 patients with non-hematologic tumors as well as neoplastic cells from 85 patients with hematologic malignancies. The results indicate that TdT is not present in cells from non-hematologic tumors, Hodgkin's lymphoma, B cell lymphoproliferative disorders, peripheral T cell neoplasms, reactive lymphadenopathy, and acute non-lymphocytic leukemia. In contrast, TdT activity is present in non-T non-B cell acute lymphocytic leukemia, T cell acute lymphocytic leukemia, T cell lymphoblastic lymphoma and chronic granulocytic leukemia in blast crisis. It is concluded that the TdT assay is a measurement useful in the differential diagnosis of some hematologic malignancies.
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PMID:Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase activity in non-hematologic and hematologic neoplasms. 695 14

Clinicopathological studies have identified CD30+ ALCL as a clinicopathological entity with heterogeneous morphology and a frequent translocation involving t(2;5), with a better prognosis than most other T cell neoplasms and a different natural history and prognosis than Hodgkin's disease. Because of the different natural history and prognosis of CD30+ ALCL, it is important to recognize this entity and its morphological variants. Further studies are indicated to determine whether specific clinical management(s) and therapies are necessary for variants of ALCL such as HD like ALCL and the small cell predominant type.
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PMID:Anaplastic large cell lymphoma and its morphological variants. 954 87

The 150-kd transmembrane protein CD100 is the first semaphorin protein shown to be expressed in lymphoid tissue. CD100 is present in the interfollicular T cell zones and is also expressed by B cells in the germinal centers of secondary lymphoid follicles, but not in the mantle zones. The CD100 molecule was recently cloned, and CD100 transfectants were shown to induce homotypic aggregation of human B cells and improve their viability in vitro, suggesting that CD100 may play a role in lymphocyte aggregation and germinal center formation. We studied the expression of CD100 in 138 clinical cases representing a range of lymphoproliferative disorders, to determine whether this molecule is expressed in these neoplastic processes. In general, we found CD100 expression to be common in peripheral T-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas but rare in B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. CD100 expression was not detectable in low-grade B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, including cases of small lymphocytic lymphoma (18 cases), marginal zone lymphoma (10 cases), and mantle cell lymphoma (10 cases), as might be expected for these neoplasms that are not of follicular center cell origin. Surprisingly, we found that the vast majority of follicular lymphomas (37 of 40 cases) as well as diffuse large-cell lymphomas of B-cell type (35 cases) did not express CD100. The neoplastic cells in 3 of 11 cases of predominantly large-cell-type follicular lymphoma did express CD100. In contrast, all five cases of high-grade, small non-cleaved (Burkitt-like) B-cell lymphoma were immunoreactive for CD100 expression, as were 18 of 20 cases (90%) of malignant T cell neoplasms. Northern blot analysis of CD100 expression correlated with immunohistochemical findings. Absence of expression of CD100 by neoplastic follicular center B cells is a common feature in follicular lymphomas, but expression of CD100 by T cells is maintained in T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders.
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PMID:The leukocyte semaphorin CD100 is expressed in most T-cell, but few B-cell, non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 966 86

LAT (linker for activation of T cells) is an integral membrane protein of 36-38 kd that plays an important role in T cell activation. Using a rabbit polyclonal antibody generated against the cytosolic portion of LAT, we investigated the immunohistochemical expression of LAT in normal and pathological hematolymphoid tissues. LAT reacts with human T cells in paraffin sections, including decalcified bone marrow trephines. LAT appears early in T cells at the thymocyte stage and before TdT expression in embryos, and is expressed in peripheral lymphoid tissues, without restriction to any T cell subpopulations. In addition to T cells, natural killer (NK) cells (evaluated with flow cytometry), megakaryocytes and mast cells are also LAT-positive, whereas B cells and other myeloid and monocytic derived cells are negative. Tested on a total of 264 paraffin-embedded tissue biopsies, LAT reacted with the great majority (96.8%) of T/NK-cell neoplasms, covering the full range of T cell maturation. Although antibodies to both LAT and CD3 had a similarly high sensitivity in the staining of T/NK-cell lymphomas, when used in conjunction, they successfully identified a higher number of cases (98.4%). Atypical megakaryocytes from different hematological disorders, as well as mast cells in mastocytosis were also LAT-positive, but all neoplasms of B cell origin, Hodgkin's lymphomas, and several nonlymphoid malignancies were negative. These data indicate that the anti-LAT antibody may be of value to diagnostic histopathologists for the identification of T cell neoplasms.
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PMID:Linker for activation of T cells (LAT), a novel immunohistochemical marker for T cells, NK cells, mast cells, and megakaryocytes: evaluation in normal and pathological conditions. 1023 42

Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is 1 of 17 mature T cell neoplasms described by the World Health Organization. Primary central nervous system (PCNS) ALCL represents a distinct rare form of this family of non-Hodgkin lymphoma and discussions of prognosis and management are limited to case reports and case series. Therapies for this disease largely parallel that of other PCNS lymphomas. We report the case of a 38-year-old male soldier who presented with a parieto-occipital mass lesion and neurological sequelae without evidence of systemic disease. Pathologic evaluation of tissue from brain biopsy confirmed ALCL. We elected treatment with an intensive combination of systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy with radiotherapy. Our patient is in complete remission 15 months following therapy. Tailored therapies for PCNS ALCL are unavailable and this regimen may be an option for patients who can tolerate intensive treatments.
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PMID:Central nervous system anaplastic large cell lymphoma in an adult: successful treatment with a combination of radiation and chemotherapy. 1761 57

The frequency of subtypes of lymphoid neoplasms was determined in a prospective series of 831 patients presenting at 29 Shanghai hospitals over a 4-year period. Diagnosis and classification was established in a single laboratory according to the 2001 WHO classification system. The frequency of non-Hodgkin lymphoma was 87.6% (n = 728) and Hodgkin lymphoma was 12.4% (n = 103). The most prevalent NHL subtypes diagnosed using WHO criteria were diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL), precursor B lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL). Although a low incidence has been reported in some Asian populations, CLL/SLL was commonly encountered, indicating that chronic lymphoid neoplasms are not rare in Shanghai. Consistent with previous reports, our findings indicate a decrease in the frequency of follicular lymphoma and an increase in T cell neoplasms compared to the West. Precursor T lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma, anaplastic large T cell lymphoma, aggressive NK cell leukemia, angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma and peripheral T cell lymphoma were prominent subtypes of T cell NHL.
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PMID:A prospective study of 728 cases of non-Hodgkin lymphoma from a single laboratory in Shanghai, China. 1864 6

Primary gastrointestinal lymphoma comprises 10-15% of all non-Hodgkin lymphomas and encompasses 30-40% of the total extranodal lymphomas. Approximately 60-75% of cases occur in the stomach, and then the small bowel, ileum, cecum, colon and rectum. Lymphoid neoplasms may consist of mature B, T and less commonly extranodal NK/T cells. Of these, the two most frequently encountered histologic subtypes are extranodal marginal zone lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT lymphoma), where Helicobacter pylori infection is implicated in a number of cases, and diffuse large B cell lymphoma. Several B cell lymphomas are associated with chromosomal aberrations. Enteropathy-associated T cell lymphoma, type I in particular, usually arises in a background of celiac disease. T cell gene rearrangement confirms clonality. NK/T cell neoplasms are invariably associated with Epstein-Barr virus infection and are often aggressive; thus, differentiation from a benign NK-cell enteropathy is paramount. Although incidence of other hematopoietic malignancies in the gastrointestinal tract such as plasma cell myeloma associated with amyloidosis, plasmablastic lymphoma, Hodgkin disease, histiocytic sarcoma and mast cell sarcoma is extremely rare, these entities have been documented, with the latter two demonstrating aggressive clinical behavior. Endoscopic ultrasonography is an important adjunct in disease staging and follow-up. Conservative antibiotic treatment of stage I MALT lymphomas with associated Helicobacter pylori infection achieves good clinical outcome with high remission rate. Chemotherapy, radiation and rarely surgery are reserved for advanced diseases or cases resistant to conservative therapy and those not associated with Helicobacter pylori infection.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal lymphomas: Morphology, immunophenotype and molecular features. 2294 12


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