Blastic natural killer (NK) cell lymphoma (also termed CD4+CD56+ hematodermic neoplasm) is a recently described entity, with the first case reported in 1994. It was suggested initially that the disease originates from NK cells. Since 1994, single cases and a few small series have been published. In this review, data from the literature and a series of 30 cases from the French and Dutch study groups on cutaneous lymphomas are discussed. The major clinical, histopathologic, and phenotypic aspects of the disease and diagnostic criteria and data suggesting a plasmacytoid dendritic cell origin for the tumor cells are provided.
In 1999, we reported seven cases of an unusual hematologic malignancy with primary cutaneous presentation that appeared as a distinct clinicopathologic entity characterized by medium-sized tumor cells with a peculiar CD3- CD4+ CD56+ CD43+ HLA-DR+ cell surface phenotype. Because the origin of tumor cells was not clear and they exhibited a nonlineage-specific phenotype, we hypothesized that such tumors likely originated from hematologic-myeloid precursor cells and were tentatively assigned the designation "agranular CD4+ CD56+ hematodermic neoplasms." In the present study we report 14 cases (seven already reported and seven additional cases) of these tumors, and simultaneously we present now a rare population of cells that we have identified in the peripheral blood of healthy volunteers treated with Flt3 ligand. These cells express all the characteristic markers of CD4+ CD56+ hematodermic neoplasms. This population appears to be related to plasmacytoid monocytes because they also expressed CD68 and bright levels of CD123. To confirm the relationship between these normal cells and CD4+ CD56+ hematodermic neoplasms, we conducted an extensive comparative phenotypic study. Results show that these two cell types are indeed related because they share many phenotypic features, including the presence of CD4, CD56, CD43, CD68, and HLA-DR and the absence of other T, B, NK, or myelomonocytic markers. More importantly, we found that the bright expression of CD123 by immunohistochemistry is a distinctive characteristic of CD4+ CD56+ hematodermic neoplasms because all (n = 14) cases expressed this marker, whereas only two specimens in a control panel comprising 30 samples of related tumors expressed comparable levels of CD123. We therefore propose that oncogenic transformation of NCAM-expressing plasmacytoid monocyte-like cells may lead to "agranular CD4+ CD56+ hematodermic neoplasm."
FTIR spectral imaging was applied on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded biopsies from colon and skin cancerous lesions. These samples were deposited onto different substrates (zinc selenide and calcium fluoride respectively) and embedded using two types of paraffin. Formalin fixation followed by paraffin embedding is the gold standard in tissue storage. It can preserve molecular structures and it is compatible with immunohistochemistry. However, paraffin absorption bands are significant in the mid-infrared region and can mask some molecular vibrations of the tissue. Direct data processing was applied on spectral images without any chemical dewaxing of the tissues. Extended Multiplicative Signal Correction was used to correct the spectral contribution from paraffin. For this purpose, the signal of paraffin was modelled using Principal Component Analysis and paraffin spectra were removed from the raw images based on an outlier detection. Then, pseudo-colour images were computed by K-means clustering in order to highlight histological structures of interest. This robust chemometrics methodology was applied on the two samples. Tumour areas were successfully demarcated from the rest of the tissue in both colon and skin independently of the embedding material and of the substrate.
Compared with healthy controls, the presence of functional HMGA1 gene variants in individuals of white European ancestry was associated with type 2 DM.
Blastic natural killer (NK) cell lymphoma (also termed CD4+CD56+ hematodermic neoplasm) is a recently described entity, with the first case reported in 1994. It was suggested initially that the disease originates from NK cells. Since 1994, single cases and a few small series have been published. In this review, data from the literature and a series of 30 cases from the French and Dutch study groups on cutaneous lymphomas are discussed. The major clinical, histopathologic, and phenotypic aspects of the disease and diagnostic criteria and data suggesting a plasmacytoid dendritic cell origin for the tumor cells are provided.
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