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Query: UMLS:C0079731 (
B-cell lymphoma
)
16,671
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report on 11 patients from 8 independent families (3 pairs of sibs) with a complex clinical pattern including microcephaly, peculiar "bird-like" face, growth retardation, and, in some cases, mild-to-moderate mental deficiency. Most of the patients have recurring respiratory tract infections. One girl has developed
B-cell lymphoma
. A detailed anthropometric study of 15 physical parameters, including 3 cephalic traits, was performed. It was possible to study the chromosomes of PHA-stimulated lymphocytes in all of the patients. We found structural aberrations with multiple rearrangements, preferentially involving chromosomes 7 and 14 in a proportion of metaphases in all individuals. Profound humoral and cellular immune defects were observed. Serum AFP levels were within normal range. Radioresistant DNA synthesis was strongly increased in all 8 patients who were hitherto studied in this respect. Our patients fulfill the criteria of the
Nijmegen breakage syndrome
, which belongs to the growing category of ataxia telangiectasia-related genetic disorders. In light of the increased predisposition to malignancy in this syndrome, an accurate diagnosis is important for the patient.
...
PMID:Eleven Polish patients with microcephaly, immunodeficiency, and chromosomal instability: the Nijmegen breakage syndrome. 754 70
There is a large increase in lymphoid malignancy in A-T patients and a total absence of myeloid tumors. Penetrance of the tumor phenotype is about 10% to 15% by early adulthood. The increase in lymphoid malignancy includes both B- and T-cell tumors. However, young A-T patients do not show an increased susceptibility to cALL, and the UK data suggest that
B-cell lymphoma
occurs in older A-T children. T-cell tumors may occur at any age and may be T-ALL, T-cell lymphoma, or T-PLL; most strikingly, there may be a fourfold to fivefold increased frequency of T-cell tumors compared with that of B-cell tumors in these patients. If this is correct, it is possible that a significant proportion of all T-ALL/T-cell lymphoma in infants might be associated with undiagnosed A-T. The age range and sex predominance for T-ALL may be different for A-T and non-A-T patients and the age range for T-PLL may also be different in A-T and non-A-T patients. There is clearly some uncertainty concerning the ratio of T-cell to B-cell tumors in A-T, but this could be clarified by the publication of all tumors that occur in the disorder. In contrast, 8 of 9 tumors reported in
NBS
, which shows the same cellular features as A-T, were lymphomas and none was a leukemia. There are several indicators of genetic heterogeneity in A-T that suggest that not all patients are equally susceptible to all T-cell tumor types. Concordance for tumor type within individual families suggests that particular gene defects may be associated with particular tumor types. The logical extrapolation of this argument is that some patients may not have any increased risk for B-cell tumors at all or even to all T-cell types but only to a particular type of T-cell tumor. What is the cause of the increased predisposition to leukemia/lymphoma in A-T patients? There is no evidence that the immunodeficiency in A-T is related to this predisposition. One of the major findings in all A-T patients is the increase in V(D)J-mediated chromosome rearrangement observed in T lymphocytes. Particular chromosome translocations in T cells, involving a break in a TCR gene, are characteristically associated with either T-ALL or T-PLL in non-A-T patients. The majority of T-cell tumors in A-T are T-ALL and T-cell lymphoma, about which virtually nothing is known chromosomally, and the assumption is that the increased number of translocations leads to the increased level of these tumors. In older T patients, the expansion of specific translocation T-cell clones has been followed to the point to which they develop into T-PLL. All the evidence, therefore, suggests that the A-T mutation in the homozygous state allows a large increase in production of translocations formed at the time of V(D)J recombination, and this leads to the increased predisposition to leukemia. The general increased predisposition to T-cell tumors compared with B-cell tumors in A-T patients may be related to a preferential occurrence of translocations in T cells. Relatively little is known about translocations in circulating B lymphocytes in normal individuals, but A-T siblings have been shown to have clonal chromosome rearrangements of both B and T cells, simultaneously, although in these siblings the T-cell clones occupied all the T-cell compartment and the B-cell clones were small. An important inference from these facts is that the A-T defect preferentially affects immune system gene recombination in T cells rather than B cells. Recent evidence suggests that the V(D)J recombination machinery is not identical or is not regulated identically in T- and B-cell progenitors. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that V(D)J rejoining in the majority, at least, of A-T patients may be preferentially deficient in T cells compared with B cells giving rise to the greatly increased number of translocations and T-cell tumors. Carbonari et al proposed that the recombination defect in A-T cells affected both Ig isotype switching and TCR rearrangeme
...
PMID:Leukemia and lymphoma in ataxia telangiectasia. 855 63
We report the first Italian case of
Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS)
. The proband is an immunodeficient, microcephalic, 11 year old boy with a "bird-like" face. He developed a T cell rich
B cell lymphoma
. Spontaneous chromosomal instability was detected in T and B lymphocytes and fibroblasts; chromosomes 7 and 14 were only sporadically involved in the rearrangements and no clonal abnormality was present. The patient appeared to be sensitive both to ionising radiation and to bleomycin, although his sensitivity did not reach the level of AT reference cells. After bleomycin treatment, inhibition of DNA synthesis was low when compared with normal cells, but higher than observed in an AT reference strain. Moreover, cell cycle analysis, after drug exposure, showed a progressive reduction in the percentage of S phase cells, but the G1 arrest, found in normal cells, was not observed. On clinical evaluation our patient shares features with
NBS
subjects, but cytogenetic and cell biological data do not completely overlap with those reported in
Nijmegen breakage syndrome
. The ethnic origin of our patient might account for these differences, as expression of different allelic forms at the
NBS
locus.
...
PMID:A variant of the Nijmegen breakage syndrome with unusual cytogenetic features and intermediate cellular radiosensitivity. 913 89
In 1981 Weemaes et al. first described the
Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS)
, a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by stunted growth, microcephaly, immunodeficiency, spontaneous chromosome instability, and a peculiar predisposition to cancer development. Most
NBS
-related malignancies are lymphomas, but their pathologic features have rarely been specified. We report here the case of a northern Italian 8-year-old child who, 2 years after the diagnosis of
NBS
, developed a diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
(T cell-rich
B-cell lymphoma
variant). The histological and immunobiological features of the lymphoma population are analyzed and discussed in detail.
...
PMID:Nijmegen breakage syndrome-associated T-cell-rich B-cell lymphoma: case report. 1074 14
A 17-year-old Croatian boy with
Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS)
who developed diffuse large B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma is presented. The majority of the patients with this rare autosomal recessive disease are of Slavic origin and, in most of them, the disease is caused by NBS1 mutation 657del5, as was found in our patient.
Nijmegen breakage syndrome
is characterized by microcephaly, growth retardation, abnormal facial appearance, spontaneous chromosomal rearrangements, immunodeficiency, and a high predisposition to cancer development, predominantly lymphoma. Because of increased sensitivity to radiation therapy and chemotherapy, the treatment of malignancies in patients with
NBS
can be difficult. To our knowledge, our patient is the first with
NBS
reported in the literature who was successfully treated for diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
with the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab in addition to a modified dose of CHOP (cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin/vincristine/prednisone) chemotherapy. He has been in complete remission for 3 years after finishing the treatment.
...
PMID:Successful treatment of diffuse large B-cell non-hodgkin lymphoma with modified CHOP (cyclophosphamide/doxorubicin/vincristine/prednisone) chemotherapy and rituximab in a patient with Nijmegen syndrome. 1818 68
Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS)
is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by microcephaly, immunodeficiency, radiation hypersensitivity, chromosomal instability and increased incidence of malignancies. In Poland 105
NBS
cases showing mutations in the
NBS
gene (nibrin, NBN), have been diagnosed, approximately 53% of which have developed cancer, mainly (>90%) lymphoid malignancies. This study is based upon the largest reported group of
NBS
-associated lymphomas. The predominant lymphoma types found in these 14
NBS
children were diffuse large
B cell lymphoma
(DLBCL) and T cell lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-LBL/ALL), all showing monoclonal Ig/TCR rearrangements. The spectrum of
NBS
lymphomas is completely different from sporadic paediatric lymphomas and lymphomas in other immunodeficient patients. Morphological and molecular analysis of consecutive lymphoproliferations in six
NBS
patients revealed two cases of true secondary lymphoma. Furthermore, 9/13
NBS
patients with lymphomas analysed by split-signal FISH showed breaks in the Ig or TCR loci, several of which likely represent chromosome aberrations. The combined data would fit a model in which an NBN gene defect results in a higher frequency of DNA misrejoining during double-strand break (DSB) repair, thereby contributing to an increased likelihood of lymphoma formation in
NBS
patients.
...
PMID:Unique morphological spectrum of lymphomas in Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS) patients with high frequency of consecutive lymphoma formation. 1878 73