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

Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) was estimated in the tissues of 42 patients with lymphoma, whose cells were also typed by the use of surface markers. Four of the 8 patients with T-cell lymphoma were TdT+ including patients whose lymph nodes showed an undifferentiated or poorly differentiated appearance. The TdT- T-cell lymphomas included cases with diffuse histiocytic Sezary cell, diffuse, poorly differentiated and angio-immunoblastic histology. The tissues of 31 patients with B-cell lymphoma were invariably TdT-, whether the histology was poorly differentiated, well differentiated, nodular, diffuse, histiocytic or Burkitt type, and including cases with about equal proportions of T and B cells, and those whose cells showed non-capping and capping surface immunoglobulin. Hodgkin's tissue was also invariably TdT-. We conclude that estimation of TdT in tissues of patients with malignant lymphoma may be a useful test in diagnosing the T-cell lymphoma, particularly in patients with tumours of undifferentiated or poorly differentiated histology.
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PMID:Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase activity in lymphoma. 31 14

Seventy-five peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTLs) were classified according to the recently proposed "Updated Kiel Classification of Non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas" (mycosis fungoides and Sezary's syndrome excluded). Thirty-seven PTLs belonged to the low-grade category (T-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia [T-CLL], 3; lymphoepithelioid, 4; angioimmunoblastic, 22; T-zone, 6; pleomorphic small cell, 2) and 38 belonged to the high-grade category (pleomorphic medium and large cell, 24; immunoblastic, 1; large-cell anaplastic Ki-1-positive, 13). Loss of pan-T antigens occurred exclusively in high-grade PTLs; on paraffin sections UCHL 1 was slightly more sensitive than MT 1. Sixty patients presented with lymphadenopathy and 15 patients (20%) presented with extranodal disease most frequently affecting the skin and upper aerodigestive tract. B-cell lymphoma symptoms were found in 43 cases (57%) and bone marrow involvement (T-CLL excluded) was found in 12 cases (17%). Staging (T-CLL excluded) revealed stage I in 13%, stage II in 15%, and stages III and IV in 72% of the cases. Among the intensively treated patients, 37% achieved complete remission and 15 are still in complete remission after 4 to 79 months (median: 24 months). The overall median survival (MS) rate was 23 months. Peripheral T-cell lymphoma of pleomorphic medium and large-cell type was the most aggressive lymphoma (MS: 8 months). B-cell lymphoma symptoms, bone marrow involvement, and Ki-67 positivity 60% or greater significantly shortened survival times, whereas age (under 60 versus over 60 years), stage (I and II versus III and IV), and grade had no significant influence. Ki-67 reactivity was found to be a prognostic factor which allows prediction of probable poor outcome, especially in cases with limited stage of disease.
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PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphomas: a clinicopathologic study of 75 cases. 222 19

Circulating cerebriform lymphoid cells (Sezary cells) are considered to be highly predictive of cutaneous T-cell Lymphoma (CTCL). A leukemic peripheral blood (leukocyte count 24.5 x 10(9)/l) composed predominantly of cerebriform cells was found in a 75-year-old man presenting with weight loss and generalized lymphadenopathy but without skin lesions. Cell suspensions studies and immunohistochemistry of peripheral blood revealed that the cerebriform cells were B-cells (IgM+ Kappa+, HLA DR+, Leu 1+, CALLA-, B1+, and OKT 10+). A variety of T-cell markers (other than Leu1) was negative. Computer-assisted morphometry confirmed a nuclear profile typical of CTCL (mean nuclear contour index, 7.47). A lymph node that underwent subsequent biopsy revealed a follicular malignant lymphoma of small to intermediate cells with similar morphologic and immunologic characteristics to the circulating cerebriform cells. The findings of a leukemic presentation of a cerebriform B-cell lymphoma extends the recent observation of nodal B-cell lymphomas composed of cerebriform cells and indicates that circulating cerebriform cells should not be considered to be exclusively of T-cell origin.
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PMID:Circulating cerebriform lymphoid cells (Sezary-type cells) in a B-cell malignant lymphoma. 245 Jun 33

Synchronous cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and low-grade B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders have rarely been reported in the same patient. Coexpression of each phenotype in the same lymph node has not, to our knowledge, been previously documented. We describe an 86-year-old man with chronic pruritus and erythroderma and recent-onset peripheral lymphadenopathy and lymphocytosis. Lymph node biopsy provided morphological and immunohistochemical evidence of concurrent small B lymphocytic lymphoma and small pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma. Immunophenotyping of nodal lymphocytes demonstrated two distinct clones: IgM-kappa B-cells with CD5 positivity and CD7 negative T-helper cells. Both immunoglobulin (heavy and light chains) and T-cell receptor (beta I and beta II) gene rearrangements were detected by Southern blot analysis of the lymph node. In contrast, the immunophenotype of lymphocytes from peripheral blood and bone marrow was exclusively that of T-helper cells with atypical CD7 deletion. Electron microscopic examination of circulating lymphocytes revealed small cerebriform Sezary cells. This case demonstrates that small lymphocytic lymphoma may coexist intranodally with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma as a unique form of composite T- and B-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:Composite cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and small B-cell lymphocytic lymphoma: morphologic, immunologic, and molecular genetic documentation of concurrent lymph node involvement. 799 22

The recently developed strategy for the detection of monoclonal B-cell populations, based on the selective amplification of predominant immunoglobulin heavy chain gene (IgH) rearrangement, is seen to be a suitable alternative to Southern blot analysis. The new technique uses a pair of consensus primers for variable (VH) and joining (JH) regions. We first tested the accuracy of this new approach on a broad series of 67 samples that had been well characterized by both Southern blot and immunohistochemical techniques before being subjected to blind testing. Our results show that this technique gave 100% specificity (absence of false-positive results) and approximately 70% sensitivity (30% false-negative results). The only exception was the presence of an IgH polymerase chain reaction ambiguous result in a case of Sezary's syndrome. The polymerase chain reaction technique was then applied to a panel of 27 frozen gastric endoscopy biopsy specimens following previous clinical suspicion of lymphoma. Monoclonality was detected in nine of 13 samples previously diagnosed as lymphomas and in one of two carcinomas. Further examination of the gastrectomy specimen in the latter case disclosed a B-cell lymphoma associated with the carcinoma. In spite of its limited sensitivity, the high specificity attained by this technique in the detection of monoclonality makes it a useful adjunct to routine morphologic criteria, as it is sometimes capable of detecting true positive cases that conventional morphology studies show to be negative.
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PMID:The detection of B-cell monoclonal populations by polymerase chain reaction: accuracy of approach and application in gastric endoscopic biopsy specimens. 824 19

This is a retrospective study of cutaneous lymphomas (CL) seen over a ten year period. (January '88-December '97) in Christian Medical College & Hospital, Vellore, S. India. The aims of the study were to describe the clinicopathological profile of CL and correlate it with results of immunophenotyping. Thirty three patients were included of whom 31 had non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) and two Hodgkin's disease. REAL scheme was used for classification. In the NHL group there were 20 patients with cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL), 7 with cutaneous B cell lymphoma (CBCL), 1 with anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) and 3 patients were unclassifiable. Mycosis fungoides was the most common CTCL (55.5%). Three (15%) of patients had subcutaneous panniculitic T cell lymphoma (SPTL). The duration of the disease was significantly longer (P < .05) in patients with MF as compared to non MF CTCL and CBCL. One patient with Sezary's syndrome was HTLV 1 positive. There was no difference in survival (p = 0.86) after diagnosis in the three main groups.
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PMID:Clinicopathological profile of cutaneous lymphomas--a 10 year retrospective study from south India. 1092 Dec 14

Classification of primary cutaneous lymphomas (PCLs) is the subject of ongoing controversy. Based on a series of 556 patients, the applicability of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) classification for PCLs was assessed and compared to the proposed World Health Organization (WHO) classification of hematologic malignancies. The large majority of patients could be properly classified according to the scheme proposed by the EORTC. Comparison of estimated 5-year survival for specific diagnostic categories of PCLs demonstrated nearly complete concordance of the present results with those of the EORTC study for most of the indolent cutaneous T-cell lymphomas and cutaneous B-cell lymphomas, whereas differences were found for mycosis fungoides-associated follicular mucinosis and Sezary syndrome. A few patients with newly described entities (CD8(+) epidermotropic cytotoxic T-cell lymphoma, primary cutaneous natural killer/T-cell lymphoma) could not be classified according to the EORTC scheme. Comparison of the EORTC with the WHO classification showed that the EORTC scheme allows a more precise categorization of the patients, especially for cutaneous B-cell lymphoma. In conclusion, the study confirmed that the EORTC classification allows a better management of patients with PCL. Small amendments to that classification should be carried out to account for recently described entities and to unify some of the diagnostic categories.
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PMID:Primary cutaneous lymphomas: applicability of current classification schemes (European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, World Health Organization) based on clinicopathologic features observed in a large group of patients. 1180 79

Primary cutaneous lymphomas (PCLs) represent a heterogeneous group of extranodal T- and B-cell malignancies. The underlying molecular pathogenesis of this malignancy remains unclear. This study aimed to characterize oncogene abnormalities in PCLs. Using genomic microarray, we detected oncogene copy number gains of RAF1 (3p25), CTSB (8p22), PAK1 (11q13), and JUNB (19p13) in 5 of 7 cases of mycosis fungoides (MF)/Sezary syndrome (SS) (71%), gains of FGFR1 (8p11), PTPN (20q13), and BCR (22q11) in 4 cases (57%), and gains of MYCL1 (1p34), PIK3CA (3q26), HRAS (11p15), MYBL2 (20q13), and ZNF217 (20q13) in 3 cases (43%). Amplification of JUNB was studied in 104 DNA samples from 78 PCL cases using real-time polymerase chain reaction. Twenty-four percent of cases, including 7 of 10 cases of primary cutaneous CD30(+) anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (C-ALCL), 4 of 14 MF, 4 of 22 SS, and 2 of 23 primary cutaneous B-cell lymphoma (PCBCL) showed amplification of JUNB, and high-level amplification of this oncogene was present in 3 C-ALCL and 2 MF cases. JUNB protein expression was analyzed in tissue sections from 69 PCL cases, and 44% of cases, consisting of 21 of 23 SS, 6 of 8 C-ALCL, 5 of 10 MF, and 9 of 21 PCBCL, demonstrated nuclear expression of JUNB by tumor cells. Overexpression of JUNB also was detected in 5 C-ALCL and 2 SS cases. These results have revealed, for the first time, amplification and expression patterns of JUNB in PCL, suggesting that JUNB may be critical in the pathogenesis of primary cutaneous T-cell lymphomas.
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PMID:Amplification and overexpression of JUNB is associated with primary cutaneous T-cell lymphomas. 1239 3

Staging biopsies of the bone marrow in lymphoma patients are among the most important indications and therefore of substantial practical importance. Occasionally it is the only organ infiltrated, and therefore a bone marrow biopsy is the prime diagnostic choice in cases of leukemic lymphomas. A synoptical diagnostic approach relying on immunophenotypic as well as on molecular biological criteria aside from histomorphology (cytomorphology), is of utmost importance for the subtyping of malignant lymphomas. This too can be done reliably on bone marrow biopsies, as comparative studies have yielded a concordance rate of more than 90% with lymphoma typing on corresponding lymph nodes. Cytology and the pattern of infiltrates, (i.e. diffuse, interstitial, nodular peritrabecular and intrasinusoidal), in combination with immunological phenotyping are the mainstays for subtyping, giving clear-cut decisions in most cases of small B-cell lymphoma, mantle zone as well as marginal cell and follicular lymphomas and hairy cell leukemia. Among the blastic variants the most important are the lymphoblastic lymphomas of either B- or T-cell type which have to be discerned from AML and the so-called blastoid mantle cell lymphomas. T-cell lymphomas are rare compared to B-cell lymphomas. Among the rarely seen T-cell neoplasias the lymphoma of large granular lymphocytes is the dominating lymphoma, which in most cases can only be diagnosed reliably by molecular biological means, followed by T-CLL, Sezary's syndrome and hepatosplenic chi delta lymphoma.
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PMID:[Histopathology of leukaemic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in bone marrow]. 1243 97

Recent years have witnessed differences between the World Health Organization (WHO) and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) classification systems of primary cutaneous lymphomas (PCLs). Recently, a joint WHO-EORTC classification system for PCLs has been reached. This study was performed to assess the applicability of this new classification to a single referral center. All new PCL cases, excluding mycosis fungoides and Sezary syndrome, who were referred from 1999 to 2005 were included. The histological, immunohistochemical stainings and molecular studies were reviewed, and additional stains were performed as needed. The cases were then reclassified according to the WHO-EORTC classifications. The clinical files were also studied, and the patients were followed up clinically. There were 43 new non-mycosis fungoides/Sezary syndrome PCLs, including 29 B-cell lymphomas of which 14 were follicle center lymphoma, 10 marginal zone lymphoma, 4 diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma, leg type, and 1 diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma, other. The 14 T-cell lymphomas included 5 cases of lymphomatoid papulosis, 2 CD30+ anaplastic large-cell lymphomas, 1 NK/T-cell lymphoma, and 6 peripheral T-cell lymphomas, unspecified. Of the 6 "unspecified" T-cell lymphomas, 3 were CD4+ small/medium-sized pleomorphic T-cell lymphoma, which is considered currently a provisional entity under the unspecified T-cell category. The remaining 3 cases could not be classified beyond the unspecified T-cell category, of which 2 cases had an aggressive course. The new WHO-EORTC classification is applicable to most non-mycosis fungoides/Sezary syndrome PCL cases, especially the B-cell lymphomas. However, there is still a substantial subset of T-cell PCLs which cannot be classified beyond the unspecified peripheral T-cell category, some of which may have an aggressive course.
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PMID:The applicability of the new WHO-EORTC classification of primary cutaneous lymphomas to a single referral center. 1821 43


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