We used comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) to screen for DNA copy number changes in 34 specimens from 27 cases of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). The most common gains were detected at 3q (52%), 8q (30%), and 15q (26%), whereas the most frequent losses involved 13q (41%), 1p (33%), 6q (30%), 9p (30%), and 11q (30%). The gain of 3q, with a minimal common region at 3q26.1‐27, appeared in more than half of the lymphomas, suggesting the location of an important oncogene here. A common deleted region at 11q22 was found in one‐third of the patients, which suggests that this region may harbor a tumor suppressor gene important in the tumorigenesis of MCL. The mean number of changes was higher in more aggressive blastoid variants of MCL than in lymphomas with typical morphology. Our results show that the chromosomal regions affected in MCL are highly consistent and are different from those seen in other types of non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma. Genes Chromosomes Cancer 21:298–307, 1998. © 1998 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
In small cell lymphomas, central nervous system (CNS) involvement has been considered to be very rare. Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a distinct subtype of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas consisting of small or intermediate lymphatic B-cells. It has a poorer prognosis than the other small cell lymphomas. Only a few MCL patients with CNS involvement have been reported in the literature to date. We analyzed retrospectively the incidence, clinical characteristics, and outcome of CNS involvement in 94 patients with confirmed MCL treated at one center from 1980 to 1997. Four of the 94 patients (4%) developed CNS lymphoma during the median follow-up of 51 months. The diagnosis was based on clinical, cytological and radiological findings. CNS involvement appeared at 4.6, 56, 66, or 86 months from the diagnosis of MCL. All patients had neurological symptoms and a leukemic disease; two cases were seen with a blastoid morphology. Malignant lymphatic cells were detected in spinal fluid in all cases and parenchymal infiltrations in brain in two. All patients were treated with intrathecal chemotherapy, without response. Survival time after diagnosis of CNS lymphoma ranged from 18 to 55 days. At diagnosis, no adverse prognostic factors predictive of CNS lymphoma were found. CNS involvement was associated with a progressive leukemic disease as a late event or a blastoid transformation. The prognosis of MCL patients with CNS involvement is poor.
Summary.Chromosomal deletions at 11q21-23 have recently been reported to be common aberrations in mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). To characterize the structure of the deletion, we studied 41 cases of MCL by fluorescence in situ hybridization using a YAC contig, which spans the region at 11q22.1-23.3. 17 MCLs were studied using a set of 20 yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) in a contig, and nine of these cases showed deletion of 11q22-23. The deletion spanned several megabases in all but one case, where only YAC 755b11 at 11q23.1, covering approximately a 1·6 Mb of DNA, was deleted. Analysis of additional 24 MCLs with YAC 755b11 revealed the deletion in 49% of all cases (20/ 41). The deleted region at 11q22.1-23.3 was discontinuous in five lymphomas and in the majority of the cases the distal breakpoint occurred between YACs 785e12 and 911f2 at 11q23.3. We conclude that the deletion of 11q22-23 and particularly the deletion of YAC 755b11 are very common in MCL and may be important in the genesis or progression of the disease.
Spontaneous rupture of the spleen is a rare complication of hematological malignancies, occurring most commonly in patients with acute leukemia, but it has been documented in chronic leukemias and also in lymphomas. We report two patients with histologically and immunohistochemically confirmed mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) who experienced a spontaneous splenic rupture. An 80-year-old woman and a 51-year-old man had a blastoid variant of MCL and responded poorly to conventional treatment. Both patients recovered after splenectomy. The woman died of progressive lymphoma 2 months later. An allogeneic bone marrow transplantation was performed in the man with a good initial result, but an aggressive relapse was seen only 6 months later and he died of progressive lymphoma. In view of our data, we suggest special caution when MCL is complicated by rapid progression and severe splenomegaly. Although it is a rare phenomenon, the risk of splenic rupture should be kept in mind.
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