Pediatric-type follicular lymphoma
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Pediatric-type follicular lymphoma | |
|---|---|
| Other names | Pediatric follicular lymphoma, pediatric-type nodular follicular lymphoma |
| Specialty | Hematology, oncology |
Pediatric-type follicular lymphoma (PTFL) is a disease in which malignant B-cells (i.e. a lymphocyte subtype originating from the bone marrow) accumulate in, overcrowd, and cause the expansion of the lymphoid follicles in, and thereby enlargement of the lymph nodes in the head and neck regions[1] and, less commonly, groin and armpit regions.[2] The disease accounts for 1.5% to 2% of all the lymphomas that occur in the pediatric age group.[3]
Initially, PTFL was found only in children and adolescents and termed Pediatric follicular lymphoma. More recently, however, the disease has been found to occur also in adults.[4][5] This lead the World health Organization (2016) to rename the disorder pediatric-type follicular lymphoma.[4] (The disease is also referred to as pediatric-type nodular follicular lymphoma.[6][7]) At the same time the World Health Organization also recognized PTFL as a clinical entity distinct from the follicular lymphoma disorders in which it was previously classified. This reclassification was based on fundamental differences between the two diseases.[4]
PTFL differs from follicular lymphoma in its clinical manifestations, its pathophysiology including the genomic alterations (i.e. chromosome abnormalities and gene mutations) which occur in the diseases malignant cells, and its clinical course. Relative to the last point, PTFL often presents histologically as a high-grade malignancy but unlike the small percentage of follicular lymphoma cases that similarly present as a high grade malignancy, it almost invariably takes an indolent, relapsing and remitting course without progressing to a more aggressive and incurable form.[2] Recognition of PTFL as a distinct disease separate from follicular lymphoma is critical to avoid mistaking it for a more aggressive lymphoma that requires potentially toxic chemotherapy treatments.[4] This appears to be particularly the case when PTFL occurs in children, adolescents, and perhaps very young adults.[2]
A significant percentage of cases that were once diagnosed as PTFL are now regarded as being large B-cell lymphoma with IRF4 rearrangements, a very rare disease that was provisionally defined by the World Health organization (2016) as distinctly separate from PTFL.[8] PTFL is here described based on this recently formulated and important distinction.
PTFL occurs in male (male to female ratio ~10;1) children or adolescents (ages 1–17 years, median age ~13-14), less frequently in young adults (ages 18–30 years), and occasionally in older adults.[3][7] In ~90% of cases, the diseases is diagnosed in an early stage (i.e. stage I or II) and localized to one or two adjacent lymph node chains.[3]
Historically, PTFL has been described as commonly presenting with swollen lymph nodes and/or tonsils in the head and neck regions,[3] less commonly as swollen lymph nodes in the axillary and/or inguinal regions,[2] and/or rarely as swollen lymph nodes in the abdomen and/or infiltrations of the malignant cells into the testes, bone marrow, and/or central nervous system.[3] However, many if not all of the latter rare cases as well as cases that exhibit tonsil involvement are now regarded by the World Health Organization (2016) as due to a provisional entity termed large B-cell lymphoma with IRF4 rearrangement. This diseases is a follicular-type large B-cell lymphoma that also afflicts children, adolescents, and young adults but is otherwise distinguished from PTFL by its lack of a strong predominance in males, its common occurrence in extra-nodal sites, its histology, its clinical course, and the genomic alterations carried by its malignant B-cells, particularly the hallmark translocation of the IRF4 (interferon regulatory factor 4) gene (also termed the MUM1 or melanoma associated antigen (mutated) 1 gene) on the short (i.e. p) arm of chromosome 6 at position 25.3[9] near to the IGH@ immunoglobulin heavy locus on the long (i.e. q) arm of chromosome 14 at position 32.33[10] This acquired genomic abnormality forces the overexpression of interferon regulatory factor protein.[8] Excluding cases now regarded as being large B-cell lymphomas with IRF4 rearrangement, PTFL presents almost exclusively with enlargement of lymph nodes in the head, neck, axilla, or groin.[3][11]
Pathophysiology
PTFL is the proliferation of a clone (i.e. a group of genetically identical cells that share a common ancestry) of B-cells that act non-physiologically by invading and disrupting the structure and function of lymphoid tissues. This cell clone forms, increases in size, and spreads to other lymphoid tissues in association with its progressively increasing accumulation of numerous chromosome deletions and gene mutations, although different sets of these alterations occur in different individuals with the disease. These alterations are thought to promote the survival of the malignant cells by inhibiting their programmed cell death, blocking their maturation, increasing their ability to evade the immune system, and/or creating conditions favorable for the development of other genomic alterations that have these pro-malignancy effects. The most common chromosome deletion is the 1p36 deletion which occurs in 20-50% of PTFL cases. This alteration is a deletion in the q arm of chromosome 1 at position 36 that results in the lose of TNFAIP3, a gene that encodes tumor necrosis factor, alpha-induced protein 3. This protein functions to inhibit the activation of NF-κB, to block programmed cell death, and to regulate lymphocyte-based immune responses through its ubiquitin ligase activity.[12] Other alterations repeatedly seen in PTFL include mutations in the following genes: 1) TNFRSF14 (30-50% of cases) which encodes tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily, member 14, a receptor that stimulates immune responses in T-cells, a set of non-B-cell lymphocytes;[13] 2) IRF8 (10-50% of cases) which encodes the interferon regulatory factor 8 protein, a protein that contributes to the maturation and function of B-cells;[14][15] 3) MAP2K1 (10-40% of cases), which encodes mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1, an enzyme which activates the MAPK/ERK cell signaling pathway that regulates cell proliferation and the expression of various genes;[16] and 4) scores of other genes that are found in up to 15% of cases.[2] Recent Whole exome sequencing studies in children and adolescents with PTFL have confirmed these results, found that many of these genomic alterations result in suppressing either the MAPK/ERK or G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathways, and suggest that the suppression of these pathways contributes to the development of PFFL.[17]