Mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphomas most frequently involve the gastrointestinal tract and are the most common subset of extranodal non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Here we describe overexpression of BCL10, a novel apoptotic signalling gene that encodes an amino-terminal caspase recruitment domain (CARD), in MALT lymphomas due to the recurrent t(1;14)(p22;q32). BCL10 cDNAs from t(1;14)-positive MALT tumours contained a variety of mutations, most resulting in truncations either in or carboxy terminal to the CARD. Wild-type BCL10 activated NF-kappaB but induced apoptosis of MCF7 and 293 cells. CARD-truncation mutants were unable to induce cell death or activate NF-kappaB, whereas mutants with C-terminal truncations retained NF-kappaB activation but did not induce apoptosis. Mutant BCL10 overexpression might have a twofold lymphomagenic effect: loss of BCL10 pro-apoptosis may confer a survival advantage to MALT B-cells, and constitutive NF-kappaB activation may provide both anti-apoptotic and proliferative signals mediated via its transcriptional targets.
Since the initial description of splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL) in 1992, an increasing number of publications have dealt with multiple aspects of SMZL diagnosis, molecular pathogenesis and treatment. This process has identified multiple inconsistencies in the diagnostic criteria and lack of clear guidelines for the staging and treatment. The authors of this review have held several meetings and exchanged series of cases with the objective of agreeing on the main diagnostic, staging and therapeutic guidelines for patients with this condition. Specific working groups were created for diagnostic criteria, immunophenotype, staging and treatment. As results of this work, guidelines are proposed for diagnosis, differential diagnosis, staging, prognostic factors, treatment and response criteria. The guidelines proposed here are intended to contribute to the standardization of the diagnosis and treatment of these patients, and should facilitate the future development of clinical trials that could define more precisely predictive markers for histological progression or lack of response, and evaluate new drugs or treatments.
We retrospectively analyzed 26 patients with thyroid lymphoma (TL). Patients were mostly females, with a median age of 59 yr, presenting a rapidly growing nodular goiter with or without cervical adenopathy, without symptoms related to lymphoma for 81% and hypothyroidism in 61%. A previous history of Hashimoto thyroiditis was observed in 11 patients. Six different subtypes of lymphoma were observed: 13 of 26 (50%) had diffuse large B cell lymphoma, 6 (23%) mucosa- associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma, 3 (12%) had follicular lymphoma, 2 (7%) had Hodgkin's disease, 1 (4%) had small lymphocytic lymphoma, and 1 (4%) had Burkitt's lymphoma. Diffuse large B cell lymphoma patients presented a compressive multinodular goiter, cervical adenopathy (66%), disseminated disease (50%), and poor performance status, with a poor prognosis (5-yr survival at 44%) despite a treatment based on a multidrug regimen. MALT lymphoma arose in patients with previous history of Hashimoto disease, was localized in all but 1, and was biologically associated with hypothyroidism and a high level of serum antithyroid antibodies. With total thyroidectomy, prognosis was good (5-yr survival at 100%). We did not find any routine clinical or biological parameters that could predict the evolution from Hashimoto's thyroiditis to MALT lymphoma. In conclusion, we confirmed the histological heterogeneity of TL corresponding to different clinical presentations and different prognoses.
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