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Angiotropic large cell lymphoma (ALCL): Morphological, immunohistochemical and genotypic studies with analysis of previous reports
Author(s) -
Domizio P.,
Hall P. A.,
Cotter F.,
Amiel S.,
Tucker J.,
Besser G. M.,
Levison D. A.
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
hematological oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 1099-1069
pISSN - 0278-0232
DOI - 10.1002/hon.2900070303
Subject(s) - histogenesis , lymphoma , immunohistochemistry , pathology , medicine , aggressive lymphoma , neoplasm , phenotype , population , biology , gene , rituximab , biochemistry , environmental health
The entity ‘angioendotheliomatosis proliferans systemisata’ was first described 28 years ago as a cutaneous small vessel neoplasm of presumed endothelial origin. Since then, 101 similar cases have been reported under a variety of different names, most with systemic as well as cutaneous lesions, and a lymphoid histogenesis of the tumour cell is now favoured. Review of these cases has shown a characteristic clinical presentation with predominant neurological and dermatological features, although the diagnosis was made at autopsy in 53 per cent of patients. Most therapeutic regimens have proved ineffective with a median survival of 5 months from date of clinical presentation. Aggressive combination chemotherapy can produce complete and lasting remission and a partial response to steroids is sometimes seen. We have examined a case of this condition showing unusual clinical features. Immunohistochemical studies confirm the lymphoid origin of the tumour cells with B cell phenotype. Antigen receptor gene rearrangement studies indicate the presence of the same clonal population of B cells in multiple sites. We suggest that the term ‘angioendotheliomatosis proliferans systemisata’ should be dropped and support the use of ‘angiotropic large cell lymphoma’ to describe this unusual condition.