CD5-expressing B-cell lymphomas/leukemias: relatively high frequency of CD5+ B-cell lymphomas with an overall poor prognosis in Nagasaki Japan.

LEUKEMIA & LYMPHOMA(2009)

Cited 1|Views10
No score
Abstract
To characterize CD5(+) B-cell neoplasms in Japan, where chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is rare and of different subtypes in comparison with Western countries, we collected 58 cases of CD5(+) B-cell lymphomas/leukemias and analyzed their clinicopathologic features. According to the French-American-British (FAB) and standard histologic classifications, the cases corresponded to small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL, group I; n = 22, consisting of CLL, n = 10, CLL/PL, n = 3, and CLL(mixed), n = 7); intermediate differentiated lymphoma/mantle cell lymphoma (IDL/MCL, group II, n = 18); and others with CDS-positive lymphomas (group III, n = 18). The CD5(+) B-cell lymphomas showed morphologic and prognostic variability among the three groups. The clinical and immunophenotypic features were remarkably consistent in leukemic disease being seen in 73% of all cases, splenomegaly in 63%, and intense CD19, CD20, surface membrane immunogobulin M (SmlgM) or SmIgM and SmIgD, light-chain expression, and no CD10 expression. The median survival time of groups I, II, and III was 7.8, 3.3, and 0.8 years, respectively. These findings suggest that CD5 antigens may serve as valid markers for the prognosis and clinical features of B-cell lymphomas and that CD5(+) B-cell lymphomas with an overall poor prognosis occurs at a relatively high frequency in Japan. This also suggests that a combination of immunophenotypic and morphologic features is of value for characterizing CD5(+) B-cell neoplasms.
More
Translated text
Key words
CD5 antigens,B-cell lymphoma,CLL,FAB-classification
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined