Background: The histopathologic features characterizing the involvement of the bone marrow (BM) in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) have not been systematically analyzed to date.Objectives: The aim of this study was to assess morphologic and immunohistochemical characteristics of BM involvement in SLE.Patients and methods: Clinical and serological data of 40 SLE patients with unexplained cytopenias were studied. Ten patients with myelodysplasia of refractory anemia (RA) were used as controls. BM aspiration, BM biopsy (BMB), and immunohistochemistry were carried out in patients and controls. BM fibrosis, BM necrosis, stromal edema, and abnormal localization of immature precursors (ALIP) were assessed according to standard criteria.Results: Dyserythropoiesis and megakaryocytic atypias were uniform findings in SLE patients. The disruption of the normal BM architecture was a predominant SLE BM feature affecting cells of all three hemopoietic lineages, with both erythroid and megakaryocytic precursors tending to assume paratrabecular locations and ALIP aggregates being present in 27 cases. In addition, BM was hypocellular in 23 cases. BM necrotic alterations were evident in 90% of the cases. The density of reticulin content was generally increased. Vascular changes including dilatation of sinuses were manifest and were associated with the presence of necrotic alterations (P 5 0.008). Hemoglobin levels correlated inversely with the presence of ALIP (P 5 0.016). Upon comparing BMB features between SLE and RA controls there were striking similarities.Conclusions: BMB in patients with SLE and unexplained cytopenias presents a variety of histopathologic findings including BM necrosis, stromal alterations, hypocellularity, dyspoiesis, and distortion of normal BM architecture, characterized primarily by the presence of ALIP aggregates. Am. J. Hematol. 81:590-597, 2006. V V C 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Summary Background Fewer than 5% of cases of mycosis fungoides (MF) present with a cytotoxic/suppressor CD8+ phenotype which, despite immunophenotypic similarities with CD8+ aggressive lymphomas, is regarded as a phenotypic variant of MF. Poikilodermatous MF showing a CD8+ phenotype has been reported to have a nonaggressive clinical behaviour and a good response to psoralen plus ultraviolet A treatment. Objectives To perform a retrospective study of CD8+ MF cases diagnosed in the skin lymphoma clinic of Andreas Sygros Hospital. Methods We analysed the clinical characteristics, the immunophenotypic and molecular indices, as well as the clinical course of these patients. Results Seven cases of CD8+ MF (6·5% of all cases of cutaneous T‐cell lymphoma) were diagnosed during 2002–2007. One of seven patients had stage IA, five stage IB and one stage IIB disease. Clinical characteristics were variable: four of seven patients presented with poikilodermatous plaques (in one of them lesions of lymphomatoid papulosis with CD8+ phenotype coexisted), one patient with classic MF, one with plantar MF and one with follicular MF. The time period between disease onset and diagnosis was long for most patients (up to 33 years). All patients received the recommended treatment according to TNM staging. Five of seven patients had complete remission, one partial response and one stable disease. Conclusions Special clinical characteristics, such as hyperpigmentation and poikiloderma, are often noted in CD8+ MF cases. In our series CD8+ MF presented with a long‐standing disease and indolent course suggesting that CD8+ cytotoxic immunophenotype may represent a marker of mild biological behaviour.
We analyzed 42 splenic marginal-zone lymphoma (SMZL) cases diagnosed on splenectomy specimens after established World Health Organization criteria. A predominantly nodular growth pattern was observed in 24 cases; the remainder showed predominantly (11/42) or exclusively (7/42) diffuse infiltration. Twenty-one cases showed the "classic" biphasic appearance; 13 cases exhibited marginal-zone morphology; finally, 8 cases were composed predominantly of small cells. CD21 and CD35 were expressed by 12/42 and 17/38 cases, respectively. DBA.44 was detected in 24/42 cases. Seventeen of 37 cases were surface IgD (SIgD)-positive. Twenty-one of 22 analyzed cases were SIgM-positive (12/21 coexpressed SIgD). Five of 37 cases were SIgG-positive. CD27 staining was observed in 21/35 cases; 7/18 CD27-positive cases coexpressed SIgD; 7/14 CD27-negative cases were SIgD-positive. Forty IGHV-D-J rearrangements were amplified in 34/42 cases: the IGHV4-34 gene predominated, followed by IGHV1-2. Using the 98% homology cut-off, 25/40 (62.5%) IGHV sequences were considered as "mutated": 10/11 cases with monomorphous, marginal-zone morphology were IGHV-mutated; in contrast, 4/6 cases with monomorphous, small-cell morphology were IGHV-unmutated. Five of 7 cases expressing IGHV1 subgroup genes had biphasic morphology, whereas 6/9 IGHV3-expressing cases had monomorphous, marginal-zone morphology. Most IGHV-mutated cases (14/20; 70%) were SIgD-negative; in contrast, 8/11 IGHV-unmutated cases expressed SIgD. CD27 was detected in 10/17 IGHV-mutated and 6/10 IGHV-unmutated cases. Seven of 11 CD27-negative cases were IGHV-mutated; 5/7 CD27-negative/IGHV-mutated cases expressed DBA.44. These results confirm the considerable histologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular heterogeneity of SMZL and indicate an origin from the diverse resident B-cell populations of the normal SMZ.
The study of immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangements in multiple myeloma has revealed extensive divergence from the germline sequences, but no intraclonal diversity with disease evolution. Our study investigated the state of the rearranged kappa light chain variable region (V kappa) gene segments as well as abortive V kappa family gene usage in cases of multiple myeloma expressing lambda light chain. We studied 11 cases of kappa and five cases of lambda light chain-expressing multiple myeloma. Total cellular RNA was extracted from the bone marrow of patients with overt disease and subjected to reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis to amplify clonally rearranged variable region sequences. Direct nucleotide sequencing by the dideoxy-chain termination method was performed on the RT-PCR products. We did not observe preferential usage of certain V kappa gene families. Mutation frequencies of the V kappa segments varied in number. In the majority of cases, extensive somatic mutations occurred within the complementarity determining regions (CDRs) of V kappa, whereas only a limited degree of divergence from the germline was observed in others. In all cases studied. replacement mutations tended to cluster in the CDRs, a finding compatible with an antigen-driven somatic hypermutation process. In 3/5 cases of lambda light-chain expressing multiple myeloma, abortively rearranged V kappa gene segments were amplified from genomic DNA; in two cases a non-templated nucleotide insertion rendering the V kappa sequences out-of-frame was observed, and in the third a stop codon was identified in the open reading frame of the V kappa sequence. Somatic mutations were observed in all cases of abortive V kappa genes studied; however, their distribution does not suggest selection by antigen. We conclude that somatic mutations observed in the V kappa regions of myeloma cells are of variable extent and suggest operation of the antigen selection process. Lack of or minimal somatic hypermutation in a few cases may be in some way implicated in the biological heterogeneity of the disease.
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