1 / 39

HANDOUT 2

HANDOUT 2. B-CELL INFILTRATES. CASE 6: ADDITIONAL FINDINGS. B-cells negative with antibodies to: CD5 CD10 CD23 BCL-6 cyclin D1. DIAGNOSIS. PRIMARY CUTANEOUS MARGINAL ZONE LYMPHOMA Synonyms: extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma (WHO) cutaneous immunocytoma (EORTC)

Download Presentation

HANDOUT 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HANDOUT 2 B-CELL INFILTRATES

  2. CASE 6: ADDITIONAL FINDINGS • B-cells negative with antibodies to: • CD5 • CD10 • CD23 • BCL-6 • cyclin D1

  3. DIAGNOSIS • PRIMARY CUTANEOUS MARGINAL ZONE LYMPHOMA • Synonyms: • extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma (WHO) • cutaneous immunocytoma (EORTC) • cutaneous follicular hyperplasia with monotypic plasma cells (Schmid et al Am J Surg Pathol 1995; 19: 12)

  4. CLINICAL Solitary or multiple tumours Good response to XRT; CR common Frequently relapse Excellent prognosis; 5-year survival >95%

  5. PCMZL and Borrelia burgdorferi • A proportion of PCMZL associated with B. burgdorferi infection. • Possibly only in some geographic locations; • Highlands of Scotland +ve • Austria (Graz/Vienna) +ve • USA -ve • Tawain -ve

  6. PATHOLOGY • Diffuse or periadnexal/perivascular infiltrate • Reactive germinal centres common • Interfollicular/diffuse neoplastic infiltrate • marginal zone cells • small lymphocytes • plasmacytoid/plasma cells • Reactive cells • histiocytes • Eosinphils

  7. Immunophenotype • CD20, bcl-2 positive • CD5, CD10, CD23, bcl-6, cyclinD1 negative • CD43 +/- • Genetics • Trisomy 3 in some • t(11;18) not found (c.f. gastric & bronchial MZL)

  8. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS • Other small B-cell lymphomas • Cutaneous B-cell pseudolymphoma

  9. FURTHER READING Rijlaarsdam et al. Histopathology 1993; 23: 117 Bailey et al. Am J Surg Pathol 1996; 20: 1011 Cerroni et al. Am J Surg Pathol 1997; 21: 1307 Goodlad et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2000; 24: 1279 Wood et al. J Cutan Pathol 2001; 28: 502 Ye et al. Blood 2003; 102: 1012 Chunmei et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2003; 27: 1061

  10. CASE 7: ADDITIONAL FINDINGS • Stage IE on staging: bone marrow, CT chest & abdomen • t(14;18) not found

  11. DIAGNOSIS • PRIMARY CUTANEOUS FOLLICLE CENTRE CELL LYMPHOMA • (EORTC: although most cases included in this category display pure diffuse large cell morphology) • Synonyms: • Grade 3 follicular lymphoma & diffuse large B-cell lymphoma • (WHO: classifying lesion in this way may result in over-treatment)

  12. CLINICAL Solitary plaques, tumours, nodules Head & neck (scalp) Respond to local XRT: CR usual Frequent relapse Excellent prognosis: 5-year survival ~100%

  13. PATHOLOGY • As for nodal follicular lymphoma except: • Higher proportion of grade 3 lesions +/- DLBCL • Lower incidence of bcl-2 expression (0-60%) • t(14;18) rarely found

  14. PRIMARY CUTANEOUS FOLLICULAR LYMPHOMA High relapse rate but excellent survival

  15. COMPARISON OF OUTCOME WITH STAGE I NODAL FL: Disease status at end of follow-up 15/15 PCFL in complete remission at end of follow-up period compared with only 49/87 stage I nodal FL (p<0.01: c2). Goodlad et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2002

  16. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS • Other small B-cell lymphomas • Cutaneous B-cell pseudolymphoma

  17. FURTHER READING Garcia et al. Am J Surg Pathol 1986; 10: 454 Yang et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2000; 24: 694 Cerroni et al. Blood 2000: 95; 3922 Franco et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2001; 25: 875 Aguilera et al. Mod Pathol 2001; 14: 828 Goodlad et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2002; 26: 733

  18. CASE 8: ADDITIONAL FINDINGS Confined to skin on staging CD5, CD23, cyclin D1 negative

  19. DIAGNOSIS LARGE B-CELL LYMPHOMA OF THE LEG (EORTC) Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (WHO)

  20. DIFFUSE LARGE B-CELL LYMPHOMA ARISING PRIMARILY IN THE SKIN • Probably two subtypes • Currently best classified as per EORTC on basis of anatomic location: • Primary cutaneous follicle centre cell lymphoma • This includes cases with true follicular morphology as treatment and outcome are the same • 2. Large B-cell lymphoma of the leg

  21. 1.0 Upper body (n=17) 0.8 0.6 Cumulative DSS Lower body (n=13) 0.4 0.2 [p=0.0047] 0.0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 Months Primary cutaneous DLBCL on upper body has significantly better prognosis than primary cutaneous B-cell lymphoma on the leg Goodlad et al. Am J Surg Pathol; In press

  22. COMPARED TO PCFCCL/LBCL ON UPPER BODY, LARGE B-CELL LYMPHOMA OF THE LEG: • More often female • Older age • More often multiple lesions • Significantly poorer prognosis (5YS <60% c.f. >95% • Significantly higher incidence of bcl-2 expression (~100%) • Less frequent CD10/bcl-6 expression • More often large round cells (centroblasts/immunoblasts) than large cleaved cells • t(14;18) rare at either site

  23. N.B. standard treatment for nodal DLBCL is aggressive CTX (anthracycline based); this would be overtreatment for majority of primary cutaneous DLBCL irrespective of location

  24. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS • CTCL, large cell types, non-epidermotropic • T/NK cell lymphomas

  25. REFERENCES Vermeer et al. Arch Dermatol 1996 Geelen et al. J Clin Oncol 1998; 16: 2080 Fernandez-Vazquez et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2001; 25: 307 Grange et al. J Clin Oncol 2001; 19: 3602 Fink-Puches et al. Blood 2002; 99: 800 Goodlad et al. Am J Surg Pathol; In press

  26. CASE 9: ADDITIONAL FINDINGS Polyclonal kappa/lambda Polyclonal IgH re-arrangement

  27. DIAGNOSIS CUTANEOUS B-CELL PSEUDOLYMPHOMA Synonyms: lymphocytoma (benigna) cutis Spiegler-Fendt sarcoid B-cutaneous lymphoid hyperplasia

  28. CUTANEOUS B-CELL PSEUDOLYMPHOMA • Cutaneous infiltrate histologically simulating CBCL • Cliincally may also mimic lymphoma • solitary red nodule/plaque (85-90%) • generalised/multifocal lesions (10-15%)

  29. AETIOLOGY • Idiopathic • Borrelia burgdorferi • Tattoo (red) • Injection sites • Acupuncture • Trauma • Vaccination • Gold piercing earrings • COMMON THEME IS REACTION TO ANTIGEN

  30. PATHOLOGY • Diffuse or nodular infiltrate (Grenz zone) • Reactive polytypic B-cells • Often in nodules +/- germinal centres • T-cell rich areas in between • Prominent vasculature • Macrophages, plasma cells, eosinophils • PRESERVED IMMUNOARCHITECTURE

  31. B-CLH: IMMUNOARCHITECTURE • T-cell areas • CD3 + • few B-cells • B-cell nodules • CD20, CD23

  32. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS: CUTANEOUS INFILTRATES RICH IN SMALL B-CELLS • B-cell pseudolymphoma • Marginal zone lymhpoma • Follicular lymphoma • (Secondary involvement by: • B-CLL • Mantle cell lymphoma)

  33. NATURE OF LYMPHOID FOLLICLES? • REACTIVE FOLLICLES • Found in all three but rare in FL • Appearance as at other sites • Zonation • Tingible body macrophages • Mitotic figures • Well formed mantles • Uniform CD10/bcl-6 expression by GCCs • Bcl-2 negative

  34. 2. COLONISED FOLLICLES • Typical of MZL • Distinct compartments • Reactive GCC: CD10/bcl-6 +ve, bcl-2 -ve • Neoplastic MZ cells: CD10/bcl-6 -ve, bcl-2 +ve • 3. NEOPLASTIC FOLLICLES • Only seen in FL • Same as in nodal FL • No zonation • Monotonous appearance • Few TBMs, MFs (NB grade 3 FL) • Absent/poorly formed mantles • Uniform CD10/bcl-6 staining • Bcl-2 usually +ve (but significant % -ve cases)

  35. NATURE OF INTERFOLLICULAR INFILTRATE? • B-CELL PSEUDOLYMPHOMA • T-cells >> B-cells • NO confluent sheets of B-cells • Polytypic light chain immunohistochemistry • Epidermal changes • e.g. parakeratosis, atrophy, acanthosis, spongiosis • 2. MARGINAL ZONE LYMPHOMA • Clusters/sheets of marginal zone cells • >75% B-cells • Light chain restriction • Aberrant CD43 expression

  36. 3. FOLLICULAR LYMPHOMA • Clusters of CD10/bcl-6+ve B-cells • Useful when bcl-2 –ve • CD10 may be down-regulated

  37. POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION • Can be helpful but use limited by: • Most FL are t(14;18) negative • False negatives relatively common • False positive results when very few B-cells • Some CBCPL are monoclonal • Some CBCPL progress to overt lymphoma

  38. THE MOST IMPORTANT DECISION: SHOULD THE PATIENT BE STAGED?

  39. FURTHER READING Ritter et al J Cutan Pathol 1994; 21: 481 Baldassano et al. Am J Surg Pathol 1999; 23: 88 de Leval et al. Am J Surg Pathol 2001; 25: 732 Nihal et al. Hum Pathol 2003; 34: 617

More Related