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Query: UMLS:C0079731 (
B-cell lymphoma
)
16,671
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
These are the first cases of primary macroglobulinemia (PMG) with t(11;18)(q21;q21) reported in the literature. The first case was a 77-year-old man with macroglobulinemia (serum IgM: 8.36 g/dL). Abnormal lymphoid cells were detected in the blood and bone marrow. Immunologic and karyotypic analyses revealed that abnormal cells were positive for surface IgM-k, CD19, and CD20, negative for CD5 and
CD10
, and all had a t(11;18)(q21;q21). The second case was a 57-year-old woman with macroglobulinemia (serum IgM: 12.0 g/dL). Abnormal lymphoid cells were detected in blood and marrow, and cells were positive for surface IgM-lambda, CD19, and CD20, and negative for CD5 and
CD10
. Plasma cells bearing cytoplasmic IgM-lambda were increased in pleural fluid. Karyotyping demonstrated t(2;11;18)(q21-23;q21;q21). Rearrangements within BCL2 and YES genes located at 18q21 were not detected. Sixteen other cases with t(11;18)(q21;q21) have been reported in marginal zone
B-cell lymphoma
. Therefore, our report is in agreement with the finding that part of primary macroglobulinemia is a variant of marginal zone
B-cell lymphoma
.
...
PMID:Primary macroglobulinemia with t(11;18)(q21;q21). 1070 80
Besides the problems inherent in endoscopically obtained tissue and the low incidence of intestinal lymphomas, the major difficulties reside in the distinction to reactive processes and in the differential diagnosis among several lymphoma entities. Knowledge of the microanatomical and biological properties of the intestinal MALT, supplemented by sufficient clinical information, are important prerequisites for the diagnostic work-up which has to include immunohistochemical studies. Whereas the diagnosis of aggressive B-cell lymphomas (diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
, Burkitt's lymphoma) is usually straightforward, lymphomatous polyposis (LP, the intestinal equivalent of mantle cell lymphoma) and low-grade
B-cell lymphoma
of MALT-type may be difficult to diagnose and to separate from reactive lymphoproliferations. The characteristic immunohistochemical profile of LP (cyclin D1 + CD5 + CD43 + CD23 -
CD10
- IgM kappa or lambda, is very helpful in this regard and similarly useful to exclude intestinal involvement by B-CLL or follicular center lymphoma. In addition, the endoscopic appearance characterized by seeds of small polyps along the colorectum favors LP although MALT-type lymphoma may occasionally produce polypoid lesions. Focal lymphoid hyperplasia occurs in the terminal ileum and may present with a mass in the right iliac fossa. The diagnosis of intestinal T-cell lymphoma (ITL) represents the most challenging task for both clinicians and pathologists. This disease is often associated with and may closely mimick celiac disease of adult onset type, or can be misdiagnosed as inflammatory bowel disease. The presence of an abnormal activated T-cell phenotype, i.e. different from that of normal intraepithelial lymphocytes, strongly suggests ITL and is of particular importance in cases that lack overt cytological atypia.
...
PMID:[Problems in biopsy differential diagnosis in lymphomas of the small and large intestines]. 1071 99
Primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (PCBLs) may have particular clinicopathologic characteristics distinct from their lymph node-based counterparts. It has been suggested that PCBLs should have a separate classification system. The aim of this study was to determine whether the Revised European-American Lymphoid Neoplasms (REAL) classification is applicable to PCBL. Thirty-nine cases of PCBL from 36 patients, consisting of 20 men and 16 women (median age 66 yrs), were included in this study. Paraffin-section immunohistochemistry for CD3, CD5,
CD10
, CD20, CD43, Bcl-2, Bcl-6, and cyclin D1 was performed in all cases. Immunostaining for immunoglobulin light chains was also performed on cases histologically diagnosed as extranodal marginal zone lymphoma (MZL) and primary cutaneous
B-cell lymphoma
unclassifiable (PCBLu). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis of t(14;18) was performed in all cases. Immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement (VDJ) was tested by PCR on all follicle center lymphoma (FCL), MZL, and PCBLu cases. The 39 cases consisted of 15 (39%) FCLs, 13 (33%) diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLCL), 9 (23%) extranodal MZL, and 2 cases of PCBLu. Anatomically, 59% of PCBLs occurred in the head and neck, of which approximately 57% were FCL. Five of six cases presenting on the lower extremity were DLCL. Follow-up data was available from all 39 patients with a mean of 50.8 months. All but two patients are alive with or without disease at last contact. One patient with DLCL died of lung metastases and the other DLCL patient died of sepsis as a complication of therapy. In all 15 cases of FCL,
CD10
and/or Bcl-6 expression supported the follicle center origin of the neoplastic cells. In contrast to previous reports, we found that 53% (8 of 15) of primary cutaneous FCL had either Bcl-2 protein expression or t(14;18). Our data indicate that many cases of primary cutaneous FCL have Bcl-2 alterations similar to their nodal counterpart. We found that 95% (37 of 39) of PCBLs could be classified according to the REAL classification, supporting its applicability in cutaneous lymphomas.
...
PMID:Clinicopathologic reassessment of primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas with immunophenotypic and molecular genetic characterization. 1125 30
The clinical, histological, phenotypic and genotypic features of 21 primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (CBCLs) have been investigated. The patients were 13 men and eight women aged 34-91 years (median 67) at diagnosis. Eighteen patients had localized disease, and three had multiple skin lesions at diagnosis. Twelve patients developed cutaneous or extracutaneous recurrences, and five died from malignant lymphoma 7-84 months (median 36) after diagnosis. Histological examination showed features of marginal zone/mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT)-type lymphoma in 12 cases. Three of these had transformed to diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
(DLBCL) in relapse biopsies. The remaining cases were seven primary DLBCLs and two cases tentatively classified as follicle centre cell (FCC) lymphoma. The neoplastic B cells showed similar phenotypes and genotypes in most cases (CD20+, CD79+, CD5-,
CD10
-, cyclin D1-, bcl-2+, bcl-x-, bax-, t(14;18)-negative). p53 protein was expressed in five cases, and four harboured mis-sense or loss-of-function mutations in the p53 gene. Deletion or promoter region hypermethylation of the p16INK4a gene was detected in two patients with DLBCL. The level of retinoblastoma protein expression and the proliferative fraction were significantly higher in DLBCL (> 50%) than in MALT- or FCC-type lymphomas (< 10%). Features associated with an unfavourable prognosis were the presence of multiple skin lesions at diagnosis, transformation from MALT-type lymphoma to DLBCL, and possibly p16INK4a aberrations. It is concluded that most CBCLs are dissimilar from FCC lymphomas and seem to be more closely related to marginal zone/MALT-type lymphomas. It is also suggested that there are fundamental differences between DLBCL and other histological categories of CBCL, indicating that cutaneous DLBCL is a separate entity with an increased growth potential and genetic features similar to DLBCL originating in other anatomical sites.
...
PMID:Primary cutaneous B-cell lymphoma: a clinical, histological, phenotypic and genotypic study of 21 cases. 1080 48
In this study the authors explored the value of immunostaining for follicular center B-cell markers, BCL-6 and
CD10
, in paraffin sections as a tool for the differential diagnosis of B-cell lymphomas. The cases studied comprised reactive lymphoid hyperplasia (RLH; n = 19), follicular lymphoma (FL; n = 50), low-grade mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma (n = 24), mantle cell lymphoma (n = 19), splenic marginal zone lymphoma (n = 13), diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
(DLBCL; n = 54), Burkitt's lymphoma (BL; n = 20), nodular lymphocyte predominance Hodgkin's disease (NLPHD; n = 16), and classic Hodgkin's disease (CHD; n = 13). In RLH,
CD10
and BCL-6 were expressed almost exclusively by the follicular center cells. In contrast in FL, the expression of
CD10
(39/50) and BCL-6 (34/36) was seen in both follicular and interfollicular neoplastic B cells. Marginal zone/MALT lymphomas and mantle cell lymphoma were always negative. In DLBCL the expression was variable for both
CD10
(21/54) and BCL-6 (39/47), with some tumors, including cases of transformed follicular lymphoma (9/10), coexpressing
CD10
and BCL-6, and others expressing only BCL-6, and a small group expressing neither marker, possibly reflecting the underlying primary pathogenetic events such as the rearrangement of BCL-2 or BCL-6 genes. BL was always both
CD10
and BCL-6 positive. In NLPHD the L&H cells expressed BCL-6 (11/13) but not
CD10
, whereas in CHD BCL-6 expression was seen in half of the cases. This study demonstrates that both
CD10
and BCL-6 are reliable markers of follicular center B-cell differentiation.
CD10
and BCL-6 immunostaining have an important role in differential diagnosis of FL from RLH and other low-grade B-cell lymphomas. The results also suggest that a
CD10
/BCL-6 expression pattern may be helpful in identifying main subsets of DLBCL. However, additional studies comparing genotype with immunophenotype are required.
...
PMID:CD10 and BCL-6 expression in paraffin sections of normal lymphoid tissue and B-cell lymphomas. 1084 87
Primary cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (CBCLs) should be clearly separated from non-Hodgkin's B-cell lymphomas with secondary cutaneous involvement and from cutaneous B-cell pseudolymphomas. The majority of CBCLs are characterized by a homogeneous clinical presentation and behavior, with good response to local radiotherapy, low tendency to extracutaneous spread, and excellent prognosis. According to the European Organization for Research on the Treatment of Cancer classification of primary cutaneous lymphomas, CBCLs with an indolent behavior are divided into 2 subgroups: follicular center cell lymphoma and immunocytoma/marginal zone lymphoma, due to putative histologic similarities with their purported nodal counterparts. In addition, a third subgroup with intermediate prognosis (large
B-cell lymphoma
of the leg) is identified. Conversely, the identification of distinct subgroups is disputable from a strictly histologic, immunophenotypic, and genotypic point of view, and has neither correlation with the clinical course nor the prognosis of the disease. Moreover, the majority of CBCLs show a uniform immunophenotype (CD5-,
CD10
-) and genotype (lack of bcl-1/bcl-2 and c-myc gene rearrangement) of neoplastic cells. Therefore, we favor the use of the term Skin-Associated Lymphoid Tissue (SALT)-related B-cell lymphomas, due to the close similarities between CBCLs and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphomas, and the evidence for an acquired B-cell arm of SALT.
...
PMID:The skin-associated lymphoid tissue-related B-cell lymphomas. 1089 14
Seven patients with peripheral
B-cell lymphoma
associated with hemophagocytic syndrome are reported. In all cases, the histologic subtype was diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
. Hemophagocytic features were noted in the bone marrow with lymphomatous infiltration. Hemophagocytic syndrome occurred with presentation of the lymphoma and was characterized by high fever, cytopenias, and elevated levels of lactate dehydrogenase, ferritin, C-reactive protein, and cytokines [interferon gamma, macrophage colony-stimulating factor, soluble interleukin (sIL)-2R, and IL-6] without evidence of infection. The phenotypes of lymphomas were suspected CD19+, CD20+, S-Ig+,
CD10
-, and coexpression of CD5 in some cases. Flow cytometric analysis showed a low CD4/CD8 ratio in peripheral blood and bone marrow. We suggest that the pathogenesis of hemophagocytic syndrome is hypercytokinemia induced by a proliferation of reactive CD8+ T cells. Previous reports of
B-cell lymphoma
with hemophagocytic syndrome demonstrated similar clinical manifestations and poor prognoses. The invasion patterns of these diffuse large B-cell lymphomas with hemophagocytosis may be classified into three groups: microscopic lymph-node involvement type, gross lymph-node involvement type, and splenic lymphoma type. Although hemophagocytic syndromes have been reported to be associated with T-cell lymphomas, our results indicate an association with diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
.
...
PMID:B-cell lymphoma-associated hemophagocytic syndrome: clinicopathological characteristics. 1096 86
In May, 1998, a 63-year-old woman was admitted for treatment of relapsed malignant lymphoma. In March 1997, a diagnosis of diffuse large
B-cell lymphoma
(DLBL), clinical stage IIISE A, was made from a biopsy specimen of the tumor in the left buccal mucosa. Six cycles of CHOP regimen were given, and complete remission was achieved. However, relapse of the lymphoma was suspected, and the patient was transferred to our hospital. On admission, a right tosillar mass, 8 mm in diameter, was found, and a biopsy showed DLBL. The immunophenotype of the lymphoma cells was CD3- CD4- CD5- CD8+
CD10
- CD19+ CD20+ CD23- CD25+ IgL (lambda)+, and dual staining confirmed that the cells were CD8+ and CD19+. The patient was an HTLV-1 carrier, but monoclonal integration of HTLV-1 proviral DNA into the lymphoma cells was not detected. She was diagnosed as having CD8+ DLBL, clinical stage IA. Because she responded to salvage chemotherapy, autologous peripheral blood stem cell transplantation was performed and complete remission was obtained. To our knowledge, this is the first report of CD8+ DLBL.
...
PMID:[CD8-positive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma]. 1102 Sep 83
A 72-year-old woman, who has been administered prednisolone and azathioprine with diagnoses of idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) and autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), underwent a complete medical examination because of monoclonal gammopathy (IgG-kappa). Tumors were found in the ileum and descending colon. Pathological examination of biopsy specimens suggested a diagnosis of marginal zone
B-cell lymphoma
of the MALT type with a high-grade component. Flow cytometric analysis by two-color staining revealed that the neoplastic B cells expressed CD38, CD19, IgG and kappa, but not CD5 or
CD10
. There were no abnormal plasma cells in bone marrow smears. The patient achieved complete remission after receiving three cycles of THP-COP chemotherapy, which resulted in a decrease of the IgG level to within the normal range. These findings indicated that monoclonal IgG-kappa might be produced by lymphoma cells. However, the relationship of the immunosuppressive agents to the pathogenesis of the MALT lymphoma remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:[MALT lymphoma producing IgG-kappa type M-protein]. 1102 Sep 94
B lymphocyte-induced maturation protein-1 (Blimp-1) is a transcriptional repressor that is sufficient to trigger terminal differentiation in the
B cell lymphoma
BCL-1. In this study, we have determined the expression pattern of Blimp-1 in vivo in primary and secondary lymphoid organs of humans and immunized mice. Blimp-1 is expressed in plasma cells derived from either a T-independent or T-dependent response in plasma cells that have undergone isotype switching and those resulting from secondary immunization. Blimp-1 is also present in long-lived plasma cells residing in the bone marrow. However, Blimp-1 was not detected in memory B cells. This expression pattern provides further evidence of a critical role for Blimp-1 in plasma cell development, supporting earlier studies in cultured lines. Significantly, Blimp-1 was also found in a fraction (4-15%) of germinal center B cells in murine spleen and human tonsils. Blimp-1 expression in the germinal center is associated with an interesting subset of cells with a phenotype intermediate between germinal center B cells and plasma cells. In the mouse, Blimp-1(+) germinal center B cells peak at day 12 postimmunization and disappear soon thereafter. They are not apoptotic, some are proliferating, they express germinal center markers peanut agglutinin or
CD10
but not Bcl-6, and most express CD138 (syndecan-1), IRF4, and cytoplasmic Ig. Together, these data support a model in which B cell fate decisions occur within the germinal center and Blimp-1 expression is critical for commitment to a plasma cell, rather than a memory cell, fate.
...
PMID:Commitment of B lymphocytes to a plasma cell fate is associated with Blimp-1 expression in vivo. 1106 98
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