Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0855152 (Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma)
46 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMLBCL) is a unique type of B-cell lymphoma probably arising from a putative thymic medulla B-cell. It constitutes 6-10% of all diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL), occurring more often in young females. PMLBCL is characterized by a diffuse proliferation of medium to large B-cells associated with sclerosis and a degree of compartmentalisation. Its main molecular characteristics include: gains in 9p segments, p53 mutations, BCL-2 and MAL gene over-expression, somatic mutations of IgVH genes, BCL-6, PIM-1, PAX-5, RhoH/TTF, and c-MYC, and constitutional NF-kappaB activation. The gene expression signature of PMLBCL seems to be much closer to classic Hodgkin lymphoma than to DLBCL. PMLBCL is characterized by a locally invasive anterior mediastinal mass, often producing cough, chest pain, dyspnea, and superior vena cava syndrome. Most PMLBCL patients have stage I-II, bulky disease, with pleural or pericardial effusions in a third of cases. Systemic symptoms, mainly fever or weight loss, are present in <20% of cases; increased LDH levels are observed in 70-80% of cases. Treatment with CHOP regimen followed by radiation therapy was associated with a 5-year survival of 65%. Apparently better results have been reported with third-generation weekly alternating regimens followed by radiation therapy. Any recurrence is almost always seen in the first 2 years of follow-up, and distant relapses tend to involve extranodal organs. Features associated with poor prognosis are poor performance status, pericardial effusion, bulky disease, high serum LDH at diagnosis, and a compromised dose-intensity of anthracycline and cyclophosphamide.
...
PMID:Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma. 1877 28

Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma has been recognised as a distinct entity with unique clinical, pathologic, and genetic features. According to WHO 2008 classification it is marked as a variant of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma but shares characteristics with classic Hodgkin lymphoma. Genetic analysis has shown that amplification of the 9p24.1 region is the disease's specific structural alteration. Aggressive behaviour and a tendency to invade surrounding tissues of the thoracic cavity, often causing superior vena cava syndrome, or pleural or pericardial effusions, are the clinical hallmarks of this disease. For a long period of time it has been considered as a disease with poor prognosis, which responds poorly to the conventional treatment created for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. An elective treatment has not yet been established, but recently the situation has became much more favourable. After the introduction of rituximab the cure rates have risen to over 80%, and the most recent results have demonstrated a new insight with dose-adjusted intensified continuous treatments, in which the cure rates have exceeded 90%. Current trends have led to the introduction of dose-adjusted intensified protocols becoming a standard of care, whereas the use of radiotherapy remains controversial because of the questionable predictive value of post-treatment PET/CT validity. The relapse rate is very low after two years of sustained complete remission. If the disease relapses or is resistant the outcome is very poor regardless of the applied treatment modality.
...
PMID:Current trends in the treatment of primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma - an overview. 2684 37

Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMBL) is a lymphoma occurring in the anterior mediastinum starting from the cells B of the thymique medullary zone. This is a rare entity characterized by epidemiological, clinical and evolutionary peculiarities as well as by pathological and immunohistochemical peculiarities. We report a case series of 5 patients with diagnosed PMBL hospitalized in Pulmonology Department of Ibn Sina Hospital between January 2012 and May 2016. The average age was 34 years, the median of consultation time was 2 months. Reported symptoms were dyspnea, chest pain, dry cough; two patients suffered from superior vena cava syndrome. LDH level was high in 4 patients. Thoracic imaging showed an anterior mediastinal tissue processing in 5 patients. Histological diagnosis was based on ultrasound-guided transparietal puncture biopsy in 5 patients. The contribution of immunohistochemistry was decisive in all cases. Patients were sent to the National Institute of Oncology for therapeutic management. PMBL prognosis is reserved, it most commonly occurs in young women, which increases the need of aggressive therapy to improve survival rate.
...
PMID:[Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma in women: about five cases]. 2779 78