| Literature DB >> 20309427 |
Sylvia Höller, Heike Horn, Andreas Lohr, Uwe Mäder, Tiemo Katzenberger, Jörg Kalla, Heinz-Wolfram Bernd, Philip Went, M Michaela Ott, Hans Konrad Müller-Hermelink, Andreas Rosenwald, German Ott.
Abstract
We analyzed morphological and immunohistochemical features in 174 aggressive B-cell lymphomas of nodal and extranodal origin. Morphological features included presence or absence of a follicular component and cytologic criteria according to the Kiel classification, whereas immunohistochemical studies included expression of CD10, BCL-2, BCL-6, IRF4/MUM1, HLA-DR, p53, Ki-67 and the assessment of plasmacytoid differentiation. Patients were treated with a CHOP-like regimen. While the presence or absence of either CD10, BCL-6 and IRF4/MUM1 reactivity or plasmacytoid differentiation did not identify particular cytomorphologic or site-specific subtypes, we found that expression of CD10 and BCL-6, and a low reactivity for IRF4/MUM1 were favourable prognostic indicators. In contrast, BCL-2 expression and presence of a monotypic cytoplasmic immunoglobulin expression was associated with an unfavourable prognosis in univariate analyses. Meta-analysis of these data resulted in the development of a cumulative immunohistochemical outcome predictor score (CIOPS) enabling the recognition of four distinct prognostic groups. Multivariate analysis proved this score to be independent of the international prognostic index. Such a cumulative immunohistochemical scoring approach might provide a valuable alternative in the recognition of defined risk types of aggressive B-cell lymphomas.Entities:
Keywords: Aggressive B-cell lymphoma; Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; Immunohistochemistry; Prognosis
Year: 2009 PMID: 20309427 PMCID: PMC2798934 DOI: 10.1007/s12308-009-0044-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematop ISSN: 1865-5785 Impact factor: 0.196
Major clinical features of the patient cohort
| Clinical parameter | No. of patients |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 92 |
| Female | 81 |
| N/A | 1 |
| Age (y) | |
| Median (range) | 63 (8–94) |
| No more than 60 | 73 |
| More than 60 | 100 |
| N/A | 1 |
| Ann Arbor stage | |
| I | 26 |
| II | 29 |
| III | 35 |
| IV | 31 |
| N/A | 53 |
| LDH | |
| Normal | 42 |
| High | 74 |
| N/A | 58 |
| IPI group | |
| Low (0–1) | 38 |
| Intermediate (2–3) | 37 |
| High (4–5) | 13 |
| Not classified | 86 |
| B Symptoms | |
| Yes | 49 |
| No | 70 |
| N/A | 55 |
| Median follow-up (range) | 33 months (1–163) |
Fig. 1Stratification of the tumors according to the Hans algorithm was predictive of survival and showed a GC differentiation to represent a favourable parameter in the Kaplan-Meier model
Fig. 2Overall survival of all 145 patients stratified according to the CIOPS score with a dramatic difference in survival between cases without risk factors (score null), cases with 1–2 adverse prognostic factors, cases with 3–4 adverse prognostic factors, and cases with a score of five
Overview of the distribution of the immunophenotypes in the different CIOPS subgroups
| CIOPS group | CIOPS-Score | number of cases | nonGCB/GCB | CD10 positive/ negative | BCL-6 positive/ negative | cIg positive/ negative | BCL-2 positive/ negative | MUM1p positive/ negative |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0 | 14 | 0/14 | 14/0 (100/0%) | 14/0 (100/0%) | 0/14 (0/100%) | 0/14 (0/100%) | 0/14 (0/100%) |
| 2 | 1 | 42 | 5/37 | 28/14 (67/33%) | 40/0 | 4/38 (10/90%) | 24/18 (57/43%) | 2/40 (5/95%) |
| 2 | 31 | 7/24 | 11/20 (55/45%) | 29/2 (94/6%) | 13/18 (42/48%) | 24/7 (77/23%) | 3/28 (10/90%) | |
| 3 | 3 | 24 | 14/10 | 4/20 (20/80%) | 18/6 (75/25%) | 14/10 (58/42%) | 20/4 (83/17%) | 12/12 (50/50%) |
| 4 | 26 | 26/0 | 0/26 (0/100%) | 15/11 (58/42%) | 23/3 (88/12%) | 24/2 (92/8%) | 20/6 (77/23%) | |
| 4 | 5 | 8 | 8/0 | 0/8 (0/100%) | 0/8 (0/100%) | 8/0 (100/0%) | 8/0 (100/0%) | 8/0 (100/0%) |