Three cases of peripheral T-cell lymphocytosis associated with thymoma are described. Each patient had a malignant, predominantly lymphocytic thymoma with resolution of lymphocytosis upon treatment of the epithelial neoplasm. These findings suggest that lymphocytosis complicating thymoma is a parane
T-cell lymphocytosis associated with lymphocyte-rich thymoma
โ Scribed by Alice D. Barton
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 257 KB
- Volume
- 80
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
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โฆ Synopsis
METHODS.
The author presents what is believed to be the seventh case of peripheral T-cell lymphocytosis associated with thymoma and reviews the previous six cases. The pathology slides of the thymoma were reviewed with a pathologist who confirmed the presence of neoplastic thymic epithelium with cytokeratin stains. Immunophenotyping by flow cytometry was performed at Dianon Systems, Inc., on both the thymoma cells and cells in the peripheral blood. In addition, gene rearrangement analysis was performed on the peripheral lymphocytes using the previously described Southern blot analysis technique with immunoglobulin probes (heavy chain, kappa light chain, and lambda light chain) and T-cell receptor gene probes (beta and gamma chains).
RESULTS.
Analyses of the T cells within the thymoma and the peripheral blood confirm that the peripheral T cells are both polyclonal and more mature than those populating the thymoma. Clearly the peripheral T cells are not themselves neoplastic, and yet they represent more than physical ''spillover'' of the immature tumor-related T cells.
CONCLUSIONS.
Peripheral T-cell lymphocytosis occurs rarely with locally aggressive, lymphocytic thymomas. Although it is clear that these cells are not neoplastic, as they are in other T-cell proliferative disorders, the etiology of this unusual phenomenon remains obscure and may reflect the perturbation of systemic immunoregulation that accompanies thymic neoplasia. It is important to differentiate this condition from T-cell lymphomas or leukemia to treat affected patients appropriately.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
A patient with pure red cell aplasia and expansion of the peripheral blood natural killer (NK) cell population is described. Despite normal absolute and differential leukocyte counts, NK cells were increased at diagnosis and at relapse. Furthermore, these cells were not morphologically recognizable