| Literature DB >> 25478033 |
Christiane Stuhlmann-Laeisz1, Ilske Oschlies1, Wolfram Klapper1.
Abstract
Lymphoproliferations associated with Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) in adult patients pose a diagnostic challenge for pathologists for several reasons. First, the EBV lymphoproliferations represent a clinically and histologically very broad spectrum ranging from self-limiting lymphoproliferations to manifest malignant lymphomas. Second, the classification of these diseases is not solely based on histopathology but rather requires a synopsis of clinical as well as pathological features. And third, a resource-efficient diagnostic procedure demands a deliberate strategy for selecting the tissue specimens that are to be tested for EBV. We describe how the clinical context and histological features may indicate to histopathologists which lymphatic tissues should be tested for the presence of EBV and how these features guide the classification. We provide recommendations as to which biopsy specimens should be investigated for EBV and which methods for detecting viral association are appropriate.Entities:
Keywords: EBER; ENBA2; LMP1; Latency type; Lymphoma
Year: 2014 PMID: 25478033 PMCID: PMC4243011 DOI: 10.1007/s12308-014-0209-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematop ISSN: 1865-5785 Impact factor: 0.196
EBV-latency types and expressed antigens
| Latency type | EBV-associated antigens |
|---|---|
| 0/I | EBER, EBNA1 |
| II (default program) | EBER, EBNA1, LMP1, LMP2B |
| III (growth program) | EBER, EBNA1-6, LMP1, LMP2A + B |
| lytic | all lytic antigens (e.g., ZEBRA) |
Spectrum of polymorphic EBV driven LPD with variable neoplastic potential
Fig. 1Histomorphology of EBV-associated lymphoproliferative diseases. a and d illustrates the features of a primary EBV infection in the oral mucosa of a child. As examples of EBV reactivation, an EBV-associated mucocutaneous ulcer in the anal mucosa in a patient treated with azathioprin for myastenia (b and e) and a lymphomatoid granulomatosis in the lung of a patient (c and f) are shown. As shared features in all lesions necrosis (arrow) and angiotropism (arrow head) are indicated. All stainings Hematoxilin and Eosin, original magnification a–c ×100, d–f ×400
EBV-positive lymphomas and latency types and their association with immunocompromised state
| Lineage | Immunocompetence of patients | Entity | Latency type |
|---|---|---|---|
| B cell | Competent | Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma | 2 |
| Endemic Burkitt Lymphoma | 0/1 | ||
| Sporadic Burkitt Lymphoma | 0/1 | ||
| EBV + DLBCL of the elderly | Variable | ||
| EBV + DLBCL associated with chronic inflammation (Pyothorax lymphoma) | Predominantly 3 | ||
| Compromised | Primary effusion lymphoma | 0/1 | |
| Plasmablastic lymphoma | 0/1 | ||
| Lymphomatoid Granulomatosis Grade 3 and DLBCL arising from the former | 3 | ||
| Monomorphic PTLDa | Variable | ||
| Lymphomas associated with HIV infectiona | Variable | ||
| Lymphoproliferative disease associated with primary immune disordersa | Variable | ||
| Other iatrogenic immunodeficiency-associated lymphoproliferative disordersa | 3 | ||
| T cell | Competent | Angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma | 0/1 or 2 |
| Extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma | 2 | ||
| Compromised | EBV-positive T cell lymphoproliferative disease of childhood and young adultsb | Variable |
aDiseases under this category are further specified according to histopathology
bThe immunodeficiency in many of these young patients is postulated but not always objectifiable
DLBCL diffuse large B cell lymphoma, PTLD posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease
Differential diagnostic of polymorphic EBV-positive lymphoproliferative disease (LPD) compared to Hodgkin Lymphoma
| Feature | Hodgkin Lymphoma | Polymorphic EBV + LPD |
|---|---|---|
| Histomorphology | Mixed cellularity infiltration with Hodgkin (−like) cells, necrosis | |
| Predominant epitheloid cells and eosinophils | Predominant plasmablasts, plasmacells, angiotropism | |
| Immunophenotype of large cells | CD30 > CD20 | CD20 > CD30 |
| Expression of EBV antigens | • EBER + cells equal to LMP1 + cells • EBER + large cells only • EBNA2 negative | • EBER + cells more than LMP1 + cells • EBER + small and large cells • EBNA2 +/− |
| Clinical scenario | Predominant immunocompetent | Predominant immunocompromised |
| Site | • Mediastinum • Nodal> > extranodal | • Extranodal> > nodal • Mucosa |
Fig. 2An EBV-associated mucocutaneous ulcer in the colonic mucosa (a Hematoxilin and Eosin). Staining pattern of EBV-encoded RNA (EBER, b) is nuclear. The protein LMP1 is expressed in the cytoplasm (c). EBNA2 protein expression is nuclear (d). Note the artificial cytoplasmic staining in the epithelium (d). The case illustrates the variability of markers being detectable. EBER usually labels the majority of EBV-infected cells, whereas LMP1 and EBNA2 if positive in the lesion stain only a subset of all EBE-positive cells. Original magnification a–d ×400
Recommendations for selecting tissue specimen and methods for EBV testing
| Lymphoma | Nodal and extranodal lymphatic tissue not presenting overt lymphoma (polymorphic LPD) | |
|---|---|---|
| Histopathological features | Clinical context | |
| Testing by EBER | Testing by EBER | Testing by EBER |
| B cell lymphomas | ||
| • Endemic Burkitt Lymhoma | • Hodgkin-like large cells and Hodgkin or Reed-Sternberg cells | • Inherited immunodeficiency |
| • Plasmablastic lymphoma | ||
| • Primary effusion lymphoma | • Posttransplantation | |
| • Pyothorax associated lymphoma | ||
| • DLBCL with histological features suspicious for EBV association | • Necrosis | • Drug induced immunocompromised state |
| • Angiotropism of blastic cells | ||
| • Any monomorphic PTLD | ||
| • Lymphomatoid granulomatosis | • Plasmablastic infiltrate | • HIV infection |
| T cell lymphomas | ||
| • AILT | ||
| • Extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma | ||
| • EBV-positive T cell lymphoproliferative disease of childhood and young adults | ||
| Testing by EBER or LMP | ||
| • Hodgkin Lymphoma | ||
| Testing by EBER, LMP1 and EBNA2 | ||
| • Differential diagnosis between Hodgkin lymphoma and PTLD | ||
PTLD posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disease, AITL angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma