| Literature DB >> 27468353 |
Qinglong Hu1, Yizhuo Zhang2, Xiaoyan Zhang3, Kai Fu3.
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori)-associated gastritis is one of the most common infectious diseases in the United States, China and worldwide. Gastric mucosa-associated tissue lymphoma (MALT lymphoma) is a rare mature B-cell neoplasm associated with H. pylori infection that is curable by antibiotics therapy alone. The pathological diagnosis of gastric MALT lymphoma can be reached by histological examination, immunohistochemical staining and B-cell clonality analysis. H. pylori eradication is the choice of therapy for early-stage gastric MALT lymphoma. High response rates and long-term survival have been reported in refractory and localized diseases treated with low-dose radiation therapy. Systemic chemotherapy is recommended for advanced-stage gastric MALT lymphoma and cases with large B-cell lymphoma transformation. Recent advances in the pathological diagnosis and management of gastric MALT lymphoma are reviewed in this article.Entities:
Keywords: Gastric MALT; Helicobacter pylori
Year: 2016 PMID: 27468353 PMCID: PMC4962427 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-016-0068-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Wotherspoon scale of confidence of histological diagnosis of lymphoma [15]
| Grade | Description | Histological features |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Normal | Scattered plasma cells in the lamina propria. No lymphoid follicles. |
| 1 | Chronic active gastritis | Small clusters of lymphocytes in the lamina propria. No lymphoid follicles. No LELs. |
| 2 | Chronic active gastritis with florid lymphoid follicle formation | Prominent lymphoid follicles with surrounding mantle zone and plasma cells. |
| 3 | Suspicious lymphoid infiltrate, probably reactive | Lymphoid follicles surrounded by CCL cells that infiltrate diffusely into the lamina propria and occasionally into the epithelium. |
| 4 | Suspicious lymphoid infiltrate, probably lymphoma | Lymphoid follicles surrounded by CCL cells that infiltrate diffusely into the lamina propria and into the epithelium in small groups. |
| 5 | Low-grade B-cell lymphoma of MALT | Presence of dense diffuse infiltrate of CCL cells in the lamina propria with prominent lymphoepithelial lesions. |
CCL cells centrocyte-like cells (or marginal zone cells), LEL lymphoepithelial lesion
Fig. 1Gastric biopsy showing intra-lamina small lymphocyte infiltrate with monotonous features (a, original magnification 100 X); foci of lymphoepithelial lesion (b, H&E, original magnification 200 X); CD20 immunostaining shows sheets of CD20+ small B-cells (c, original magnification 200 X); aberrant expression of CD43 is also detected (d, original magnification 200X). A repeat gastric biopsy 6 months after H. pylori eradication showed scattered intra-lamina infiltrates of small lymphocytes, plasma cells and a few small loose lymphoid aggregates, indicating complete remission (e, H&E, original magnification 100 X; f, 200 X)
Fig. 2Gastric biopsy shows H. pylori-associated chronic active gastritis with scattered small lymphocytes and plasma cells; a lymphoid follicle with a reactive germinal center and a slightly expanded marginal zone (a, H&E, original magnification 100 X). Immunostaining of H. pylori shows intra-foveolar bacteria with curving configuration, characteristic of H. pylori (b, immunohistochemical stain of H. pylori, original magnificantion 1000 X)
Modified Ann Arbor (Musshoff) staging [25]
| Modified Ann Arbor system | Extension of organ involvement by lymphoma |
|---|---|
| I1E | Mucosa, submucosa involvement |
| I2E | Muscularis propria, serosa, neighboring organs |
| II1E | Regional abdominal lymph nodes (compartment I + II) |
| II2E | Intra-abdominal distant lymph nodes |
| IIIE | Extra-abdominal lymph nodes |
| IV | Diffuse or disseminated infiltration of distant or extra-gastrointestinal organs, bone marrow |
First-Line Regimens for Helicobacter pylori Eradication (ACG Guideline 2007) [7]
| Regimen | Duration (days) | Eradication Rates | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Triple therapy: ∗Standard dose PPI b.i.d. (esomeprazole is q.d.), clarithromycin 500 mg b.i.d., amoxicillin 1,000 mg b.i.d. | 10–14 | 70–85 % | Consider in non-penicillin-allergic patients who have not previously received a macrolide |
| Triple therapy (penicillin allergic): Standard dose PPI b.i.d., clarithromycin 500 mg b.i.d., metronidazole 500 mg b.i.d. | 10–14 | 70–85 % | Consider in penicillin-allergic patients who have not previously received a macrolide or are unable to tolerate bismuth quadruple therapy |
| Bismuth therapy: Bismuth subsalicylate 525 mg p.o. q.i.d. metronidazole 250 mg p.o. q.i.d., tetracycline 500 mg p.o. q.i.d., ranitidine 150 mg p.o. b.i.d. or standard dose PPI q.d. to b.i.d. | 10–14 | 75–90 % | Consider in penicillin-allergic patients |
| Sequential therapy: PPI + amoxicillin 1 g b.i.d. ×5 followed by: PPI, clarithromycin 500 mg, tinidazole 500 mg b.i.d. ×5 | 10 |
| Requires validation in North America |
Note: The above recommended treatments are not all FDA approved. The FDA-approved regimens are as follows:
Bismuth 525 mg q.i.d. + metronidazole 250 mg q.i.d. + tetracycline 500 mg q.i.d. × 2 weeks + H2RA as directed × 4 weeks
Lansoprazole 30 mg b.i.d. + clarithromycin 500 mg b.i.d. + amoxicillin 1 g b.i.d. × 10 days
Omeprazole 20 mg b.i.d. + clarithromycin 500 mg b.i.d. + amoxicillin 1 g b.i.d. × 10 days
Esomeprazole 40 mg q.d. + clarithromycin 500 mg b.i.d. + amoxicillin 1 g b.i.d. × 10 days
Rabeprazole 20 mg b.i.d. + clarithromycin 500 mg b.i.d. + amoxicillin 1 g b.i.d. × 7 days
ACG American College of Gastroenterology, PPI proton pump inhibitor, p.o. orally, q.d. daily, b.i.d. twice daily, t.i.d. three times daily, q.i.d. four times daily
∗ Standard dosages for PPIs are as follows: lansoprazole 30 mg p.o., omeprazole 20 mg p.o., pantoprazole 40 mg p.o., rabeprazole 20 mg p.o., esomeprazole 40 mg p.o
GELA grading system for post-treatment evaluation of gastric MALT lymphoma [35]
| GELA category | Histological features | Clinical category |
|---|---|---|
| Complete histological response (CR) | Total disappearance of lymphoid infiltrate with only scattered small lymphocytes and plasma cells. Regressive stromal changes with fibrosis and separation of glands can be observed. | Complete remission |
| Probable minimal residual disease (pMRD) | Small lymphoid aggregates present, stromal regressive changes are usually present. | Complete remission |
| Responding residual disease (rRD) | Overt residual lymphoma with a nodular or diffuse infiltrate of neoplastic B-cells but with clear evidence of regressive stromal changes characterized by fine fibrosis and an “empty lamina propria.” | Partial remission |
| No change (NC) | Persistence of overt lymphoma identical to that observed at diagnosis with no morphological features to suggest response to treatment (such as stromal fibrosis). | Stable or progressive disease |
GELA Groupe d’Etude des Lymphomes de l’Adult, MALT mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue