| Literature DB >> 22901769 |
Abstract
Persistent polyclonal B-cell lymphocytosis (PPBL) is rare and intriguing hematological disorder predominantly reported in young to middle- aged smoking women. It is characterized by persistent moderate polyclonal B-cell lymphocytosis with circulating hallmark binucleated lymphocytes and elevated polyclonal serum IgM. Most patients have benign clinical course on long-term follow-up. Some pathologic features of PPBL may resemble malignant lymphoma, including morphology as well as frequent cytogenetic and molecular abnormalities. Significant symptomatic splenomegaly requiring splenectomy is very unusual for this disorder; therefore there is a lack of descriptions of the morphologic features of the spleen in the literature. We present here one of the first detailed descriptions of the morphologic and immunohistochemical features of the spleen from a young female with PPBL who developed massive splenomegaly during 6-year follow up. Splenectomy was performed for symptomatic relief and suspicion of malignant process. The morphological and immunohistochemical features of the spleen closely mimicked involvement by B-cell lymphoma, however there was no monotypic surface light chain restriction seen by flow cytometry and no clonal rearrangement of IgH gene was detected by molecular analysis. Evaluating a splenectomy sample in cases like this may present a diagnostic challenge to pathologists. Therefore, correlation with B cell clonality studies (by flow cytometry and molecular analysis), clinical findings and peripheral blood morphology searching for characteristic binucleated lymphocytes is essential to avoid misdiagnosing this benign process as B-cell lymphoma. We also present here a literature review on pathogenesis of PPBL. VIRTUAL SLIDES: The virtual slide(s) for this article can be found here: http://www.diagnosticpathology.diagnomx.eu/vs/5329558967545656.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22901769 PMCID: PMC3488513 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1596-7-107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
List of antibodies/ probes
| CD5 (SP19) | Cell Marque Co., | Predilute |
| CD10 (56C6) | Cell Marque Co., | Predilute |
| CD20 (L26) | Ventana, Arizona, USA | Predilute |
| CD23 (1B12) | Cell Marque Co. | Predilute |
| CD43 (L60) | Ventana, Arizona, USA | Predilute |
| Cyclin D1(SP4) | Medicorp, Montreal, Canada | 1;50 |
| BCL-2 (124) | DAKO, Mississauga, Canada | 1:40 |
| Kappa | DAKO, Mississauga, Canada | 1:20,000 |
| Lambda | DAKO, Mississauga, Canada | 1:20,000 |
| EBER (RNA probe) | Ventana, Arizona, USA | Predilute |
Figure 1Histological features of the spleen. Images of the H&E stained spleen sections at 20x (A), 100x (B) and 400x (C, D) magnification showing expansion of the white pulp nodules and significant infiltration of the red pulp by small mature lymphocytes with minimal cytologic atypia. Occasional binucleated lymphocytes are noted in the splenic sinusoids indicated by black arrows (C, D and D inset).
Figure 2Immunohistochemical features of the spleen. Only few scattered T lymphocytes are seen as highlighted by CD3 stain (A, magnification 100x). Majority of lymphocytes in the white and red pulp are CD20 positive (B, magnification 100x) and BCL-2 positive (C, magnification 200x) B cells. PCR for IgH gene rearrangement performed on spleen paraffin-embedded sections reveals polyclonal pattern with no clonal rearrangements detected (D) (Lane 1 - no DNA; Lane 2 - patient; Lane 3 - negative control; Lane 4 - positive control).