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Splenic Lymphoma (splenic + lymphoma)
Selected AbstractsSplenic lymphoma in a short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus)AUSTRALIAN VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue 7 2009EJ Gentz A 23-year-old, male short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) housed at a North American zoo was successfully treated for flea-associated anaemia, but subsequently died. Cause of death was presumptive septicaemia secondary to splenic lymphoma. This is only the fifth case of neoplasia reported in this monotreme species, and the first from outside of Australia. [source] Prognostic features of splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytes: a report on 129 patientsBRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY, Issue 5 2003Nilima Parry-Jones Summary. Splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytes (SLVL) is a low-grade B-cell lymphoma defined in the World Health Organization classification as the leukaemic form of splenic marginal zone lymphoma. Presenting features and response to therapy have been described, but information on prognostic factors is scanty. Clinical, laboratory and follow-up data were collected on 129 patients with SLVL to determine features predicting disease behaviour and survival. Diagnosis was made on clinical, morphological and immunophenotypic features and, where available, bone marrow and spleen histology. Median age was 69 years (range 39,90 years) and male:female ratio, 0·9. The majority had splenomegaly, but lymphadenopathy and hepatomegaly were rare. Median Hb was 11·8 g/dl, white blood cell count was 16 × 109/l and platelet count was 145 × 109/l; 27% of patients had monoclonal protein in serum and/or urine. While 27% of patients remained untreated, 10% transformed to high-grade lymphoma. Median follow-up was 61 months and median survival was 13 years, with 72% of patients alive at 5 years. Cox regression analysis showed that increasing age, anaemia, thrombocytopenia and lymphocytosis >,16 × 109/l were independent adverse predictors of overall survival. However, only anaemia and lymphocytosis >,16 × 109/l remained highly significant independent prognostic factors when only deaths due to lymphoma were analysed. Splenectomized patients fared better than those receiving chemotherapy only (P = 0·001 for SLVL deaths). We conclude that SLVL is mainly a disease of the elderly with a relatively benign course but, when treatment is required, splenectomy is beneficial. [source] TCL1 is activated by chromosomal rearrangement or by hypomethylationGENES, CHROMOSOMES AND CANCER, Issue 4 2001Martin R. Yuille TCL1 is an oncogene activated by recurrent reciprocal translocations at chromosome segment 14q32.1 in the most common of the mature T-cell malignancies, T-cell prolymphocytic leukemia. It acts to transport Akt1 to the nucleus and enhance Akt1's serine-threonine kinase activity. TCL1 is also expressed in the B-cell malignancy, Burkitt's lymphoma (BL). However, 14q32.1 breakpoints have not been detected in BL, and we therefore investigated in more detail how expression was activated. No evidence for rearrangement near TCL1 was found in BL. Instead, a NotI site adjacent to the TATA box in the TCL1 promoter was found to be unmethylated. By contrast, tumor cell lines not expressing TCL1 were fully methylated at this NotI site, while normal somatic cells were hemimethylated. We also found that TCL1 was expressed in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and the related disorder splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytes (unlike in normal mature B-cells), and that the NotI site was unmethylated on both alleles. This correlation of repression and methylation was tested in vitro. When cells with both alleles methylated at the NotI site were demethylated, TCL1 expression was induced. These data provide evidence that in mature B-cell malignancies there is an alternative mechanism of TCL1 activation that apparently involves loss of methylation of one promoter allele. We discuss the significance of this for CLL tumorigenesis and for genomewide hypomethylation in CLL. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] In vitro Epstein-Barr virus-immortalized lymphoma cell line carrying t(9;14)(p13;q32) chromosome abnormality, derived from splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytesINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, Issue 2 2006Masanori Daibata Abstract We herein describe splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytes (SLVL) carrying t(9;14)(p13;q32). The t(9;14)(p13;q32) is a rare reciprocal chromosome translocation found in a subset of B-cell malignancies, mainly in low-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. In t(9;14)(p13;q32), PAX-5 gene on 9p13 is involved with the immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene on 14q32. It has been thought that the deregulated expression of PAX-5 as a result of t(9;14)(p13;q32) may contribute to abnormal cell proliferation. Although continuous cell lines are invaluable tools for studying lymphomagenesis in the t(9;14)(p13;q32)-bearing lymphomas, establishment of such cell lines is extremely difficult since they are usually mature B-cell malignancies. In an attempt to transform the SLVL cells into a proliferating cell line, we examined the responses of the cells to infection by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). SLVL cells were found to be susceptible to immortalization by EBV, resulting in a permanent cell line. The cell line, designated SL-15, possessed the t(9;14)(p13;q32). Genotype analysis and immunophenotype profiles confirmed that the cell line arose from the primary lymphoma cells. The cells had characteristic cytoplasmic villi. SL-15 cells has been growing over 2 years equivalent to 350,400 population doubling levels without proliferative crisis that is often observed in EBV-positive lymphoblastoid cell lines. Furthermore, SL-15 cells, when inoculated into nude mice, formed t(9;14)(p13;q32)-bearing tumors with cytoplasmic villi. The validated SLVL-derived cell line provide a useful model system to study molecular biology of t(9;14)(p13;q32)-bearing B-cell malignancies as well as lymphomagenesis of SLVL in vitro and in vivo. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Splenic lymphoma in a short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus)AUSTRALIAN VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue 7 2009EJ Gentz A 23-year-old, male short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) housed at a North American zoo was successfully treated for flea-associated anaemia, but subsequently died. Cause of death was presumptive septicaemia secondary to splenic lymphoma. This is only the fifth case of neoplasia reported in this monotreme species, and the first from outside of Australia. [source] Prognostic features of splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytes: a report on 129 patientsBRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY, Issue 5 2003Nilima Parry-Jones Summary. Splenic lymphoma with villous lymphocytes (SLVL) is a low-grade B-cell lymphoma defined in the World Health Organization classification as the leukaemic form of splenic marginal zone lymphoma. Presenting features and response to therapy have been described, but information on prognostic factors is scanty. Clinical, laboratory and follow-up data were collected on 129 patients with SLVL to determine features predicting disease behaviour and survival. Diagnosis was made on clinical, morphological and immunophenotypic features and, where available, bone marrow and spleen histology. Median age was 69 years (range 39,90 years) and male:female ratio, 0·9. The majority had splenomegaly, but lymphadenopathy and hepatomegaly were rare. Median Hb was 11·8 g/dl, white blood cell count was 16 × 109/l and platelet count was 145 × 109/l; 27% of patients had monoclonal protein in serum and/or urine. While 27% of patients remained untreated, 10% transformed to high-grade lymphoma. Median follow-up was 61 months and median survival was 13 years, with 72% of patients alive at 5 years. Cox regression analysis showed that increasing age, anaemia, thrombocytopenia and lymphocytosis >,16 × 109/l were independent adverse predictors of overall survival. However, only anaemia and lymphocytosis >,16 × 109/l remained highly significant independent prognostic factors when only deaths due to lymphoma were analysed. Splenectomized patients fared better than those receiving chemotherapy only (P = 0·001 for SLVL deaths). We conclude that SLVL is mainly a disease of the elderly with a relatively benign course but, when treatment is required, splenectomy is beneficial. [source] |