Extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type

Definition

An extranodal lymph showing a wide morphological spectrum. There is commonly angiocentricity, vascular destruction and necrosis. While most cases are of NK-cell type, some appear to be composed of cytotoxic g/d T-cells.

Synonyms

Epidemiology

The median patient age is about fifty years2,4. Most common in Asia (Japan4, Korea and China), it is also relatively common in Mexico, South and Central America2, where it occurs in adults with a male predominance. It has also been reported in immunosuppressed and post-transplantation patients. EBV is probably pathogenic. Cases complicating transplantation have been reported.

Clinical features

Involvement is most commonly of the nasal cavity, nasopharynx and palate, also of skin, soft tissues, gastrointestinal tract and testes. There may be secondary lymph node involvement. Marrow involvement is uncommon, but there may be overlap with aggressive NK leukaemia.

Patients present with nasal obstruction, epistaxis or midfacial destructive lesions. Rapid dissemination may occur. There may be a haemophagocytic syndrome, which is often a late clinical complication associated with a rapidly fatal outcome2.

Cutaneous cases may be solitary but are usually generalised, consisting of tumours, ulcer, or vasculitis/panniculitis. There is commonly a haemophagocytic syndrome1.

Histopathology

At all sites, there is mucosal ulceration. There is a diffuse lymphomatous infiltrate with angiocentricity and angiodestruction. Fibrinoid necrosis of vessel walls may be seen. Massive coagulative necrosis is common4 and there is often marked apoptosis4. The neoplastic cells vary from small to large and anaplastic. The nuclei tend to be somewhat elongated, so-called cleaved-like cells, admixed with large blastic cells with round nuclei4. An abundant admixture of small lymphocytes, plasma cells, histiocytes and eosinophils may be present, mimicking an inflammatory process.

Cutaneous disease is often "bottom-heavy" with extension into subcutaneous fat. Epidermotropism is rare but an overlying florid pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia may mimic carcinoma.

Immunohistochemistry

 

CD2

positive2, 9/204

 

CD3

surface-negative but cytoplasmic e-positive2, 31/314

CD4

usually negative, 0/314

CD5

usually negative, 0/304

CD7

occasionally positive, 7/204

CD8

usually negative, 3/314

CD11b

may be positive

CD16

usually negative2, 0/204

CD20

0/314

CD30

occasionally positive

CD43

usually positive, 23/314

CD45RO

usually positive, 24/314

CD56

positive2 (unless cytotoxic T-cell type), 29/314

CD57

usually negative2

CD94

20/204

 

TCR

usually negative, 0/204

 

granzyme B

usually positive2, 30/314

 

TIA-1

usually positive2, 30/304

 

perforin

usually positive2

 

TCR

usually negative, unless composed of NK-like T-cells

 

EBV

positive, 12/314

 
 

Cytogenetics

6q deletions are common2. T-cell gene rearrangements are lacking.

Molecular studies

Differential diagnosis

Management

Radiotherapy may be effective for localised disease, but is usually combined with chemotherapy2. Expression of high levels of multidrug resistance gene confers resistance to chemotherapy2.

Prognosis

Nasal disease is of very variable prognosis with a reported 5-year survival of 58%4. Stage I disease has a favourable prognosis4. Extra-nasal disease is highly aggressive. There is frequently deletion or mutation of p53, but this does not appear to be of prognostic significance2. Expression of CD94 may be associated with a better prognosis3.

References

World Health Organization Classification of Tumours, Tumours of the haematopoietic and lymphoid tissues, IARC Press 2001.

1 Liu, V. and McKee, P.H. Cutaneous T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders: approach for the surgical pathologist: recent advances and clarification of confused issues. Adv Anat Pathol 2002;9:79-100.

2 VE Nava and ES Jaffe. The pathology of NK-cell lymphomas and leukamias. Adv Anat Pathol 2005;12:27-34.

3Lin CW, Chen YH, Chuang YC, et al. CD94 transcripts imply a better prognosis in nasal-type extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma. Blood 2003; 102:2623-31

4 Kitamura A, Yamashita Y, Hasegawa Y, et al. Primary lymphoma arising in the nasal cavity among Japanese. Histopathology 2005; 47:523-32

This page last revised 19.12.2005.

©SMUHT/PW Bishop