Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorders, PTLD

Definition

A lymphoid proliferation arising in a recipient of solid organ or bone marrow allogeneic transplantation (including umbilical cord blood transplantation2).

EBV is thought to be causal in most cases. However, about 20% of cases (50% of renal transplantation cases) are EBV-negative; these cases tend to occur late after transplantation. Most PTLD are of host origin but about 10% arise from donor lymphoid cells; those arising from donor cells most commonly arise after lung and liver transplantation and involve the allograft. PTLD in the context of bone marrow transplant is of donor origin.

A few cases of similar EBV-positive B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder have been described as a sequel to chemotherapy with fludarabine for low-grade B-cell lymphoma. At least in some cases, they regress spontaneously1.

Clinical features

The mean time to the development of PTLD after grafting is variable:

with azathioprine-based immunosuppression; 48 months
with cyclosporine A; 15 months
after bone marrow transplantation; 5 months
EBV-positive cases after 6-10 months
EBV-negative cases after 4-5 years

 

25% of cases involve the allograft. Azathioprine immunosuppression is associated with extranodal PTLD of the allograft and of the CNS. Cyclosporine and Tacrolimus are associated with nodal and gastrointestinal PTLD, less often CNS disease. Bone marrow, liver and lungs may also be involved. Involvement of the peripheral blood is rare.

Histopathology

Prognosis

The overall mortality of PTLD is 60% in the context of solid organ allografts and 80% in bone marrow allograft recipients.

References

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

1 Abruzzo, L.V., Rosales, C.M., Medeiros, L.J., Vega, F., Luthra, R., Manning, J.T., Keating, M.J. and Jones, D. Epstein-Barr virus-positive B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders arising in immunodeficient patients previously treated with fludarabine for low-grade B-cell neoplasms. Am J Surg Pathol 2002;26:630-6.

2 Gong JZ, Bayerl MG, Sandhaus LM, et al. Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder after umbilical cord blood transplantation in children. Am J Surg Pathol 2006; 30:328-36

This page last revised 10.4.2006.

 

 

©SMUHT/PW Bishop