| Literature DB >> 18636273 |
Sanghui Park1, Kihyun Kim, Won Seog Kim, Keon Hee Yoo, Hong-Hoe Koo, Young-Hyeh Ko.
Abstract
Fulminant Epstein-Barr virus (EBV+) T-cell lymphoma in immunocompetent elderly patients is rare and its character has not been well defined. This study analyzed the clinicopathological features of five elderly patients (group A: 50-84 years) and compared them with those of eight children and young adult patients with systemic T-cell lymphomas (group B: 10-34 years). Group A more commonly presented with generalized lymphadenopathy (n = 3) than did group B (n = 1). Chronic active EBV infection (n = 3) and hydroa vacciniforme-like eruptions (n = 1) were seen in group B, while group A showed no evidence of chronic EBV infection, but did show chronic hepatitis B or C virus infections (n = 3). The histological and immunophenotypical findings were similar. All patients died within 1 to 14 months of diagnosis. These findings suggest that EBV+ T-cell lymphoma in elderly patients is a unique disease with an underlying derangement of T-cell immunity and failure to eradicate infected virus. Additional factors related to senility may play a role in the disruption of homeostasis between the virus and the host's immune system.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18636273 PMCID: PMC2516298 DOI: 10.1007/s00428-008-0640-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virchows Arch ISSN: 0945-6317 Impact factor: 4.064
Characteristics of five elderly patients and eight children and young adult patients
| No. | Sex | Age (years) | Onset (months) | Associated disease | Treatment | Follow-up (months) | Outcome | EBV serology | EBV DNA in PBa | Histologic grade (necrosis) | Cell type | TCR gene rearrangement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elderly patients ( | ||||||||||||
| 1 | M | 50 | 1b | HBV carrierc | CHOP | 7 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EA−, EBNA+ | ∼30,530 | 3 | αβ-T CD8>CD4, CD56− | Monoclonal |
| 2 | M | 51 | 1 | HBV carrierc | CHOP, A-DHAP, autoPBSCT | 14 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EA−, EBNA+ | ∼187 | 3 | αβ-T CD8>CD4 CD56− | Monoclonal |
| 3 | M | 60 | <1 | None | CHOP | 5 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EA±, EBNA+ | ∼14,770 | 1(+) | γδ-Td, CD4−, CD8-CD56− | Monoclonal |
| 4 | F | 64 | <1 | Hepatitis Cc | Cytoxan, VCR | 1 | Dead | NA | NA | 2 | NA CD56− | NA |
| 5 | M | 84 | <1 | Prostate ca | Cytoxan, VCR | 3 | Dead | NA | NA | 2 | αβ-T CD8+, CD56− | Monoclonal |
| Children and young adults ( | ||||||||||||
| 6 | M | 10 | 24 | CAEBV | 106B, VCR, TMX | 10 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EA+, EBNA− | ∼14,680 | 1 | αβ-T CD4>CD8 CD56− | Monoclonal |
| 7 | M | 11 | <1 | None | 106B | 1 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EA−, EBNA+ | NA | 2 | αβ-Te CD8+CD56− | Monoclonal |
| 8 | M | 11 | <1 | None | Steroid | 0.3 | Dead | NA | 19,220 | 2(+) | αβ-T CD8+ | Monoclonal |
| 9 | F | 14 | <1 | None | 1 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EBNA− | NA | 3 | NA CD56− | NA | |
| 10 | F | 15 | 12 | Hydroaf vacciniforme | CHOP, ESHAP | 6 | Dead | NA | NA | 2 | αβ-T CD8+, CD56− | NA |
| 11 | M | 16 | <1 | None | CHOP, DHAP, IMVP-16/PD, EPHOCH | 6 | Dead | NA | NA | 3 | αβ-T CD8+, CD56− | NA |
| 12 | F | 20 | 6 | CAEBV | CHOP, IMVP-16/PD, DHAP, ICE | 12 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EA+ EBNA± | NA | 1 | αβ-T CD8>CD4 CD56− | Monoclonal |
| 13 | F | 34 | 12 | CAEBV | CHOP | 3 | Dead | Anti-VCA IgG+, IgM−, EA± EBNA− | NA | 2(+) | NA | Monoclonal |
106B Prednisolone+cyclophosphamide+daunorubicin+vincristine+l-asparaginase, VCR vincristine, TMX trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazol, CHOP cyclophosphamide+adriamycin+vincristine+prednisolone, DHAP dexametasone+cytarabine+cisplatin, IMVP-16/PD ifosfamide+methotrexate+VP-16 (etoposide)+prednisolone, EPHOCH etoposide+cytoxan+doxorubicin+vincristine+prednisolone, ESHAP, etoposide+methylprednisolone+cytarabine+cisplatin, ICE, ifosfamide+carboplatin+etoposide, NA not available
aCopies/reaction (5 μl) using whole blood
bEnlarged lymph node at infraauricular area at 45 years old, followed by decreased size
cThe patients had no treatment for hepatitis.
dThis case was regarded of γ/δ phenotype due to the lack of staining with the βF1 antibody in the proper reactivity with internal control.
eDetermined by flow cytometry
fHydroa vacciniform-like skin lesion with photosensitivity on face and arm for many years
Comparison of clinical features between five elderly patients and eight children and young adult patients at presentation
| Symptoms and signs | Elderly patient | Percent | Children and young adults | Percent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fever | 3/5 | 60 | 8/8 | 100 |
| Anemia | 5/5 | 100 | 7/8 | 87.5 |
| Thrombocytopenia | 5/5 | 100 | 7/8 | 87.5 |
| Pancytopenia | 4/5 | 80 | 6/8 | 75 |
| Liver dysfunction | 4/5 | 80 | 5/8 | 62.5 |
| Hepatosplenomegaly | 2/5 | 40 | 7/8 | 87.5 |
| Lymphadenopathy | 3/5 | 60 | 2/8 | 25 |
| Skin rash | 0/5 | 0 | 1/8 | 12.5 |
| G-I symptoms | 2/5 | 40 | 2/8 | 25 |
| Pleural effusion/ascites | 4/5 | 80 | 3/8 | 37.5 |
| Bone marrow involvement | 0/5 | 0 | 3/8 | 37.5 |
| Hemophagocytosis in bone marrow | 1/5 | 20 | 4/8 | 50 |
| Associated disease | ||||
| Hepatitis B or C virus infection | 3/5 | 60 | 0/8 | 0 |
| Hydroa vacciniforme | 0/5 | 0 | 1/8 | 12.5 |
| Chronic active EBV infection | 0/5 | 0 | 4/8 | 50 |
Fig. 1Microscopic finding of grade 1. There are polymorphic infiltrates of plasma cells, histiocytes, and small lymphocytes without significant atypia (case 6)
Fig. 2Microscopic finding of grade 2. Monotonous infiltrates with predominantly small to medium lymphocytes showing mild atypia (case 4)
Fig. 3Microscopic finding of grade 3. Overt lymphoma showing monomorphic infiltrates of large lymphocytes with marked atypia (case 11)
Fig. 4EBER in situ hybridization showing numerous positive cells (case 7)