AI Article Synopsis

  • Primary cutaneous large B-cell lymphomas (PCLBCL) are hard to diagnose because they come in different types that need different treatments and have different outcomes.
  • Scientists studied 55 PCLBCL cases and found many were classified as either germinal center (GC) or non-GC types, with some unclassified ones needing more testing.
  • They used a special test called RT-MLPA to accurately sort out the different types of PCLBCL, which could help doctors better figure out how to treat patients based on their specific lymphoma type.

Article Abstract

Primary cutaneous large B-cell lymphomas (PCLBCL) represent a diagnostic challenge because they are classified as PCLBCL, leg type (PCLBCL, LT) or primary cutaneous follicle centre lymphoma, large cell (PCFCL, LC), which differ by prognosis and therapeutic requirement. Unclassified cases with discordant clinical presentations, morphologies, and immunophenotypes may be classified into the not otherwise specified (PCLBCL, NOS) category based on ancillary molecular analyses. Cell-of-origin profiling as germinal centre (GC) type or non-GC type by immunohistochemistry is not considered reproducible because of variable CD10 expression. In a series of 55 PCLBCL cases with > 80% large cells, we reported 21 PCFCL, LC cases as GC-type and 27 PCLBCL, LT as non-GC-type; 7 cases were considered PCLBCL, NOS. Here, we demonstrate the accuracy of molecular profiling of PCLBCL as GC or non-GC type using a reverse transcriptase multiplex ligation assay (RT-MLPA). RT-MLPA classified the seven PCLBCL, NOS cases in accordance with their mutational profile. An integrative principal component analysis confirmed the main criteria and the relevance of genomic profiling of PCFCL, LC as GC-derived, and PCLBCL, LT as non-GC-derived. Both the cell-of-origin classification of PCLBCL and the integrative analysis identified two clinically relevant subgroups according to overall survival, which may help to standardize PCLBCL diagnosis and patient management.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9032422PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0266978PLOS

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