BACKGROUND: CD30 (Ki-1) positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) has been only rarely described in HIV-positive patients. METHODS: The clinicopathologic features of eight ALCLs occurring in four AIDS and four HIV-positive patients were investigated. The phenotype of each neoplasm was determined by immunohistochemical methods. In three cases fresh tissue was available for molecular analysis. RESULTS: The ALCLs are a clinically heterogeneous group of T (4), B (1) and indeterminate (3) cell malignant lymphomas which presented in the skin (4), liver (1), lung (1), nasal cavity (1; also with bone marrow involvement) and peritoneal fluid (1). While most of the patients had aggressive disease, dying in a median of three months, two patients had either localized or regressing skin lesions. Molecular studies showed that two ALCLs, one of B cell and one of indeterminate cell lineage, contained clonal Epstein-Barr virus sequences. None of the ALCLs examined contained evidence of HTLV-1 or HIV integration nor did they exhibit c-myc or bcl-2 proto-oncogene rearrangements. No mutations or deletions of the p53 tumor suppressor gene were identified in the three cases studied. CONCLUSIONS: HIV-related ALCL represents a clinically heterogeneous group of T cell, B cell and null cell malignant lymphomas, distinct from the previously described categories of AIDS-associated NHL, that may expand the spectrum of lymphoid neoplasms associated with HIV-infection. Identification and investigation of other cases of HIV-associated ALCL is important to determine the nature of the relationship between HIV infection and the development of ALCL.
BACKGROUND:CD30 (Ki-1) positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) has been only rarely described in HIV-positivepatients. METHODS: The clinicopathologic features of eight ALCLs occurring in four AIDS and four HIV-positivepatients were investigated. The phenotype of each neoplasm was determined by immunohistochemical methods. In three cases fresh tissue was available for molecular analysis. RESULTS: The ALCLs are a clinically heterogeneous group of T (4), B (1) and indeterminate (3) cell malignant lymphomas which presented in the skin (4), liver (1), lung (1), nasal cavity (1; also with bone marrow involvement) and peritoneal fluid (1). While most of the patients had aggressive disease, dying in a median of three months, two patients had either localized or regressing skin lesions. Molecular studies showed that two ALCLs, one of B cell and one of indeterminate cell lineage, contained clonal Epstein-Barr virus sequences. None of the ALCLs examined contained evidence of HTLV-1 or HIV integration nor did they exhibit c-myc or bcl-2 proto-oncogene rearrangements. No mutations or deletions of the p53tumor suppressor gene were identified in the three cases studied. CONCLUSIONS: HIV-related ALCL represents a clinically heterogeneous group of T cell, B cell and null cell malignant lymphomas, distinct from the previously described categories of AIDS-associated NHL, that may expand the spectrum of lymphoid neoplasms associated with HIV-infection. Identification and investigation of other cases of HIV-associated ALCL is important to determine the nature of the relationship between HIV infection and the development of ALCL.
Authors: S Muralidhar; A M Pumfery; M Hassani; M R Sadaie; M Kishishita; J N Brady; J Doniger; P Medveczky; L J Rosenthal Journal: J Virol Date: 1998-06 Impact factor: 5.103
Authors: Min Jung Koh; Mwanasha H Merrill; Min Ji Koh; Robert Stuver; Carolyn D Alonso; Francine M Foss; Angel M Mayor; John Gill; Marta Epeldegui; Edward Cachay; Jennifer E Thorne; Michael J Silverberg; Michael A Horberg; Keri N Althoff; Ank E Nijhawan; Kathleen A McGinnis; Jennifer S Lee; Charles S Rabkin; Sonia Napravnik; Jun Li; Jessica L Castilho; Changyu Shen; Salvia Jain Journal: Blood Adv Date: 2022-03-08