| Literature DB >> 20309424 |
Elisa Cannizzo, Aliyah R Sohani, Judith A Ferry, Ephraim P Hochberg, Michael J Kluk, Michelle E Dorn, Craig Sadowski, Janessa J Bucci, Adam M Ackerman, Janina A Longtine, Giovanni Carulli, Frederic I Preffer.
Abstract
Multiple malignancies may occur in the same patient, and a few reports describe cases with multiple hematologic and non-hematologic neoplasms. We report the case of a patient who showed the sequential occurrence of four different lymphoid neoplasms together with a squamous cell carcinoma of the lung. A 62-year-old man with adenopathy was admitted to the hospital, and lymph node biopsy was positive for low-grade follicular lymphoma. He achieved a partial remission with chemotherapy. Two years later, a PET-CT scan showed a left hilar mass in the lung; biopsy showed a squamous cell carcinoma. Simultaneously, he was diagnosed with diffuse large B cell lymphoma in a neck lymph node; after chemo- and radiotherapy, he achieved a complete response. A restaging PET-CT scan 2 years later revealed a retroperitoneal nodule, and biopsy again showed a low-grade follicular lymphoma, while a biopsy of a cutaneous scalp lesion showed a CD30-positive peripheral T cell lymphoma. After some months, a liver biopsy and a right cervical lymph node biopsy showed a CD30-positive peripheral T cell lymphoma consistent with anaplastic lymphoma kinase-negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma. Flow cytometry and cytogenetic and molecular genetic analysis performed at diagnosis and during the patient's follow-up confirmed the presence of two clonally distinct B cell lymphomas, while the two T cell neoplasms were confirmed to be clonally related. We discuss the relationship between multiple neoplasms occurring in the same patient and the various possible risk factors involved in their development.Entities:
Keywords: Anaplastic large cell lymphoma; Cytogenetics; Diffuse large B cell lymphoma; Follicular lymphoma; Multiple malignancies; Risk factors
Year: 2009 PMID: 20309424 PMCID: PMC2766444 DOI: 10.1007/s12308-009-0041-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematop ISSN: 1865-5785 Impact factor: 0.196
Histological and immunohistochemical findings of hematologic and non-hematologic malignancies
| Month/year | Sample | Morphology | Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11/2003 | Paratracheal lymph node | Nodular proliferation of predominantly small to intermediate sized lymphoid cells with irregular to cleaved nuclei | CD20+, CD10+, bcl-6+, bcl-2+ (subset, weak) | Follicular lymphoma, grade 1 of 3 |
| 12/2005 | Bronchoscopic biopsy | Not applicable | Not performed | Squamous cell carcinoma poorly differentiated |
| 01/2006 | Left neck lymph node | Diffuse infiltrate of large atypical lymphoid cells with oval, irregular, and multilobated nuclei and scant cytoplasm (Fig. | Pax5+, bcl-2+, bcl-6−/+, cyclin D1−, 90% Ki67+, EBER− | Diffuse large B cell lymphoma |
| 02/2008 | Skin biopsy, right scalp | Dense dermal and subcutaneous infiltrate of large atypical lymphoid cells with irregular nuclei (Fig. | CD3+, CD30+, ALK1− | CD30-positive peripheral T cell lymphoma |
| 03/2008 | Retroperitoneal lymph node | Diffuse and vaguely nodular infiltrate of small atypical centrocytes (Fig. | Pax5+, bcl-6+, CD10+, bcl-2−, 5–10% Ki-67+, CD21+ follicular dendritic cell meshworks | Follicular lymphoma, grade 1 of 3 |
| 10/2008 | Right cervical lymph node and liver | Diffuse proliferation of large atypical lymphoid cells with round, oval, or occasionally indented nuclei and frequent mitoses (Fig. | CD3+, CD2+, CD30+ (strong and diffuse), ALK1−, MUM1+ and bcl-2+; CD5−, CD4−, CD8−, granzyme B−, perforin−, CD20−, CD79a−, CD10−, bcl-6−, CD56−, >90% Ki-67+, EBER− | Anaplastic large cell lymphoma, ALK negative, T-lineage |
EBER Epstein–Barr virus RNA, ALK anaplastic lymphoma kinase
Flow cytometric, cytogenetic, and molecular genetic findings of lymphomas
| Month/year | 11/2003 | 01/2006 | 03/2008 | 02/2008 | 10/2008 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis | Follicular lymphoma, grade 1 of 3 | Diffuse large B cell lymphoma | Follicular lymphoma, grade 1 of 3 | CD30-positive peripheral T cell lymphoma | Anaplastic large cell lymphoma, ALK negative, T-lineage |
| Flow cytometric findings | CD19+, CD20+, FMC7+, CD5−, CD10+/− B cells with monotypic expression of lambda immunoglobulin light chain | CD19+, CD20+, CD43+, CD5−, CD10−, CD23− B cells with monotypic expression of kappa immunoglobulin light chain | CD19+, CD20+, CD43−, CD5−, CD10+, CD23+ B cells with monotypic expression of lambda immunoglobulin light chain | Not obtained | CD3 dim+, CD7dim+, CD5−, CD43+ T cells |
| Cytogenetic findings | 49–50,XY,+X,add(1)(p36),t(2;7)(q11;q25),+7,add(12)(p13),t(14;18)(q32;q21),+mar[cp5]/49-50,idem,del(6)(q21)[cp3]/46,XY[2] (Fig. | 49,X,−Y,+X,−6,?del(8)(p11.2p21),+11,+12,hsr(12)(q24)x2,add(14)(q32),+15[cp3]/50,idem,+mar[cp3] (Fig. | FISH of paraffin-embedded tissue: | Not obtained | 45,XY,add(1)(p36),der(2)add(2)(p2?3),t(2;?6)(q31;?p21),add(3)(q11),del(5)(q1?5q3?1),der(6)t(2:6)(q31;p21),del(7)(q32),der(13;13)(q10;q10)[11] |
| Molecular genetic findings | Not obtained | Clonal IgH gene rearrangement (framework regions I [323 bp] and II [267 bp]; Fig. | Clonal IgH gene rearrangement (framework region I only [319 bp]; Fig. | Clonal TCR gene rearrangement (2 peaks in Vγ1-8 [204 and 213 bp]) | Clonal TCR gene rearrangement (2 peaks in Vγ1-8 [204 and 213 bp]) |
IgH immunoglobulin heavy chain, TCR T cell receptor
Fig. 1Cytogenetic analysis of the patient's B cell lymphomas. Cytogenetic analysis of the 2003 lymph node showing grade 1 follicular lymphoma (a) revealed a complex karyotype (arrows), with a translocation between chromosomes 14 and 18 indicating a rearrangement involving IGH and BCL2. Analysis of the 2006 lymph node with DLBCL also showed a complex karyotype (arrows), which was distinct from that of the prior follicular lymphoma (b). In particular, t(14;18) was absent. Metaphase FISH analysis revealed a BCL6 rearrangement involving chromosome 3 (not shown). For complete karyotypes, see Table 2
Fig. 2Histologic and immunohistochemical findings of the patient's B cell lymphomas. Biopsy of enlarged left neck lymph node from 2006 revealed an infiltrate of large atypical lymphoid cells with oval, irregular, and multilobated nuclei and prominent nucleoli (a). The cells effaced the nodal architecture in a diffuse pattern (b) and were positive for Pax5 (c), consistent with DLBCL. In 2008, a retroperitoneal lymph node core biopsy showed a proliferation of small lymphocytes with irregular nuclei, consistent with centrocytes (d), forming vague follicle structures (e) and staining positively for Pax5 (f). The findings were consistent with relapsed follicular lymphoma, grade 1 of 3
Fig. 4Molecular genetic studies of the patient’s B cell lymphomas. IgH gene rearrangement studies on both the 2008 lymph node showing grade 1 follicular lymphoma (a and c) and the 2006 lymph node showing DLBCL (b and d) revealed clonal B cell populations. In the 2008 case, the clonal IgH gene rearrangement was detected with PCR primers to framework region I only (a, 319 bp), whereas primers to framework region II (c) showed a polyclonal B cell population. In contrast, in the 2006 case, the clonal rearrangement was detected with primers to both framework regions I (a, 323 bp) and II (d, 267 bp), indicating that the two lymphomas arose from different primaries. Framework region III primers were polyclonal in both samples (not shown)
Fig. 3Histologic and immunohistochemical findings of the patient’s T cell lymphomas. In 2008, biopsy of an enlarged right neck lymph node showed a diffuse proliferation of large atypical lymphoid cells with round to irregular nuclei, sometimes reniform nuclei; mitotic figures were readily apparent (a). The tumor cells were positive for CD3 (b), strongly positive for CD30 (c), and negative for ALK-1 (not shown). A diagnosis of ALCL, ALK negative was made. Eight months earlier, biopsy of the patient’s 2008 scalp lesion revealed a dense dermal infiltrate of large atypical lymphoid cells with irregular nuclei (d). The infiltrate extended to involve subcutaneous tissue and was positive for CD3 (e) and CD30 (f) and negative for ALK-1 (not shown). Subsequent TCR gene rearrangement studies supported that the prior skin biopsy represented secondary cutaneous involvement by a systemic ALK-negative ALCL