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Reappraisal of nodal Epstein-Barr Virus-negative cytotoxic T-cell lymphoma: Identification of indolent CD5+ diseases.

Daisuke YamashitaKazuyuki ShimadaKatsuyoshi TakataTomoko Miyata-TakataKei KohnoAkira SatouAyako SakakibaraShigeo NakamuraNaoko AsanoSeiichi Kato
Published in: Cancer science (2018)
Nodal cytotoxic molecule (CM)-positive peripheral T-cell lymphoma (CTL) has recently been recognized as a clinicopathologically distinct disease. To further characterize this disease, here we compared 58 patients with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-negative CTL to 48 patients with EBV-positive CTL. The two groups did not differ in histopathology, T-cell receptor (TCR) expression or rearrangement incidences, or survival curves. However, patients with EBV-negative CTL less frequently showed hepatic involvement (P = .007), B symptoms (P = .020), hemophagocytosis (P = .024), and detectable CD4 (P = .002) and CD5 (P = .009). Univariate and multivariate analyses identified three factors that independently predicted favorable survival, onset age <60 years (P = .002), CD5 expression (P = .002), and mixed morphology (P = .013), TCRαβ was not an independent predictor (P = .30), but was strongly linked with long survivorship among patients younger than 60 years old. A prognostic model incorporating these factors worked well for prognostic delineation, independently of the International Prognostic Index (P = .007 vs P = .082) and Prognostic Index for PTCL (P = .020 vs P = .15). Moreover, this constellation of findings indicated two nodal indolent diseases: CD5+ TCRαβ (n = 13), and CD5+ NK-cell type lacking TCR expression or clonal TCRγ rearrangement (n = 4). The survival curves for these two groups were significantly superior to others (n = 29, P < .001). These diseases appear to be unique in their indolent clinical behavior, and should be managed differently from other diseases.
Keyphrases
  • epstein barr virus
  • diffuse large b cell lymphoma
  • regulatory t cells
  • poor prognosis
  • nk cells
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • physical activity
  • immune response
  • hodgkin lymphoma
  • data analysis
  • rectal cancer