| Literature DB >> 24765169 |
Liying Zhang1, Lanxiang Gao1, Guang Liu1, Luping Wang1, Chunwei Xu1, Lin Li1, Yuwang Tian1, Huiru Feng2, Zhe Guo2.
Abstract
Primary thyroid lymphomas are rare, and the majority are B-cell lymphoma. Primary Burkitt's lymphoma (BL) of the thyroid is much less common than the other types of lymphoma. The current study presents the case of an eight-year-old male with a mass in the right lobe of the thyroid, which was detected by B-ultrasound. The patient was diagnosed with BL by immunohistochemistry, fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis of MYC (8q24) and immunoglobulin rearrangement assays. Furthermore, subsequent positron emission tomography-computed tomography scans revealed no abnormal metabolites in the left lobe of the thyroid or in other parts of the body following surgery. The patient underwent alternate R-B-NHL-BFM-90-A and R-B-NHL-BFM-90-B treatment for four cycles each following the thyroidectomy. The patient is well and remains free of disease recurrence following almost four years follow-up. The present study discusses this rare case of primary BL of the thyroid and presents a review of the literature. This case report provides evidence that the immediate diagnosis and treatment of primary Burkitt's lymphoma of the thyroid is likely to improve patient outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Burkitt’s lymphoma; Epstein-Barr virus; fluorescence in situ hybridization; immunoglobulin rearrangement assay; thyroid
Year: 2014 PMID: 24765169 PMCID: PMC3997736 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.1941
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1B-ultrasound scan. A mass was detected in the thyroid tissue with (A) the short axis measuring 31.2×26.2 mm and (B) the long axis measuring 39.9×20.3 mm. (C) The surrounding lymph nodes were normal and the largest measured 9.6×2.9 mm in size.
Figure 2Positron emission tomography-computed tomography following thyroidectomy showing no hypermetabolic nodes in (A) the cervical region and (B) other parts of the body.
Figure 3Histopathological observations with hematoxylin and eosin staining. (A) Low magnification showing a diffuse infiltration of atypical lymphoid cells in the thyroid gland (magnification, ×200) and (B) the ‘starry sky’ histology pattern within the tumor tissues (magnification, ×200). (C) Higher magnification showing benign tissue cells engulfing apoptotic bodies (magnification, ×400). (D) Lack of morphological features of Hashimoto’s thyroiditis in the background thyroid gland, including infiltrating lymphocytes, lymphoid follicle formation, stromal fibrosis, eosinophilic change of the epithelial cells or squamous metaplasia (magnification, ×200). (E and F) Reactive lymphoid tissue hyperplasia in the two lymph nodes surrounding the tumor, but not in the neoplastic lesions (magnification, ×100). (G–I) Immunohistochemical staining for the expression of CD20, CD10 and Ki-67 in the neoplastic cells, observed using anti-CD20, anti-CD10 and Ki-67 antibodies with slight hematoxylin counterstain. The positive immunohistochemical signals are brown-yellow, and strong and diffuse (G) anti-CD20 and (H) anti-CD10 antibody immunoreactivity and (I) a high Ki-67 proliferation index (>95%) are apparent in the neoplastic cells (magnification, ×400). (J and K) EBER in situ hybridization is (J) negative in the neoplastic cells and (K) positive in the nasopharyngeal carcinoma tissue, which was used as a positive control (EBER digoxin-labeled probe; magnification, ×400). (L) Fluorescence in situ hybridization of the MYC (8q24) gene identifying chromosomal translocation in the neoplastic cells (DAPI; magnification, ×1,000). In total, ~90% of the neoplastic cells exhibited visible red and green signal separation, with one yellow fusion signal and two separated red and green signals observed in the majority of the neoplastic cells. (C-MYC break-apart probe). CD, cluster of differentiation; EBER, Epstein-Barr virus-encoded small RNA.
Primary antibodies used for immunohistochemical staining.
| Antibody | Clone | Dilution | Corporation purchased from |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD20 | L-26 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| CD10 | 56C6 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| CD3 | PS1 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| CD5 | SP19 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| CD43 | MT1 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| CD38 | SPC32 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| TDT | SEN28 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| Ki-67 | K-2 | 1:100 | Zymed Laboratories, Inc. |
| Bcl-2 | C-2 | 1:100 | Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. |
| Bcl-6 | N-3 | 1:100 | Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. |
CD, cluster of differentiation; TDT, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase; Bcl, B-cell lymphoma.
Figure 4Immunoglobulin gene rearrangement assays. The results showed that IgH-A and -B and IgK-B were positive for gene rearrangements, whereas IgH-D, IgK-A and IgL were negative for gene rearrangements (VH − FR1 + JH consensus for IgH-A; VH − FR2 + JH consensus for IgH-B; DH + JH consensus for IgH-D; Vκ + Jκ for IgK-A; Vκ − Kde and intron Kde for IgK-B; and Vλ + Jλ for IgL; Biomed-2 PCR Kit). IG, immunoglobulin.
Details of the R-B-NHL-BFM-90 A and R-B-NHL-BFM-90 B regimens.
| Regimen | Dosage, mg/m2 | Administration | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| R-B-NHL-BFM-90 A | |||
| Rituximab | 375 | i.v. | Prior to D1 |
| Dexamethasone | 10 | po/i.v. | D1–5 |
| Isophosphamide | 800 | i.v. | D1–5 |
| Methotrexate | 500 | 24 h i.v. | D1 |
| Adriamycin | 150 | i.v. (every 12 h) | D4 and 5 |
| Etoposide | 100 | 1 h i.v. | D4 and 5 |
| R-B-NHL-BFM-90 B | |||
| Dexamethasone | 10 | po/i.v. | D1–5 |
| Cyclophosphamide | 200 | i.v. | D1–5 |
| Methotrexate | 500 | 24 h i.v. | D1 |
| Adriamycin | 25 | i.v. | D4 and 5 |
i.v., intravenous; po, orally; D, day.