학술논문

Molecular Characterization of Primary Mediastinal Large B-Cell Lymphomas.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancers. Oct2023, Vol. 15 Issue 19, p4866. 15p.
Subject
*DNA analysis
*EOSINOPHILS
*GENETIC mutation
*SEQUENCE analysis
*IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY
*B cell lymphoma
*MOLECULAR pathology
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*GENE expression
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*GENOMICS
*SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics)
*ALGORITHMS
*ANTIGENS
*CYTOPLASM
MEDIASTINAL tumors
Language
ISSN
2072-6694
Abstract
Simple Summary: The present study describes a primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMBL) cohort on the morphological, immunohistochemical, and molecular levels, allowing to go deeper in the molecular characterization of PMBL. The mean age at diagnosis was 39 years (21–83), with a sex ratio of 0.88, and a predominance Ann Arbor stage II (67%). Most patients presented a non-germinal center phenotype (non-GC-B) using the Hans algorithm (88%). CD30 was expressed in 88% of cases; with a partial and heterogeneous (67%) or intense and diffuse (20%) expression. CD23 was expressed in 75% of cases with a focal (8%), partial (45%), or diffuse (22%) expression. CIITA breaks were observed in 35% of cases. None of the cases displayed BCL2 rearrangement. The most frequent mutations were: SOCS1 (91%), TNFAIP3 (54.5%), ITPKB (51.5%), GNA13 (48.5%), CD58 (36.4%), B2M (36.4%), STAT6 (33.3%), ARID1A (30.3%), XPO1 (27.3%), CIITA (24%), and NFKBIE (24%). These data also provide pathologists with daily routine tools and reinforce the interest in an integrated histomolecular diagnosis to allow precision diagnosis as early as possible and to adapt the therapeutic strategy. Since the description of primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMBL) as a distinct entity from diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL), numerous studies have made it possible to improve their definition. Despite this, this differential diagnosis can be challenging in daily practice. However, in some centers, PMBL may be treated according to a particular regimen, distinct from those used in DLBCL, emphasizing the importance of accurate identification at diagnosis. This study aimed to describe the histological and molecular characteristics of PMBL to improve the accuracy of their diagnosis. Forty-nine cases of PMBL were retrospectively retrieved. The mean age at diagnosis was 39 years (21–83), with a sex ratio of 0.88. All cases presented a fibrous background with diffuse growth of intermediate to large cells with an eosinophil (26/49, 53%) or retracted cytoplasm (23/49, 47%). "Hodgkin-like" cells were observed in 65% of cases (32/49, 65%). The phenotype was: BCL6+ (47/49, 96%), MUM1+ (40/49, 82%), CD30+ (43/49, 88%), and CD23+ (37/49, 75%). Genomic DNAs were tested by next generation sequencing of 33 cases using a custom design panel. Pathogenic variants were found in all cases. The most frequent mutations were: SOCS1 (30/33, 91%), TNFAIP3 (18/33, 54.5%), ITPKB (17/33, 51.5%), GNA13 (16/33, 48.5%), CD58 (12/33, 36.4%), B2M (12/33; 36.4%), STAT6 (11/33, 33.3%) as well as ARID1A (10/33, 30.3%), XPO1 (9/33, 27.3%), CIITA (8/33, 24%), and NFKBIE (8/33, 24%). The present study describes a PMBL cohort on morphological, immunohistochemical, and molecular levels to provide pathologists with daily routine tools. These data also reinforce interest in an integrated histomolecular diagnosis to allow a precision diagnosis as early as possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]