| Literature DB >> 28693234 |
Yunfei Shi1, Xianghong Li1, Yuqin Song2, Lixin Zhou1, Qin Feng1, Ping Wang1, Chen Zhang2, Weiping Liu2, Yanhua Bai1, Yumei Lai1.
Abstract
Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive large B-cell lymphoma (LBCL) is a rare lymphoma subtype. The present study investigated a refractory nodal ALK-positive LBCL case in a 28-year-old Chinese male. It was initially misdiagnosed as ALK-positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma; however, the patient's lesions relapsed and spread widely following a short remission for chemotherapy and the patient succumbed to the disease 3 months' post-autologous stem cell transplantation; thus, a revision was performed. Histologically, the tumor cells exhibited a characteristic immunoblastic morphology with marked cellular pleomorphism. All lesions shared the same immunoprofiles, including granular cytoplasmic ALK staining patterns and a lack of cell lineage-associated markers, with the exception of cluster of differentiation (CD)45 and CD4. CD30 expression was revealed to be negative and CD138 staining was observed to be positive, additionally, cytokeratin was expressed aberrantly in a relapsed tumor biopsy. Fluorescence in situ hybridization studies demonstrated breakage and extra copies of the ALK gene in ≥30% of cells. Final clarification was provided by the detection of immunoglobulin κ locus (IGK) gene rearrangement in clonality studies [but notimmunoglobulin heavy locus (IGH) and immunoglobulin λ locus (IGL) genes]. This aggressive entity requires distinct modalities of standard treatment, and may be ignored owing to its rarity in routine pathology laboratories. BIOMED-2 polymerase chain reaction assays, including for IGH, IGK and IGL genes, are essential for the detection of gene rearrangement.Entities:
Keywords: B-cell lymphoma; anaplastic lymphoma kinase; clonality; cluster of differentiation 4; cytokeratin
Year: 2017 PMID: 28693234 PMCID: PMC5494706 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2017.6180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1.Lymph node biopsies reveal diffuse and sinus proliferation of large lymphocytes with immunoblastic features. (A) H&E stain; magnification, ×40. (B) H&E stain;magnification, ×400. The lymphoma cells were positive for (C) CD45, (D) CD138 and (E) epithelial membrane antigen, and they exhibited (F) granular cytoplasmic anaplastic lymphoma kinase positivity. Stains for (G) CD43 and (H) CD30 were negative. A subset of tumor cells was moderately positive for (I) CD4. (J) CytokeratinAE1/3 staining of neoplastic cells was positive in the last relapsed needle biopsy. (C and J) Immunoperoxidase stain; magnification, ×400. (D, E, F, I) Immunoperoxidase stain; magnification, ×200. (G and H) Immunoperoxidase stain; magnification, ×40. H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; CD, cluster of differentiation.
Figure 2.Representative metaphase fluorescence in situ hybridization in ALK-positive large B-cell lymphoma; magnification, ×1,000). The hybridization targets of the orange color probes and the green color probes are on opposite sides the breakpoint of the ALK gene. A two-color signal would represent a fusion signal in patients with native ALK, but they became two separated signals (one orange and one green) in this patient with ALK break-apart pattern. In addition, extra (>2) copies of the ALK gene in single cell were also observed. ALK, anaplastic lymphoma kinase.
Figure 3.Clonal IGK locus gene rearrangement with polymerase chain reaction-based clonality investigation. The peak represented by the green line demonstrates the clonal rearrangement of variable(V)κ-joining (J)κ (detected in IGK tube A). IGK, immunoglobulin κ.