Molecular detection of micrometastases is a prognostic tool in stage II colorectal cancer.
Crucial steps in the miniaturisation of biosensors are the conversion of a biological signal into an electrical current as well as the direct sampling of bodily fluids. Here we show that protein sensors in combination with a nanopore, acting as an electrical transducer, can accurately quantify metabolites in real time directly from nanoliter amounts of blood and other bodily fluids. Incorporation of the nanopore into portable electronic devices will allow developing sensitive, continuous, and non-invasive sensors for metabolites for point-of-care and home diagnostics.
A retrospective analysis of patients presenting with primary lymphoma of bone (PLB) was performed to determine clinical factors affecting prognosis in relation to histological subtype and treatment outcome. Data from 106 patients, presenting with a PLB between 1943 and 1996, were retrieved from the files of the Netherlands Committee on Bone Tumours and Leiden University Medical Centre. The lymphomas were reclassified according to the REAL and updated Kiel classification. The clinical presentation, survival and prognostic factors were investigated. Sixty patients had sufficient clinical information and adequate follow-up to be included in the study. All 33 PLB that could be immunophenotyped were of B cell origin. According to the REAL classification, most PLB were large (B) cell lymphomas (92%) and according to the Kiel classification 45% of the tumours were centroblastic multilobated. PLB presented most often in the long bones (48%), with Ann Arbor stage I (46%), II (16%), IV (16%) and unknown (20%). Stage IV disease was exclusively caused by the presence of multiple bone lesions. Notwithstanding the heterogeneous treatment, the 5-year overall survival was 61%; 46% of patients were progression free at 5 years. Patients at presentation older than 60 had a worse overall survival (76% vs 37%, P ؍ 0.0002) and a worse progression-free period (58% vs 28%, P ؍ 0.0073). Patients with the immunoblastic subtype had a worse survival than the centroblastic mono/polymorphic subtype or the centroblastic multilobated subtype (P ؍ 0.015). Primary lymphoma of bone represents an uncommon bone tumour with a relatively homogeneous morphology and clinical behaviour. Compared to other aggressive lymphomas, PLB have a favourable prognosis.
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLCL) is characterized by a marked degree of morphologic and clinical heterogeneity. We studied 156 patients with de novo DLCL for rearrangements of the BCL2, BCL6, and MYC oncogenes by Southern blot analysis and BCL2 protein expression. We related these data to the primary site of presentation, disease stage, and other clinical risk factors. Structural alterations of BCL2, BCL6, and MYC were detected in 25 of 156, 36 of 116, and 10 of 151 patients, respectively. Three cases showed a combination of BCL2 and BCL6 rearrangements, and two cases had a combination of BCL6 and MYC rearrangements. BCL2 rearrangement was found more often in extensive (39%) and primary nodal (17%) lymphomas than in extranodal cases (4%) (P = .003). BCL2 rearrangement was present in none of 40 patients with stage I disease, but in 22% of patients with stage II to IV (P = .006). The presence of BCL2 rearrangements did not significantly affect overall survival (OS) or disease-free survival (DFS). In contrast, high BCL2 protein expression adversely affected both OS (P = .008) and DFS (P = .01). BCL2 protein expression was poorly correlated with BCL2 rearrangement: only 52% of BCL2-rearranged lymphomas and 37% of BCL2-unrearranged cases had high BCL2 protein expression. Rearrangement of BCL6 was found more often in patients with extranodal (36%) and extensive (39%) presentation versus primary nodal disease (28%). No significant correlation was found with disease stage, lymphadenopathy, or bone marrow involvement. DFS and OS were not influenced by BCL6 rearrangements. MYC rearrangements were found in 16% of primary extranodal lymphomas, versus 2% of primary nodal cases (P = .02). In particular, gastrointestinal (GI) lymphomas (5 of 18 cases, 28%) were affected by MYC rearrangements. The distinct biologic behavior of these extranodal lymphomas was reflected by a high complete remission (CR) rate: 7 of 10 patients with MYC rearrangement attained complete remission and 6 responders remained alive for more than 4 years, resulting in a trend for better DFS (P = .07). These data show the complex nature of molecular events in DLCL, which is a reflection of the morphologic and clinical heterogeneity of these lymphomas. However, thus far, these genetic rearrangements fail as prognostic markers. © 1998 by The American Society of Hematology.
MCL is a disease of the elderly, who present with widespread disease and with a poor response to therapy. Although it harbors features of an indolent NHL, it behaves clinically as an aggressive NHL with a short overall survival time.
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLCL) is characterized by a marked degree of morphologic and clinical heterogeneity. We studied 156 patients with de novo DLCL for rearrangements of the BCL2, BCL6, and MYC oncogenes by Southern blot analysis and BCL2 protein expression. We related these data to the primary site of presentation, disease stage, and other clinical risk factors. Structural alterations of BCL2, BCL6, and MYC were detected in 25 of 156, 36 of 116, and 10 of 151 patients, respectively. Three cases showed a combination of BCL2 and BCL6 rearrangements, and two cases had a combination of BCL6 and MYC rearrangements. BCL2 rearrangement was found more often in extensive (39%) and primary nodal (17%) lymphomas than in extranodal cases (4%) (P = .003). BCL2 rearrangement was present in none of 40 patients with stage I disease, but in 22% of patients with stage II to IV (P = .006). The presence of BCL2 rearrangements did not significantly affect overall survival (OS) or disease-free survival (DFS). In contrast, high BCL2 protein expression adversely affected both OS (P = .008) and DFS (P = .01). BCL2 protein expression was poorly correlated with BCL2 rearrangement: only 52% of BCL2-rearranged lymphomas and 37% of BCL2-unrearranged cases had high BCL2 protein expression. Rearrangement of BCL6 was found more often in patients with extranodal (36%) and extensive (39%) presentation versus primary nodal disease (28%). No significant correlation was found with disease stage, lymphadenopathy, or bone marrow involvement. DFS and OS were not influenced by BCL6 rearrangements. MYC rearrangements were found in 16% of primary extranodal lymphomas, versus 2% of primary nodal cases (P = .02). In particular, gastrointestinal (GI) lymphomas (5 of 18 cases, 28%) were affected by MYC rearrangements. The distinct biologic behavior of these extranodal lymphomas was reflected by a high complete remission (CR) rate: 7 of 10 patients with MYC rearrangement attained complete remission and 6 responders remained alive for more than 4 years, resulting in a trend for better DFS (P = .07). These data show the complex nature of molecular events in DLCL, which is a reflection of the morphologic and clinical heterogeneity of these lymphomas. However, thus far, these genetic rearrangements fail as prognostic markers. © 1998 by The American Society of Hematology.
Gastric MALT lymphoma is a distinct entity related to Helicobacter pylori gastritis. Some studies suggest a role for trisomy 3 in the genesis of these lymphomas, but they mainly focused on low-grade MALT lymphoma. Gastric MALT lymphoma, however, comprises a spectrum from low-to high-grade cases. Furthermore, its exact relation to primary diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) of the stomach is not clear. We applied in situ hybridisation (ISH) with centromeric probes on 43 samples of 39 patients with primary gastric lymphoma (13 samples with low-grade MALT lymphoma, 25 with high-grade MALT lymphoma and five with DLBCL) to detect numerical aberrations of 10 chromosomes. ISH was performed immunohistochemically on nuclei isolated from paraffin-embedded resection tissue and on whole paraffin sections using immunofluorescence. In six of 13 low-grade MALT lymphomas trisomy was detected (46%) and mostly involved chromosome 3 (33%). In high-grade MALT lymphomas, trisomies were found in 16 of 25 cases (64%), mainly involving chromosomes 12 and 18. Trisomy 3 was present in only 13% of these cases. Of five DLBCL, only one showed trisomy. Nine of the 16 aberrant high-grade MALT lymphomas (56%) showed trisomy of more than one chromosome per case vs two of six for low-grade cases. In lymphomas with separate low-and high-grade tumour components some trisomies were detected in both components, whereas others occurred only in the high-grade tumour cells. This supports the hypothesis that high-grade MALT lymphomas can develop from a low-grade type and that this progression is accompanied by the acquisition of more genetic aberrations. However, trisomy 3 probably does not play a major role in this progression.
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