𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

A familial T-cell lymphoma with γδ phenotype and an original location: Possible role of chronic Epstein–Barr virus infection

✍ Scribed by Jean Donadieu; Daniele Canioni; Bana Cuenod; Sylvie Fraitag; Christine Bodemer; Jean Louis Stephan; François Sigaux; Françoise Le Deist; Simon Schraub; Elisabeth Ranfraing; Claude Griscelli; Nicole Brousse


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
888 KB
Volume
77
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


We describe a familial lymphoproliferative syndrome associated with Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) infection and the y6 phenotype.

METHODS.

We reviewed clinical, pathologic, immunologic, and virologic findings in a nonconsanguineous French family, collected over a 13-year period. Specimens from the father (autopsy), son (liver, lymph nodes, and pericardial effusion), and daughter (skin, liver, and digestive tract) were studied with conventional histologic and immunohistochemical techniques. Anti-EBV latent membrane protein (LMP) antibody and T-cell receptor (TCR) gene rearrangements were also studied in the daughter.

RESULTS.

The father and daughter had similar clinical and histologic features, with maxilofacial, nasal, laryngeal, skin, lung, gastrointestinal, and liver involvement by a high grade large cell angiocentric T-cell lymphoma. The y6 phenotype and clonal rearrangement were identified in the daughter's tumor. At the time of his death from pericarditis, the son had a 5-year history of a recurrent hemophagocytic syndrome and lymphadenopathy. Chronic EBV infection was found in each case. EBV infection of the son was diagnosed by means of serologic tests and detection of the EBV genome in circulating lymphocytes, and in the father and daughter by use of an anti-LMP antibody. Its pathologic role is discussed.

CONCLUSIONS. This familial T-cell lymphoma syndrome associated with the y6

phenotype and an unusual location is an original clinical entity. Chronic EBV infection was present in each case, but its precise role remains to be determined.