- Bone marrow involvement in anaplastic large cell lymphoma. Immunohistochemical detection of minimal disease and its prognostic significance.
Bone marrow involvement in anaplastic large cell lymphoma. Immunohistochemical detection of minimal disease and its prognostic significance.
Bone marrow involvement by anaplastic large cell anaplastic large cell (ALC) lymphoma can be difficult to detect on routine morphologic examination alone. In a series of 42 patients with ALC lymphoma, the authors analyzed: (1) the usefulness of a limited panel of monoclonal antibodies directed against CD30 (Ber-H2, HRS4) and epithelial marrow involvement on routinely processed biopsy specimens; and (2) the prognostic significance of bone marrow involvement as detected on both morphologic and immunohistochemical grounds. On conventional examination, 17% of the patients were found to have bone marrow involvement at diagnosis. However, after immunohistochemical analysis, occult malignant cells were detected in 23% of the patients with negative bone marrow biopsy on routine histology. The low percentage of positive cases on routine morphologic examination compared to immunohistochemical examination was related to: (1) the scarcity of neoplastic cells which were scattered among hematopoietic cells; (2) the difficulty of distinguishing malignant cells from immature hematopoietic elements; and (3) the absence of alteration of the reticulin network. The authors observed a significant association between marrow infiltration and the presence of hematologic abnormalities (mostly anemia or cytopenias) at diagnosis, both in children and adult patients. More importantly, a significant lower survival was seen in patients with bone marrow involvement compared to those without bone marrow involvement. Immunohistochemistry with anti-CD30 and anti-EMA antibodies should be performed systematically in bone marrow biopsies from patients with ALC lymphoma to reliably identify the presence of bone marrow involvement that appears to carry a poor prognosis.