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T-cell-rich, large B-cell lymphoma in the brain of a horse.

Daniel R RissiAnne C AveryRobert C Burnett
Published in: Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc (2023)
T-cell-rich, large B-cell lymphoma (TCRLBCL) is the most commonly diagnosed type of lymphoma in horses. Here we describe the clinical signs, neuropathology, immunohistochemistry (IHC), and PCR for antigen receptor rearrangement (PARR) analysis results of a TCRLBCL in the brain of an 8-y-old male Quarter Horse that was euthanized after acute anorexia, tremors, head pressing, falling, blindness, incoordination, and seizures. Autopsy revealed a firm, smooth, pale-yellow mass that expanded both lateral ventricles and the adjacent subcortical white matter. Histologically, the mass consisted of a densely cellular neoplasm composed of large, CD79+ neoplastic B-lymphocytes admixed with sheets of small, CD3+ reactive T-lymphocytes, Iba1+ histiocytes, MUM1+ plasma cells, and rare eosinophils supported by a fine fibrovascular stroma. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue scrolls were retrieved and subjected to PARR analysis, which revealed a clonal reaction in the immunoglobulin gene and a polyclonal reaction for the T-lymphocyte receptor gene, consistent with a neoplastic B-lymphocyte and reactive T-lymphocyte proliferation. The diagnosis of TCRLBCL was suspected histologically and confirmed based on IHC and PARR analysis.
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