Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

High-grade non-Hodgkins B-cell lymphoma is one of the principle malignancies that occurs in individuals infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). Immunoblastic lymphomas that arise in immunosuppressed transplant patients have been described as both monoclonal and polyclonal, and occur in association with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. To test whether polyclonal lymphoma occurred in patients with AIDS we studied tumors from multiple sites in three patients who died with widespread AIDS-associated large cell or large cell immunoblastic lymphoma. All biopsy specimens contained invasive lymphoma. Tumor cells were mature IgM-positive immunoblasts by immunohistochemical analysis, with the same B-cell phenotype observed in all tumor sites. Only a minority of sites from all patients analyzed were monoclonal as measured by immunoglobulin gene rearrangements, with one case having several foci of monoclonal disease with other histologically identical metastases showing no evidence of monoclonal proliferation. Similar to the transplant-associated polyclonal B-cell proliferations. EBV gene sequences were present in multiple sites from one autopsy. In the other two autopsies, polyclonal B-cell proliferations occurred in the absence of EBV involvement except at one site, where a minor clone of EBV-infected cells was found. In contrast to HIV-associated Burkitt's lymphoma, no c-myc rearrangements were found at any site. These studies describe the occurrence of polyclonal lymphoma in AIDS and suggest that EBV-negative polyclonal lymphoma may be a distinct disease entity unique to HIV-infected individuals.
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PMID:AIDS-associated polyclonal lymphoma: identification of a new HIV-associated disease process. 184 89

Immunophenotypic analysis on 34 cases of T-cell malignancies using monoclonal antibodies against T-cell receptors (TCR) revealed 25 cases of alpha beta-type and two of gamma delta-type. The two patients with gamma delta-type showed cutaneous involvement of tumor cells. Immunoblastic lymphadenopathy (IBL)-like T-cell lymphoma is divided into three histologic categories; inconspicuous type, patchy type and diffuse type. DNA hybridization analysis revealed that 11 of 16 cases showed clonal rearrangement of TCR beta-chain gene without rearrangement of immunoglobulin heavy chain gene, providing strong evidence for clonal proliferation of T-cells. Among 185 patients with adult T-cell leukemia (ATL), 18 cases (9.7%) were found not to be associated with human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I). They consisted of 10 of acute type, five of chronic type, two of lymphoma type and one of smoldering type, indicating a diversity in clinical features. Two Japanese patients with ATL developed secondary monoclonal B-cell lymphomas of diffuse, large cell, non-Burkitt type. They were seropositive for HTLV-I but negative for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). They also suffered from pulmonary tuberculosis, and one from adenovirus type 11-induced hemorrhagic cystitis, indicating an immunodeficient state. Epstein-Barr virus genome was found in lymphoma cells from one patient. It is suggested that opportunistic B-cell lymphomas may occur in the immunodeficient stage of ATL.
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PMID:[Recent advances in clinical research on T-cell lymphoma]. 239 7

Immunoblastic lymphadenopathy (IBL)-like T-cell lymphoma is a distinct peripheral T-cell lymphoma, which closely resembles angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia (AILD) and/or IBL, but is characterized by focal or sheet-like proliferation of immunoblasts and pale cells of T-cell nature. In this report, 36 patients with IBL-like T-cell lymphoma were analyzed. The disease is clinically characterized by generalized lymph node swelling, hepatosplenomegaly, fever, skin rash, polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, marked male predominance, predilection for the elderly, and poor prognosis. There was no association with human T-cell leukemia virus type I or human immunodeficiency virus. IBL-like T-cell lymphoma may be divided into two categories (CD4+ type and CD8+ type) by surface marker analysis. It can also be divided into three categories on the basis of the histologic findings of distribution of morphologically recognizable tumor cells: nine cases of "inconspicuous type," six cases of "patchy type," and 21 cases of "diffuse type." Two cases of "inconspicuous type" converted later to "diffuse type." DNA hybridization analyses in the ten recent cases revealed that three of four "inconspicuous types" and five of six "diffuse types" showed clonal rearrangement of T-cell receptor-beta chain gene without rearrangement of immunoglobulin heavy chain gene, providing strong evidence for clonal proliferation of T cells.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic, immunophenotypic, and immunogenotypic analyses of immunoblastic lymphadenopathy-like T-cell lymphoma. 304 80