Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The CD4+ CD56+ lin- immunophenotype characterizes rare malignancies, so far considered as arising from the transformation of NK progenitors, and therefore classified as blastic NK-cell leukemia/lymphoma by the WHO committee. Recently it was formally demonstrated that such malignancies do, in fact, develop from plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC), according to immunophenotypic and functional criteria. The clinico-biological features of this neoplasm were moreover recently summarized from a large series of 23 patients. INFORMATION SOURCES: The main symptoms at presentation were cutaneous lesions and bone marrow failure, due to invasion by blastic cells, all of which were EBV negative and agranular. Most patients were initially sensitive to chemotherapy regimens, but they rapidly relapsed and died within 3 years. Only 2 allotransplanted patients were long survivors. Recurrent chromosomal aberrations involving chromosomes 5q, 6q, 12p, 13q, 15q and 9 were described and it was characteristic that these were associated in the same cell. In the present review we compared these findings to those in the literature. STATE OF THE ART AND PERSPECTIVES: The concordant characteristics led us to confirm that this neoplasm actually represents a new entity, that we propose to rename early pDC leukemia/lymphoma. The diagnosis is primarily based on a characteristic immunophenotypic profile i.e. CD4+ CD56+ CD3- CD13- CD33- CD19-. Complementary analyses assessing the expression of more specific pDC-related markers showed the cells to be HLA-DR+, CD123high, CD116low, CD45RA+, BDCA-2+ or BDCA-4+. Such complementary investigations are necessary only in the case of an atypical phenotype, in order to confirm a pDC origin and exclude another hematologic disease. This presently regards the expression of CD33 or cytoplasmic CD3e (cyCD3e) and the negativity of CD56.
Vol. 88 No. 8 (2003): August, 2003 : Articles
Published By
Ferrata Storti Foundation, Pavia, Italy
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