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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (
EMA
)
2,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) has been demonstrated in the Reed-Sternberg cells and their mononuclear variants (Hodgkin cells; H-RS cells) in a substantial number of Hodgkin's disease (HD) cases. Moreover, EBV can modulate both in vivo and in vitro the expression of several cellular genes, including lymphoid differentiation markers. Therefore we investigated, in 64 cases of HD, the relationship between the presence of EBV and the expression of lymphoid (CD45RB), T- (CD3, CD45RO), B- (CD20, MB2 antigen, CDw75), and myeloid-cell lineage markers (CD15), and of activation markers (CD30,
EMA
, and the 115D8 antigen) on the H-RS cells. EBV-positive cases, as demonstrated by the presence of EBER-1 and -2 RNA and
LMP
-1 protein expression, showed a significant reduction in the expression on H-RS cells of T-cell lineage (CD3, P < 0.02), B-cell lineage (CD20; P < 0.005), and activation markers (
EMA
; P < 0.002 and the 115D8 antigen; P < 0.001) as compared with EBV-negative cases. No differences were found in the expression of CD15, CD30, CD45RO, CD45RB, CDw75, or the MB2 antigen on H-RS cells in EBV-positive and EBV-negative HD cases. Interestingly, in 11 cases of EBV-negative HD, B- as well as T-cell lineage markers could be found on some H-RS cells. These data suggest that EBV in H-RS cells is able to down-regulate the expression of T- (CD3) and B- (CD20) cell lineage markers and lymphoid activation markers (
EMA
and the 115D8 antigen).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Decreased expression of cellular markers in Epstein-Barr virus-positive Hodgkin's disease. 752 10
We have recorded 8 patients presenting a Hodgkin's disease associated with Castleman's disease. Four men and 4 women with a 44 years mean age (15-60), presented as a solitary mass (2/7) or as a multicentric tumoral disease (5/7). One of our patients was HIV. Histological studies showed typical features of Castleman's disease. Nodular sclerosing Hodgkin's disease with numerous lacunar cells were present in 3 cases, interfollicular Hodgkin's disease in 4 cases and nodular paragranuloma in one case. Hodgkins' and Reed Sternberg cells were positive for CD15 (4/7), CD30 (5/7),
EMA
(3/6) and
LMP
-1 (4/5). In situ hybridization on tissue sections demonstrate presence of EBV DNA in one case and EBER1-RNA in 2 of 4 cases. The difficulty in making the diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease the relation between both diseases, and the role of IL-6 are discussed.
...
PMID:[Association of Castleman's disease and Hodgkin's disease. Eight cases and review of the literature]. 785 13
Fifty-three consecutive cases of adult CD30+ anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) have been analyzed. Thirty-six were classified as Hodgkin's disease like variety (HL) (67%) and seventeen as so-called common type (CT) (33%). All cases strongly expressed the CD30/Ki-1 antigen; the neoplastic cells expressed CD15, CD45 and
EMA
in 60%, 44% and 33% of cases, respectively; T. B and null phenotypes were found in 37%, 17% and 46% of cases. Bulky mediastinal, B symptoms, and extranodal disease at diagnosis were present in 36%, 49% and 25% of cases. EBV encoded latent membrane protein (
LMP
-1) was found in 10 cases. Of the 13 tested cases only 4 expressed a weak positivity of the CD40 molecule, in a fraction of the tumor cells; in the same cases CD21 was never found. Patients were treated with various protocols; of the 50 evaluable patients, 39 (78%) obtained a complete remission (CR), 3 (6%) a partial remission (PR) and 8 (16%) did not respond. The projected overall disease free survival (DFS) at 36 months is 70%. Only patients with advanced disease stage (III-IV) showed a statistically decreased DFS and survival. Only symptomatic and extranodal disease significantly appeared to influence survival. This study confirms the good outcome of this group of lymphomas and differs from other reports for some clinical (lower percentage of advanced stage, extranodal disease and skin infiltration) and pathological (HL/CT ratio and immunophenotype) features.
...
PMID:Anaplastic large cell lymphoma: a clinicopathologic study of 53 patients. 881 81
Between 1987 and 1993, 77 of 2855 lymphomas included in the LNH87 protocol of the GELA as non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and reviewed by a panel of pathologists had a diagnosis changed to Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). Some of these lymphomas had been initially interpreted as anaplastic large-cell lymphoma Hodgkin-like (ALCL-HL subtype). The purpose of this study was to analyze the histologic pitfalls initially encountered, to define more clearly the diagnostic criteria of lymphomas placed in the gray zone around HL, and to follow the survival of these 77 patients affected with HL and initially treated with NHL regimens. The 77 cases of HL were reviewed by three hematopathologists and immunostained with a large panel of antibodies, including CD30, CD15, CD3, CD20, CD45, CD43,
LMP
-1,
EMA
, BNH-9, TiA1, and ALK1. Each case was classified according to the Lukes-Rye system and the British National Lymphoma Investigation (BNLI) grading. The initial clinical presentation of patients was analyzed, and the overall and event-free survival rates of the 77 patients were estimated. Among the 77 HLs, 46 were misinterpreted as NHL by primary individual pathologists (12 as ALCL, 8 as ALCL-HL, 12 as peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL), 6 as B-cell lymphoma, and 8 as unclassifiable NHL). The other 31 cases had been first considered by the panel as consistent with ALCL-HL (n = 18) or with PTCL (n = 13) and were changed later in view of an immunophenotype concordant with HL. Fifty-five percent of the patients completed the full NHL treatment. The 5-year event-free and overall survival rates were 54% and 77%, respectively. The current results indicate that lymphomas initially called ALCL-HL should not be regarded as a variant of ALCL, but as HL. The clinical consequences of misdiagnoses seem to be a lower event-free survival rate compared with that of classical HL, probably because of more relapses of initially inappropriately treated HL.
...
PMID:Pathologic and clinical features of 77 Hodgkin's lymphoma patients treated in a lymphoma protocol (LNH87): a GELA study. 1122 99
We describe a patient with leukopenic T-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia/prolymphocytic leukemia (T-CLL/PLL), according to the Revised European-American Classification of Lymphoid Neoplasms. This patient simultaneously developed classic Hodgkin's disease (HD), a combination previously unreported. The leukemic cells were small and mature, did not have cytoplasmic granulation, and appeared similar to B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Immunophenotyping of the bone marrow-infiltrating cells revealed a postthymic suppressor/cytotoxic phenotype of CD2+, CD3+, CD4, CD5+, CD8+, CD25-, TCR-alpha beta. A lymph node biopsy showed the histological features of HD (mixed cellularity) with infiltrating CD8+ lymphocytes, and immunohistochemical examination revealed the following phenotype of Reed-Sternberg cells: LeuM1/CD15+, BerH2/CD30+, L26/PanB-, UCHL-1/CD45RO-, cyCD3-, CD4, CD8-, CD20-, CD79a-,
EMA
-, EBER-1+,
LMP
-1+. Southern blot analysis of the bone marrow and lymph node revealed the same rearrangement of bands of T-cell-receptor genes. Although the HD was treated with chemotherapy that resulted in complete remission, the T-PLL/CLL took an indolent course. This case may suggest the existence of a subtype of T-CLL/PLL with leukopenia and an indolent clinical course. Both diseases were believed to be independent and not a transformation of one to the other.
...
PMID:Concurrent Hodgkin's disease (mixed cellularity type) and T-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia/prolymphocytic leukemia. 1137 37
Plasmablastic lymphoma (PBL) is a rare and relatively new entity originally described in HIV-infected individuals. This subset of Epstein-Barr-virus (EBV)-related non-Hodgkin lymphomas is now regarded as a distinct clinicopathological category of AIDS-associated lymphomas occurring preferentially in the oral cavity and showing a poor prognosis. We describe for the first time an EBV-associated PBL with an isolated cutaneous distribution on the lower extremities in an HIV-infected heterosexual male and point to the unique clinical, morphological and immunophenotypic characteristics of this lymphoma. The patient presented with fast growing solid and livid nodules on both legs. The large, blastic tumor cells showed the following immunophenotype: CD138+, CD45+, CD20-, CD10-, CD3-, CD30-, bcl-2-, bcl-6-,
LMP
-1- and
EMA
-. The proliferation fraction (Mib-1) was >90%. EBV association was demonstrated by in situ hybridization (EBV-encoded RNAs 1/2). Polymerase-chain-reaction-based DNA analysis demonstrated a clonal IgH rearrangement in the absence of a bcl-2/IgH translocation. PBL in HIV patients may occur not only in the oral cavity, but can probably involve any other organs including the skin.
...
PMID:Cutaneous plasmablastic lymphoma in an HIV-positive male: an unrecognized cutaneous manifestation. 1511 93
Anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL), CD30+, is a subtype of T-non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Its most common form is a classical systemic type that involves multiple nodal and extranodal sites. In this study, morphologic, immunohistologic, and genetic studies were performed on ALCL cases in Pakistani patients. The median age of the patients in this study was 45 years (age range: 5-70 years), with a male to female ratio of 3.4:1. Thirty-seven (37) patients were diagnosed to have Ki-1 (CD30+) ALCL, which constituted 2% of all NHLs and 12.6% of all T-NHLs, over a period of 11 years (January 01, 1992-December 31, 2002). The tumors were of either T- or null-cell type with constant (100%) expression of CD30 (Ki-1). The majority of the cases (89.2%) expressed
EMA
, whereas 40.5% of the cases expressed either CD45 (LCA), CD45RO (UCHL1), or ALK. The mean age of ALCL patients with null-cell phenotype was 33.8 years as compared to those with T-cell phenotype having a mean age of 36.3 years. Out of the 37 cases diagnosed as ALCL, amplifiable DNA was isolated from 28 cases, which were further assessed for T-cell clonality for T-cell receptor (TCR)-beta, gamma, and immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) for the FR2 and FR3 regions. The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique demonstrated clonal rearrangement of the TCR beta, gamma, and IgH regions in 15 (53.6%), 11 (39.3%), and 2 (7.1%) ALCL cases, respectively, out of 28 cases. Association of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was noted in seven out of 28 cases (25%) of ALCL by PCR, whereas ISH for EBV-encoded nuclear RNA-1 (EBER-1) detected the presence of EBV in two (16.7%) out of 12 cases, where one was T-cell ALCL and the other null-cell ALCL. Immunostaining for
LMP
-1 could not be performed, because tissue material was not available. In conclusion, our study demonstrated that the prevalence of ALCL in Pakistan is comparable to that reported for some of the Asian communities and by the International Lymphoma Study Group and that EBV could be partly responsible for the pathogenesis of ALCL.
...
PMID:Prevalence and characterization of anaplastic large cell lymphoma and its association with Epstein-Barr virus in Pakistani patients. 1564 4
Histological, clinical and immunohistochemical analysis of 6 cases of primary liver lymphomas (PLL) are presented. PLL represents 4.3% of primary malignant liver tumors diagnosed in our department. The patients were relatively young people, who despite the presence of a large tumor, were in good general health status. There were no signs of scirrhosis, and cancer markers were normal. All lymphomas were CD20, CD79a, BAX positive, CD3, CD30,
EMA
, CD10, CD5, CD59, c-myc, Bcl2, EBV(
LMP
), CK negative. The proliferation index (Ki67) was high, ranging from 50-100%. In two cases positive staining for Bcl6 and in another one for cyclin D1 was obtained. The major histological type of the tumor was diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. Positive immunohistochemical results with BAX and the lack of Bcl2, c-myc and CD59 are associated with better prognosis. We have not confirmed the value of Bcl6 and CD10 stains as a predictor of poor outcome. Despite clinically advanced stage at the time of diagnosis, if treated appropriately, the primary lymphoma of the liver has relatively good prognosis (five of our patients are alive).
...
PMID:Primary lymphoma of the liver -- morphological and clinical analysis of 6 cases. Success of aggressive treatment. 1587 91
This study aims to assess the distribution of lymphoma subtypes in Shanxi, China, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) classification, and to compare the relative distribution with other areas of the world. H&E-stained tissue sections from the archives of the Shanxi Tumor Hospital, China, were reviewed and 447 cases with sufficient materials were selected for detailed study. A panel of antibodies and probes was assembled, including antibodies to ALK1, bcl-6, CDs 1alpha, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 15, 20, 23, 30, 43, 56, 68, 79alpha, and 99, cyclin D1,
EMA
, kappa, lambda, LMP1, PAX5, TdT, Vs38C and ZAP70, plus EBER RNA probe by in situ hybridization. The 447 lymphoma cases, subtyped according to the WHO classification, were assembled in triplicate into 11 tissue microarrays and examined with the panel of markers described. Among the 447 cases, 385 (82.6%) were confirmed to be non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) and 62 (13.9%) were Hodgkin lymphomas of classic type (CHL). Of the NHL cases, 68.6% were B-cell lymphomas and 30.6% T/NK-cell lymphomas. Histiocytic neoplasms accounted for only three cases (0.8%). Diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL) were the most common subtype (35.1%), followed by peripheral T-cell lymphomas unspecified (PTun, 12.0%), extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphomas (MALT lymphomas, 11.7%), follicular lymphomas (FL, 8.6%), T-lymphoblastic lymphomas (T-LBL, 7.0%), anaplastic large cell lymphomas (ALCL, 4.2%), B small lymphocytic lymphomas (B SLL, 3.6%), and mantle cell lymphomas (MCL, 2.6%). Of 263 B-cell neoplasms, 105 (39.9%) expressed immunoglobulin light chain, including 52 kappa and 53 lambda, detectable in paraffin sections. The incidence of DLBCL was similar to many Western countries and Asia. The frequency of FL was, however, much lower than the usual pattern in Western countries, although NK/T-cell lymphomas were more common (30.6%), similar to other countries in Asia, including Japan and Korea. With regard to markers of EBV infection, 8 of 385 (2.1%) NHL cases gave positive findings by both in situ hybridization (EBER RNA) and immunohistochemistry (
LMP
-1), whereas 24 (6.2%) expressed only the EBER and 12 (3.1%) expressed only
LMP
-1. EBV positivity was found in 24 of 119 (20.2%) T and NK cell lymphomas, in 20 of 263 (7.6%) B cell neoplasms, and in 37 of 62 (59.7%) CHLs. In CHLs there was complete concordance of results by both in situ hybridization (EBER RNA) and immunohistochemistry (
LMP
-1) procedures. ZAP70 was detected in most T cell-lineage disorders (61.4%) and also in a subset of B small lymphocytic lymphomas (50%). However, ZAP-70 was expressed in a minority of other types of B-cell lymphomas, including precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (25%), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (26.7%), follicular lymphoma (15.2%), and lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (9.1%). Immunohistochemical analysis represents an effective method for assessing ZAP-70 expression and reveals that a variety of B-cell malignant neoplasms express ZAP-70, albeit at low frequency.
...
PMID:Distribution and ZAP-70 expression of WHO lymphoma categories in Shanxi, China: a review of 447 cases using a tissue microarray technique. 1628 Jun 61
We report the case of a 77-year-old Japanese man with natural killer (NK)-like T cell lymphoma of the small intestine diagnosed after an emergency laparotomy for perforated peritonitis. Immunohistochemical staining of the tumor showed that the patient had CD3+ CD8+ CD30- CD56+ CD68- CD79a- UCHL-1+
EMA
-
LMP
-1 NK-like T cell lymphoma. The patient had a history of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and was also diagnosed with T cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma associated with T cell receptor (TCR) reconstruction in the Jgamma chain. Intestinal T cell lymphoma is uncommon and very few cases of CD56+ T cell lymphoma, otherwise known as NK-like T cell lymphoma, have been reported. The patient did not have a history of gluten-sensitive enteropathy (celiac disease). Multiple lesions appeared within months after the initial operation and his condition deteriorated rapidly. We think that this patient probably had NK-type granular lymphocyte-proliferative disorder (NK-GLPD) because the percentage of CD16+ CD56+ cells among peripheral blood mononuclear cells was elevated, at 21%. We report this case to help elucidate the relationship between underlying digestive organ disease and the development of intestinal NK-like T cell lymphoma. An accumulation of other such cases is needed to determine the etiology of this disease.
...
PMID:Natural killer-like T cell lymphoma of the small intestine: report of a case. 1663 56
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