PEL is a rare HIV-associated NHL type occurring as a late manifestation of HIV infection with a poor clinical outcome and a shorter overall survival compared with CBCL patients.
Primary effusions presenting as the sole lymphoma localization are also known as body-cavity-based-lymphoma (BCBL), and have been shown to carry Kaposi's sarcoma herpesvirus (KSHV) DNA sequences. The aim of this study was a comparative analysis of the clinical, pathologic and molecular features of BCBL and lymphomatous effusions secondary to tissue-based lymphomas occurring both in the general population and in HIV-1-infected individuals. All the lymphomatous effusion samples (seven AIDS-related and nine AIDS-unrelated) were subjected to an identical multiparameter investigation, including collection of clinical data, analysis of morphology and immunophenotype, as well as the study of viral sequences and genetic lesions. In six cases defined as BCBL (four AIDS-related and two AIDS-unrelated), the patients exhibited exclusive or predominant involvement of the body cavities. BCBL tended to display indeterminate phenotypes (4/6), whereas all AIDS-related and AIDS-unrelated lymphomatous effusions secondary to tissue-based lymphomas consistently expressed B-cell phenotype. Detection of KSHV DNA sequences was restricted to cases of BCBL (3/4 AIDS-related and 1/2 AIDS-unrelated), whereas EBV association (3/4) and expression of EBV-encoded antigens (LMP-1, 2/3; EBNA-2, 1/3) were confined to the AIDS-related BCBL. Overall, our results confirm that both AIDS-related and AIDS-unrelated BCBL preferentially associate with peculiar clinical, immunophenotypic and molecular features among lymphomatous effusions and therefore should be singled out as a specific clinico-pathologic entity.
Our virologic findings indicate that HIV-related HD is more closely associated with EBV than HD in the general population. The peculiar clinicopathologic findings, the role of some prognostic factors, and the possibility of cure of HIV-related HD have been demonstrated.
Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), also termed human herpesvirus type 8, is consistently identified in Kaposi's sarcoma, primary effusion lymphoma (PEL), and multicentric Castleman's disease. Here we report four cases of KSHV-bearing solid lymphomas that occurred in AIDS patients (cases 1 to 3) and in a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-seronegative person (case 4). The patients presented extranodal masses in the abdomen (cases 1, 3, and 4) or skin (case 2), and nodal involvement, together with Kaposi's sarcoma (case 3). The gastrointestinal tract was involved in two patients (cases 1 and 3). The patients did not develop a lymphomatous effusion. KSHV was detected in the tumor cells of all cases by immunohistochemistry and by polymerase chain reaction. Epstein-Barr virus was detected in two of the HIV-related cases. All KSHV-positive solid lymphomas exhibited PEL-like cell morphology. To investigate the relationship of these disorders to PEL and to other AIDS-associated diffuse large cell lymphomas, KSHV-positive solid lymphomas were tested for the expression of a set of genes that were previously shown by gene profiling analysis to define PEL tumor cells. The results showed that expression of this set of genes in KSHV-positive lymphomas is similar to that of PEL but distinct from KSHV-negative AIDS-associated diffuse large cell lymphomas. Because pathobiological features of KSHV-positive solid lymphomas closely mimic those of PEL, our results suggest that KSHV-positive solid lymphomas should be considered as a tissue-based variant of classical PEL, irrespective of HIV status.
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