Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 immunophenotyped 128 patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (B-NHL) of various histological subtypes using two-color flow cytometry (FCM), and found that lymphoma cells obtained from 31 patients (24.2%) coexpressed at least one of the following T-cell associated antigens (T-Ag); CD2 (2.3%), CD5 (18.0%) or CD7 (6.3%). Moreover, 3 patients expressed two kinds of T-Ag (CD2/CD5, CD2/CD7 or CD5/CD7) as reported by other investigators. Though we could not find coexpression of CD3, CD4 or CD8 antigen in any patients analyzed in our study, such T-Ag(+) B-NHL have also been reported in the literature. As clinical features, extranodular involvement and higher International Prognostic Index (high and high intermediate) seemed more frequent in T-Ag(+) B-NHL than T-Ag(-) B-NHL in our study. Such prognostic significance of T-Ag expression is also reported by other investigators especially in CD5(+) diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. In addition, two-color FCM for detecting such aberrant T-Ag expression in B-NHL is useful for monitoring the minimal residual disease in the subgroup with T-Ag(+) B-NHL.
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PMID:T-cell associated antigen-positive B-cell lymphoma. 1191 97

Primary cutaneous diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is an uncommon lymphoma. Some authors have suggested that large B-cell lymphoma can be segregated based on anatomic site, with tumors of the lower extremity being unique. We report 15 cases of primary cutaneous DLBCL. Each case was analyzed immunohistochemically using antibodies specific for CD3, CD5, CD10, CD20, bcl-2, bcl-6, and p53. Polymerase chain reaction analysis for t(14;18)(q32;q21) also was performed. There were 13 men and 2 women (median age, 64 years). Thirteen tumors were composed predominantly of centroblasts, and 2 were immunoblastic. There was a median follow-up of 72 months. Of the 4 patients with primary cutaneous DLBCL of the lower extremity (thigh, knee, leg), 2 (50%) experienced a recurrence and 1 patient died of disease. In the non-lower extremity cases, 18% (2/11) recurred and no patients died of disease. We conclude that primary cutaneous DLBCL usually occurs in elderly patients with a male predominance. Recurrences are common, but death of disease is rare.
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PMID:Primary cutaneous diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: a clinicopathologic study of 15 cases. 1193 32

We report a case of primary marginal zone lymphoma in the thymus of a 34-year-old woman. She was initially suspected of having a mediastinal plasmacytoma because of the presence of dominantly proliferating plasmacytic cells in a small fragment obtained by thoracoscopic biopsy, and an elevated level of serum monoclonal IgA. However, histology of the tissue obtained by a subsequent open surgical biopsy revealed diffuse proliferation of atypical monocytoid B-lymphocyte-like cells, which showed prominent plasmacytic differentiation and a close association with thymic epithelial cells consistent with the histology of a marginal zone lymphoma of the thymus. These lymphoma cells were positive for CD19, CD20, IgA, and kappa, and negative for CD5, CD10, and other T/NK-cell and myelomonocyte antigens. Both G-banded and spectral karyotyping analyses revealed the lymphoma cells carried a chromosomal anomaly, 46,X,dup(X)(p11p22). Although large cell type B-cell lymphoma in the thymus (mediastinal diffuse large B-cell lymphoma), which is categorized as a definite subtype in revised European-American classification of lymphoid neoplasms and the new World Health Organization classification, is not infrequent, primary marginal zone lymphoma of the thymus is extremely rare. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of primary marginal zone lymphoma of the thymus with a detailed chromosomal analysis.
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PMID:Primary marginal zone lymphoma of the thymus accompanied by chromosomal anomaly 46,X,dup(X)(p11p22). 1194 41

Low-grade B cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated tissue type (MALToma) rarely may involve the kidney. Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) is an uncommon complication of B cell lymphoma and may be related to cryoglobulin and/or immunoglobulin synthesis by a secretory B cell clone. We report 2 patients with the novel renal biopsy findings of coexistent MALToma and MPGN. Both subjects presented with nephrotic proteinuria and renal insufficiency. One patient had a serum M protein (IgG K) but neither individual had any other clinical or serologic evidence of systemic disease, including hematolymphoid malignancy, autoimmune disease, cryoglobulinemia, or hepatitis C viral infection. Both renal biopsies demonstrated MPGN type I with immunoglobulin deposits that in 1 case showed light chain restriction (IgM K). Electron microscopy disclosed corresponding glomerular electron dense deposits in subendothelial locations. Both biopsies also contained atypical interstitial lymphoid infiltrates comprising marginal zone (centro-cyte-like) cells that infiltrated tubules and showed extra-capsular extension. Immunostains demonstrated a predominantly B cell population that lacked expression of CD5 and cycline D1, and gene rearrangement studies confirmed the presence of a monoclonal B cell population in both cases. These findings indicate that low-grade B cell lymphoma in the kidney may be an unexpected finding in patients with nephrotic syndrome related to MPGN. Immunophenotypic and gene rearrangement studies are important ancillary tools for the evaluation of atypical lymphoid infiltrates in kidney biopsies.
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PMID:Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis associated with low-grade B cell lymphoma presenting in the kidney. 1200 47

Lymphomas may involve the subcutaneous tissue as a manifestation of generalized disease. However, they rarely present with multiple involvement of the subcutaneous fat tissue without other sites of the disease. We describe a patient with CD5+ diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBL) that was confined to the subcutaneous tissue. A 74-year-old woman with rheumatoid arthritis was admitted because of multiple subcutaneous nodules. The patient had not been treated with cytotoxic drugs or methotrexate. The biopsied specimen disclosed diffuse infiltration of large cells with a starry sky-like appearance. The cells were positive for CD5, CD19, CD20, CD25, IgM, lambda-chain, and negative for CD10, CD23 or cyclin D1. Thus a diagnosis of CD5+ DLBL was made. The patient was treated with a modified CHOP protocol and complete remission was achieved.
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PMID:De novo CD5-positive diffuse large B cell lymphoma solely presenting as multiple subcutaneous nodules. 1205 52

A 73-year-old man noticed a subcutaneous tumor on the left upper palpebra from April 1998, but did not seek therapy for it. Facial subcutaneous tumors appeared from November 1999, and multiple tumors appeared on the skin of the chest and both upper arms from January 2000. Tumor biopsy revealed that these tumors were non-Hodgkin lymphoma showing CD19 (+), CD20 (+), CD5 (+), CD10 (-), smIgM (+), sm lambda (+) and cyclin D1 (+). The karyotype was t(11;14) (q13;q32), but bcl-1 gene rearrangement was not detected. On the basis of these data, primary mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) of the subcutis was diagnosed. The patient underwent eight courses of THP-COP therapy, and complete remission was achieved. Primary subcutaneous B-cell lymphoma, especially MCL, is rare. MCL is aggressive and difficult to cure; the median survival of patients is 3 to 5 years, and the 5-year survival is 30%. However, the present patient showed a good response to chemotherapy, and complete remission has continued for 17 months since the MCL was first diagnosed.
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PMID:[Primary subcutaneous mantle cell lymphoma treated successfully with THP-COP therapy]. 1209 92

A minority of centroblastic and centroblastic/centrocytic cell lymphomas are accompanied by a prominent epithelioid cell response and were suggested to be a distinct variant of B-cell lymphoma of germinal center cell origin. To confirm the clinicopathologic significance of these mainly large B-cell lymphomas with an epithelioid cell response (LBCL-ER), we reviewed 50 patients with LBCL-ER and compared the results with those of 167 other diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL) and 94 follicular lymphomas (FL) without epithelioid response. The patients with LBCL-ER showed a higher age distribution (median 71, P =.03), a female predominance (M:F = 18:32, P =.001) and less frequent involvement of extranodal sites >1 (P =.004) compared with those with DLBCL, and presented with a bulky mass of the affected lymph nodes in 54% of cases. They were also older (P =.0006) and more associated with the aggressive clinical factors such as serum LDH level and International Prognostic Index score than those with FL. Histologically, nine cases (18%) partially showed a follicular growth pattern, and the others (82%) were occupied by a diffuse growth pattern. The epithelioid cells were accumulated in large demarcated masses, partially imparting a lymphoepithelioid (Lennert) lymphoma-like appearance to some portions of the lesions in every case. Immunohistochemically, LBCR-ER was positive for CD20 in every case, CD10 in 43% of the cases, and BCL-2 in 56%. None of the tumor cells in the 40 cases tested expressed CD5 antigen. Immunostaining also often highlighted the remnants of the follicular dendritic cell network. The BCL-2 gene rearrangement was detected in only 19% of the cases examined. The survival curve of the cases of LBCL-ER was almost identical with that of DLBCL and was significantly inferior to that of FL. The centroblastic and centroblastic/centrocytic lymphoma with an epithelioid cell response may be regarded as the morphologic variant of DLBCL preferentially arising in the aged population and reflecting the disease progression of FL.
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PMID:Centroblastic and centroblastic/centrocytic lymphoma associated with a prominent epithelioid granulomatous response: a clinicopathologic study of 50 cases. 1211 13

CD5 expression in neoplastic large B-cells in T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma has not been reported, to the best of our knowledge. Here we describe the first case of CD5+ T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma that is well documented by histomorphology, immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry immunophenotyping and sorting, and immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene rearrangement study by polymerase chain reaction. The expression of CD5 in large neoplastic B-cells was demonstrated by immunohistochemistry and multicolor flow cytometry. The clonal nature of the CD5+ neoplastic B-cells was confirmed by rearranged immunoglobulin heavy (IgH) chain with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of flow cytometry-sorted CD5+/CD19+/kappa+ cells. The CD5+ neoplastic large B-cells expressed bcl-6 and MUM1/IRF4 but not CD138 by immunohistochemistry. This suggests that the neoplastic cells may be of late germinal-center B-cell/ early post-germinal center B-cell origin. The patient responded to chemotherapy, CHOP (Cytoxan, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone), and Rituxan very well and is currently in complete remission clinically. We propose that the current case, CD5+ T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma, represents a variant of recently reported de novo CD5+ diffuse large B-cell lymphomas. Our patient has had an excellent response to treatment; however, the clinical and biologic significance of CD5 expression in T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma requires further studies. Awareness of the CD5+ T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma variant will prompt pathologists to perform CD5 immunohistochemical stain in cases of T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma. This will lead to identifying more cases to understand the clinical and biologic characteristics of this variant.
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PMID:CD5+ T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma. 1237 51

CD5+ diffuse large B-cell lymphoma(CD5+DLBCL) is known to have different characteristics than CD5-DLBCL and mantle cell lymphoma(MCL). 9 patients with CD5+DLBCL were reviewed, and the results were compared with those of 8 CD5-DLBCL and 3 cyclin D1+MCL patients. CD5+DLBCL was more closely related to many aggressive clinical features or parameters than CD5-DLBCL: 67% of the patients were older than 60 years, 67% with performance status > or = 2, 89% with serum lactate dehydrogenase level higher than normal, 78% with stage III/IV disease at diagnosis, and 78% with more than one extranodal lesion. The overall International Prognostic Index score for the patients with CD5+DLBCL was thus significantly higher than that for those with CD5-DLBCL. Immunophenotypically, CD5+DLBCL was characterized by CD5+CD10-CD19+CD20+CD21-CD23-cyclin D1-phenotype and the predominant expression of surface IgM. Of particular interest is that the survival rate of CD5+DLBCL patients was significantly inferior to that of patients with CD5-DLBCL. To further characterize CD5+DLBCL, we semi-quantified the CD5 expression in DLBCL cells. Our findings suggest that CD5+DLBCL may constitute a unique subgroup of DLBCL and, moreover, CD5+DLBCL may consist of several subgroups.
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PMID:[Sub-classification of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma by semi-quantification of the CD5 expression with flow cytometric analysis]. 1238 70

To analyze the relationship between immunophenotyping profile and main clinicopathological features and outcome in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), we studied 128 patients (59 men, 69 women; median age 65 years) consecutively diagnosed with de novo DLBCL in a single institution. Cells from each patient were immunostained with CD20, CD79a, CD5, CD10, bcl-6, MUM1, CD138, bcl-2, p53, p27, and Ki-67 antibodies. Four immunophenotyping profiles were distinguished according to the pattern of differentiation: germinal center-CD10(+) (GC-CD10(+); CD10(+)/Bcl-6(+)/MUM1(-)/CD138(-)), germinal center-CD10(-) (GC-CD10(-); CD10(-)/Bcl-6(+)/ MUM1(-)/CD138(-)), post-germinal center (pGC; CD10(-)/bcl-6(+/-)/ MUM1(+)/CD138(-)), and plasmablastic (CD10(-)/bcl-6(-)/MUM1(+)/CD138(+)). Rearrangement of bcl-2 was studied by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in 57 patients. Single-antigen expression was as follows: CD5, 2%; CD10, 21%; bcl-6, 72%; MUM1, 54%; CD138, 2%; bcl-2, 59%; p53, 28%; p27, 40%. Distribution according to differentiation profiles was as follows: GC-CD10(+), 24 patients, GC-CD10-, 30 patients; pGC, 60 patients; plasmablastic, 2 patients; other patterns, 12 patients. The pGC profile was associated with primary nodal presentation and immunoblastic morphology, whereas GC-CD10(+) tumors showed disseminated disease, centroblastic morphology, bcl-2 rearrangement, and lower Ki-67 proliferative index. GC-CD10(-) patients more often presented with primary extranodal origin, early stage, normal lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) levels, and low or low/intermediate International Prognostic Index (IPI) scores than the others. However, no significant difference was found in terms of response or overall survival (OS) according to these profiles. Expression of bcl-2 was associated with advanced stage, high or high-intermediate IPI, and poor OS. Expression of bcl-2 maintained predictive value in multivariate analysis, with stage and LDH. In conclusion, differentiation profile was associated with particular clinicopathological features but was not essential to predicting outcome in DLBCL patients.
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PMID:Clinical impact of the differentiation profile assessed by immunophenotyping in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. 1239 66


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