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Query: UMLS:C0079731 (B-cell lymphoma)
16,671 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical, pathologic, and immunologic aspects of malignant lymphoma of centrocytic type (ML,cc) were studied at diagnosis and often at relapse in 18 patients. The typical patient was a middle-aged or older man with adenopathy, often massive splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, marrow involvement, and, not infrequently, peripheral blood involvement. Histopathologically, ML,cc had a diffuse or vaguely nodular growth pattern with, predominantly, cells resembling centrocytes (cleaved follicular center cells) sometimes with admixed small round lymphocytes but with virtually no transformed cells. In 2 cases the neoplastic cells formed a mantle zone around reactive-appearing follicles. Cell suspensions and frozen sections revealed the monoclonal B-cell nature of all but 1 nonmarking case, and the polyclonality of the follicles in the 1 mantle zone case tested. The B cells had some, but not all, characteristics of both normal mantle and follicular center cells when eight nodes were studied with the use of a panel of monoclonal antibodies, peanut lectin, and endogenous alkaline phosphatase activity. Of 13 patients who underwent repeat biopsies, 1 developed a high grade unclassifiable B-cell lymphoma, and 6 had less marked changes. None of 7 patients tested had a change in light chain class. In conclusion, ML,cc is a distinct entity separable from other B-cell lymphomas in which either centrocytes or small round lymphocytes predominate.
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PMID:Centrocytic lymphoma: a distinct clinicopathologic and immunologic entity. A multiparameter study of 18 cases at diagnosis and relapse. 641 75

The acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) represents a new epidemic of major proportions. Risk factors include homosexuality, intravenous drug abuse, Haitian descent, and multiple transfusion in the presence of hemophilia A. The etiology of AIDS remains unknown, but there is increasing evidence implicating a transmissible infectious agent and/or multiple antigenic exposures inducing a loss of immunoregulation. In a high-risk patient, the features of weight loss, generalized lymphadenopathy, and fever should arouse suspicion of AIDS. Diagnostic confirmation includes demonstration of reduced numbers of T lymphocytes with reversal of helper-suppressor T-lymphocyte ratio, presence of unusual opportunistic infections, and a progressive downhill course. The most common infection in AIDS is Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Treatment failures with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim, Septra) are common; pentamidine isethionate (Lomidine) may be more effective in eradicating the infection. In spite of initial improvement, recurrences of P carinii pneumonia and other opportunistic infections are common. In addition, other protozoan, viral, fungal, and atypical mycobacterial infections are frequent in patients with AIDS. Finally, rare neoplasms such as Kaposi's sarcoma and B-cell lymphoma, including primary lymphoma of the brain, are also being recognized as complications. At present there is no specific therapy for AIDS, and the disease is usually fatal. Continued research will hopefully result in immunomodulation techniques and specific vaccines to combat this serious epidemic.
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PMID:Acquired immune deficiency syndrome. A deadly new disease. 660 12

The diagnosis of non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma of the nasal cavity, paranasal sinuses, and nasopharynx was made in 15 patients over a 7 year period (nasopharynx, 9; nasal cavity, 3; maxillary sinus, 2; frontal sinus, 1). A wide variety of head and neck symptoms, often characteristic of benign disease, was reported ranging from 2 weeks to 4 months prior to presentation. Of the 15 cases, the original diagnosis was inconclusive in 6; 4 of the 6 required rebiopsy, while the diagnosis in the other 2 was confirmed on further pathologic consultation. Tissue marker studies, which have recently become available, were performed in 7 cases and were crucial in the diagnosis of 2. B-cell lymphoma was diagnosed in the 7 patients who had tissue marker studies. Five patients had palpable cervical nodes, and none had distant adenopathy or masses. With further staging, 4 of the 15 patients were found to have disseminated disease. The paper emphasizes the need for early biopsy of suspicious lesions presenting in areas in which physical examination is limited. Recommendations are made for handling the biopsy specimen when malignant lymphoma is suspected, as well as for the evaluation of local and distant sites. The role of surgery is primarily diagnostic in patients with malignant lymphoma.
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PMID:Diagnosis of malignant lymphomas of the nasal cavity, paranasal sinuses and nasopharynx. 662 Dec 24

We report a case of smoldering adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) with B-cell lymphoma and early gastric cancer. A 64-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of proteinuria and hypergammaglobulinemia. Systemic lymphadenopathy, "flower cells" in peripheral white blood cells, and hypergammaglobulinemia with monoclonal gammopathy (IgA, lambda type) were found. As Southern blot analysis revealed monoclonal integration of human T-lymphotrophic virus type I proviral DNA in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, he was diagnosed as having smoldering ATL. The tissue specimen of an inguinal lymph node showed proliferation of abnormal lymphocytes which were stained with anti-lambda antibody, indicating B-cell lymphoma. A polypoid lesion in the stomach was histologically diagnosed as early gastric cancer.
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PMID:Smoldering adult T-cell leukemia with B-cell lymphoma and early gastric cancer. 772 76

Previous reports have suggested that nodular lymphocyte predominance Hodgkin's disease (NLPHD) is a germinal center-derived B-cell lymphoma that is distinct from other types of Hodgkin's Disease. A relationship between NLPHD and simultaneous or subsequent development of large-cell (LC) non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) has been established. Both Reed-Sternberg cell variants in NLPHD and NHL cells in these cases express B-cell-associated antigens, and in some cases the B-cell lineage of the NHL has been confirmed by immunoglobulin gene rearrangement studies. The B-cell phenotype and the indolent course of both lymphomas suggest histologic progression of NLPHD to B-cell NHL, rather than a de novo LCNHL unrelated to Hodgkin's Disease. We report a unique case of T-large-cell lymphoma (TLCL) following successful chemotherapy of NLPHD. A 54-year-old male was treated with seven cycles of mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone chemotherapy for NLPHD and 4 years later developed recurrent adenopathy. Lymph node biopsy showed a diffuse LCNHL. Frozen section immunotyping and gene rearrangement studies confirmed the diagnosis of TLCL. To our knowledge, this case represents only the second report of TLCL associated with NLPHD and is of significance in that: (1) it demonstrates that T-cell neoplasia can occur in the setting of NLPHD; (2) this case does not appear to represent histologic progression of NLPHD and most likely represents de novo disease that may be secondary to chemotherapy; and (3) the clinical course may differ from the favorable prognosis seen in NLPHD associated with B-cell NHL.
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PMID:Peripheral T-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma following treatment of nodular lymphocyte predominance Hodgkin's disease. 780 62

Cytokines play important roles in the pathogenesis of lymphomas via an autocrine or a paracrine mechanism, or both. The characteristic clinical and histopathological features of malignant lymphomas may be due in part to elevated serum or tissue levels of cytokines. Determination of the effects of cytokines on the growth or differentiation of lymphoma cells is often complicated by the fact that more than one cytokine is responsible, and by the failure of anti-cytokine antibodies or antisense oligonucleotides to block the proliferation in vitro of lymphoma cells. However, it appears that IL-6 and/or IL-9 may play a prominent role in the tumor cell proliferation of Hodgkin's disease (HD), anaplastic large-cell lymphoma, or immunoblastic lymphoma. IL-6 may also be responsible for the plasmacytoid differentiation of lymphoma cells in polymorphic immunocytoma. The histopathological changes as a result of paracrine effects are most noticeable in HD. The malignant (H-RS) cells of HD have been shown to express IL-1, IL-5, IL-6, IL-9, TNF-alpha, M-CSF, TGF-beta, and CD80, and, less frequently, IL-4 and G-CSF. These cytokines may be responsible for the increased cellular reaction and fibrosis observed in tissues involved by HD and for the immunosuppression found in patients with HD. In contrast to H-RS cells, most non-HD lymphoma cells do not produce cytokines in excess amounts and reveal only a minimal cellular reaction. Exceptions include T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma, angiocentric T-cell lymphoma, and angio-immunoblastic lymphadenopathy (AILD-like T-cell lymphoma. IL-4 is responsible for the T-cell reaction in T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma, whereas IL-6 accounts for the plasma cell reaction in AILD-type T-cell lymphoma. The authors extensively review the role of cytokines in lymphomas because this may lead to major advances in the understanding of the molecular processes involved in the histopathogenesis of lymphomas.
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PMID:Autocrine and paracrine functions of cytokines in malignant lymphomas. 785 53

We reported a 67-yr-old man presenting with right hypochondrial pain, obstructive jaundice, and hepatic hilar mass. Biliary stenting relieved the jaundice. Percutaneous aspiration cytology of the mass was suspicious of lymphoma. He had no evidence of the disease, including lymphadenopathy, elsewhere in the body. Excision of the mass en bloc with cholecystectomy and right hemicolectomy confirmed the diagnosis of B-cell lymphoma. The patient recovered uneventfully and received nine courses of systemic chemotherapy afterward. Up to the time of writing, the patient remained disease-free 20 months after the initial presentation. This is the first case report of a primary lymphoma arising in and remaining localized to the hepatic hilar region. Moreover, it illustrates the importance of obtaining tissue diagnosis in patients with malignant jaundice.
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PMID:Primary lymphoma presenting as intra-abdominal mass and obstructive jaundice. 787 91

In the management of photosensitivity dermatitis/actinic reticuloid syndrome (PD/AR) (syn. chronic actinic dermatitis), a chronic and often severe photodermatosis, there has been concern that patients may be predisposed to the development of lymphoreticular malignancy. A follow-up study of 231 patients with PD/AR who had been investigated at the Photobiology Unit, Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, between 1971 and 1991, was undertaken to determine (i) the incidence and type of malignancies (ii) the causes of any deaths. This information was obtained from three sources: (a) National Cancer Registry data, (b) death certificates, (c) when possible or practical, by casenote review. Thirty-eight malignancies had occurred (in 37 of the 231 patients). Although six of the 38 malignancies were lymphoma registrations, it emerged from a review of casenotes, pathology reports and death certificates that five of the six were incorrect: two were labelled 'mycosis fungoides' prior to diagnosis of PD/AR; a case of dermatopathic lymphadenopathy was initially reported as Hodgkin's disease; clerical errors had occurred in two cases. The remaining case was a true B-cell lymphoma. The occurrence of one lymphoreticular malignancy is not significantly different from the number expected in a normal population (0.96), when applying 5-year age-, sex-, and site-specific incidence rates to the cumulative patient years of risk [standardized incidence ratio 1.04 (95% CI 0.03-5.79)]. There was also no significant increase in the risk of non-lymphoma malignancies in the PD/AR subjects. Since diagnosis, 83 patients have died, the majority from cardiorespiratory or cerebrovascular diseases, or the reported malignancies, a pattern expected in an elderly population.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The photosensitivity dermatitis and actinic reticuloid syndrome: no association with lymphoreticular malignancy. 791 84

Employing Northern blot analysis and the polymerase chain reaction, we investigated PRAD1 gene overexpression in the tumour tissues of 58 patients with B-cell lymphoma. These findings were then examined in relation to the patients' clinical and immunohistological characteristics. The over-expression of this gene was detected in 6/8 patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) and in only 1/50 other lymphomas, indicating its close association with MCL. The patients with MCL had common clinical findings of advanced disease with generalized lymphadenopathy on admission, and they had a CD5+CD10-IgD+ phenotype. The patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) also showed findings indicating a distinctive disease entity: a CD5+CD10-IgD+ phenotype and lack of PRAD1 over-expression. In contrast, most patients with diffuse low-grade lymphoma other than MCL and CLL had localized extranodal disease, expressed a CD5-CD10-IgD- phenotype, and lacked PRAD1 over-expression. These findings suggest that extranodal low-grade lymphomas differ from nodal MCL and are not part of the spectrum of CLL.
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PMID:PRAD1 gene over-expression in mantle-cell lymphoma but not in other low-grade B-cell lymphomas, including extranodal lymphoma. 791 73

The clinicopathologic features of 23 patients with hematophagic histiocytosis (HH) are described. All of them exhibited increased histiocytes associated with hemophagocytosis in the marrow. The patients usually presented with fever, hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, and cytopenia. The underlying illnesses were heterogeneous, including non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 17, systemic lupus erythematosus in one, diabetes mellitus in one, acute myelomonocytic leukemia in one, myelodysplastic syndrome in one, and unknown cause in two. Among 17 non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, 14 were peripheral T-cell lymphoma, two were B-cell lymphoma, and one was an undefined phenotype. Among 14 patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma, six of the patients had nasal T-cell lymphoma. Five of these 14 patients initially diagnosed as malignant histiocytosis turned out to be T-lineage lymphoma after immunophenotypic studies. Active infections, most of viral origin, were documented in eight patients, including Epstein-Barr virus in three, cytomegalovirus in three, herpes simplex virus in three, Pseudomonas aeruginosa in one, Bacteroides vulgatus in one, and mycoplasma in one. Some of them had mixed virus and bacteria infection. Sixteen (70%) of our patients died of their acute illness within 10 weeks of the diagnosis of HH. In the past, the clinical and histologic differentiation between hematophagic histiocytosis and true histiocytic neoplasm (histiocytic medullary reticulosis/malignant histiocytosis) has proved difficult, but now these can be distinguished with immunohistologic, immunogenetic, and cytogenetic studies, especially in the cases of peripheral T-cell lymphoma with hemophagocytic syndrome.
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PMID:Hematophagic histiocytosis: a clinicopathologic analysis of 23 cases with special reference to the association with peripheral T-cell lymphoma. 792 83


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