Definition
A neoplasm of small round B-lymphocytes in the peripheral blood, bone marrow and lymph nodes, admixed with prolymphocytes and paraimmunoblasts (pseudofollicles), usually expressing CD5 and CD23. SLL is applied to those cases non-leukaemic with the same morphology
Epidemiology
B-CLL constitutes 90% of cases of chronic lymphoid leukaemia. Most patients are more than 50 years old, with a male predominance of 2:1.
Clinical features
Typical sites of involvement are lymph nodes, liver, spleen, skin, breast and ocular adnexa. Patients are commonly asymptomatic but may present with fatigue, autoimmune haemolytic anaemia, infections, hepatosplenomegaly or extranodal infiltrates.
Histopathology
The nodal architecture is replaced by a pseudofollicular pattern of pale areas composed of larger cells in a darker background of small cells. The pseudofollicles (proliferation centres, growth centres) contain a continuum of small, medium (prolymphocytes) to large (paraimmunoblasts) cells. The spleen shows predominantly white pulp involvement; pseudofollicles are less prominent. Some cases show plasmacytoid differentiation. Bone marrow involvement may be nodular, interstitial, diffuse or mixed. A paratrabecular distribution is not typical. Pseudofollicles are not common but may be found.
Immunohistochemistry
: fresh frozen tissue only
Scoring system for immunophenotype
|
CLL |
score |
other B-cell lymphoma |
score |
SIg |
weak |
1 |
strong |
0 |
positive |
1 |
negative (except mantle cell) |
0 |
|
positive |
1 |
negative |
0 |
|
weak |
1 |
strong |
0 |
|
FMC7 |
negative |
1 |
positive |
0 |
CLL score 4 or 5 |
usual score 0 to 2 |
Variants
CLL or SLL with cleaved cells
Large-cell rich CLL or SLL
Mixed CLL (so-called by the FAB group) have small numbers of prolymphocytes (<10%) but retain the immunophenotype of CLL (SIg+, CD20+, CD5+, CD23+)1.
B cell prolymphocytic leukaemia
The prolymphocytes show variable staining for CD5 and CD23 and are usually CD25 negative1.
Prolymphocytic transformation of CLL
These cases show >55% prolymphocytes, but a recognisable population of small lymphocytes is usually retained. CD5 positivity is usually retained1.
Richter's syndrome - transformation to diffuse large B-cell lymphoma - occurs in 3.5% of cases.
Hodgkin's disease variant of Richter's syndrome, occurs in 0.5% of cases.
The Reed-Sternberg cells are CD15 positive and may be CD20 positive. There may be scattered Reed-Sternberg cells in a background of CLL or discrete areas of classical Hodgkin lymphoma.
Mu heavy chain disease: a defective mu heavy chain lacks a variable region. This is an extremely rare disease of adults with hepatosplenomegaly but lacking lymphadenopathy. The bone marrow contains characteristic vacuolated plasma cells admixed with small lymphocytes. The cells are CD5-, CD10-. The unbound light chain are found in the urine as Bence Jones proteins in 50% of cases. It is only slowly progressive.
Differential diagnosis
Prognosis
Incurable but with a very variable prognosis, CLL is often indolent, with a median survival of 7 years. ZAP-70 positivity, CD38 poisitivity and unmutated IgV(H) are all asociated with an inferior prognosis.
References
World Health Organization Classification of Tumours, Tumours of the haematopoietic and lymphoid tissues, IARC Press 2001.
Wotherspoon AC, Hasserjian RP. Immunophenotyping in the differential diagnosis of histologically low grade B cell lymphomas Current Diagnostic Pathology 2000;6:55-63.
1EJ Schlette. B-cell prolymphocytic leukaemia. Pathology Case Reviews 2000;5 (5):274-280.