lymphoma uglyar t.y. adapted from joe waller, md 2013 drs. wang and young and by david lee md, frcpc

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Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

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Page 1: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Lymphoma

Uglyar T.Y.

Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Page 2: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Conceptualizing lymphoma

• neoplasms of lymphoid origin, typically causing lymphadenopathy

• leukemia vs lymphoma

• lymphomas as clonal expansions of cells at certain developmental stages

Page 3: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

ALLALL MM MM CLLCLL LymphomasLymphomas

Hematopoieticstem cell

Neutrophils

Eosinophils

Basophils

Monocytes

Platelets

Red cells

Myeloidprogenitor

Myeloproliferative disordersMyeloproliferative disordersAMLAML

Lymphoidprogenitor T-lymphocytes

Plasmacells

B-lymphocytes

nanaïïveve

Page 4: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

B-cell development

stemcell

lymphoidprogenitor

progenitor-B

pre-B

immatureB-cell

memoryB-cell

plasma cellplasma cell

DLBCL,FL, HL

ALL

CLL

MM

germinalgerminalcentercenterB-cellB-cell

maturenaiveB-cell

Page 5: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Risk Factors

• • Mostly unknown, although both genetic and infectious • processes are suspected • • Living in Western countries, being of higher social class, • more educated. • • Genetic pre-disposition, clusters noted in siblings with • similar HLA genotypes. • – Mack et al: 99x risk in monozygotic vs dizygotic twins • • EBV (MC subtype) • • HIV+ pts have different patterns of spread, more • systemic sx, poor tolerance to chemo • • Children do better than adults

Page 6: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

A practical way to think of lymphoma

Category Survival of untreated patients

Curability To treat or not to treat

Non-Hodgkin lymphoma

Indolent Years Generally not curable

Generally defer Rx if asymptomatic

Aggressive Months Curable in some

Treat

Very aggressive

Weeks Curable in some

Treat

Hodgkin lymphoma

All types Variable – months to years

Curable in most

Treat

Page 7: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Staging

• Stage I: a single LN region (on either side of the diaphragm) • Stage II: two or more LN regions of the same side of the diaphragm • Stage III: both sides of the diaphragm • Stage III-1: upper abd: splenic, celiac, portal LN only, <4 splenic • nodules • Stage III-2: lower abd: Paraaortic, mesenteric, pelvic • Stage III(S)+ Minimal: <4 splenic nodules • Stage III(S)+ Extensive: 5 or more splenic nodules • Stage IV: diffuse involvement of extralymphatic tissues, with or • without simultaneous LN involvement. • E subtypes: extranodal disease • S subtype: spleen involvement • “A” and “B”: absent or present “B” symptoms. • X subtype: bulky disease of > 1/3 thoracic diameter or > 10 cm

Page 8: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Lymph Node Regions

Page 9: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

International Prognostic Score

• In patients with Stage III-IV disease, each of the following factors

• reduces survival by 7%: • • Age >45 • Male sex • Stage IV disease • Albumin < 4g/dL • Hb<10.5 • WBC>15,000 • Lymphoctes count <8% or ALC<600 • Used for individualized treatment management

Page 10: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Mediastinal LAN

Page 11: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Other Manifestations

• SVC syndrome • • Spinal Cord • Compression • • Bone involvement • • Hepatic involvement • • Renal involvement • • Infections • • Immunologic • Abnormalities • • Rarely: • – Waldeyer's Ring, • Peyer's patches, CNS, • skin

Page 12: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Epidemiology of lymphomas

• 5th most frequently diagnosed cancer in both sexes• males > females• incidence

– NHL increasing– Hodgkin lymphoma stable– Epidemiology – • ~8000 new cases of Hodgkin’s Disease in – the U.S. in 2008, causing ~1500 deaths – • M:F ratio is 1.3:1; more pronounced in – children – • Bimodal age distribution: 2-3rd decade, – and 6-7th decade.

Page 13: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Clinical manifestations• Variable

• severity: asymptomatic to extremely ill• time course: evolution over weeks, months, or

years

• Systemic manifestations• fever, night sweats, weight loss, anorexia, pruritis

• Local manifestations• lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly most common• any tissue potentially can be infiltrated

Page 14: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

complications of lymphoma

• bone marrow failure (infiltration)

• CNS infiltration

• immune hemolysis or thrombocytopenia

• compression of structures (eg spinal cord, ureters)

• pleural/pericardial effusions, ascites

Page 15: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Diagnosis requires an adequate biopsy

Work Up • Diagnosis should be biopsy-proven before treatment is initiated• Need enough tissue to assess cells and architecture

– open bx vs core needle bx vs FNA • Excisional biopsy • – Most commonly of cervical nodes • – Presence of RS cells is necessary but not sufficient • • Laparotomy • – 1960’s • – Determine extent of disease below diaphragm • – Largely eliminated by more effective chemo regimens • – EORTC study did not show survival benefit for • pathologic staging over clinical staging (Carde et al. • JCO 1993)

Page 16: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Adverse Prognostic Factors

• • B symptoms esp. weight loss and night sweats. • • Pruritis • • Higher stage, esp.with bone marrow or organ • involvement. • • Bulky disease with large tumor burden. This includes • large mediastinal lymphadenopathy, which is >1/3 of • maximal thoracic diameter (T5-T6). • • Worrisome labs include ESR>70 and high serum copper. • • Older age • • LD type • • male

Page 17: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

CHOP Chemotherapy

• Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)

• Hydroxydaunorubicin (Adriamycin)

• Oncovin (vincristine)

• Prednisone

Page 18: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Follicular lymphoma

• most common type of “indolent” lymphoma

• usually widespread at presentation• often asymptomatic• not curable (some exceptions)• associated with BCL-2 gene

rearrangement [t(14;18)]• cell of origin: germinal center B-cell

Page 19: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

• defer treatment if asymptomatic (“watch-and-wait”)

• several chemotherapy options if symptomatic

• median survival: years

• despite “indolent” label, morbidity and mortality can be considerable

• transformation to aggressive lymphoma can occur

Page 20: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma

• most common type of “aggressive” lymphoma

• usually symptomatic

• extranodal involvement is common

• cell of origin: germinal center B-cell

• treatment should be offered

• curable in ~ 40%

Page 21: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Treatment Options:Aggressive Lymphomas

Aggressive

• Diffuse large cell lymphoma, large cell anaplastic lymphoma, peripheral T cell lymphoma.

Very Aggressive

• Burkitt’s lymphoma and lymphoblastic lymphoma.

Page 22: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Treatment Options for Advanced Stage Aggressive

Lymphomas• Systemic chemotherapy

– CHOP (± Rituxan for over 70 age group)

• ± Intrathecal chemotherapy – AIDS patients and CNS involvement

• ± Radiotherapy– Spinal cord compression, bulky disease

Page 23: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Burkitt’s Lymphoma

• African variety: jaw tumor, strongly linked to Epstein-Barr Virus infection.

• In U.S., about 50% EBV infection.• May present as abdominal mass.• Most rapidly growing human tumor.• Typical chromosome abnormality: c-

myc oncogene linked to one of the immunoglobulin genes.

Page 24: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Burkitt’s Lymphoma

• Treated with multidrug regimen similar to pediatric leukemia/lymphoma regimens.

• Treated with multidrug regimen similar to pediatric leukemia/lymphoma regimens.

Page 25: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

MALT Lymphoma

• Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue

• Chronic infection of the stomach by Helicobacter pylori.

• Localized to the stomach, indolent course.

• Can be cured in many cases by antibiotics against H. pylori.

Page 26: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Treatment Options for Early Stage Aggressive

Lymphomas• Often in Stage I or II

– potentially curable– disseminates through bloodstream early– must use systemic chemotherapy

• CHOP x 6 cycles• CHOP x 3 cycles followed by radiotherapy

Page 27: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Hodgkin lymphoma

Thomas Hodgkin(1798-1866)

Page 28: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma

Hodgkin’s Disease

Page 29: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Hodgkin’s Disease

• One-seventh as common a snon-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

• Highly treatable and curable, even when disseminated.

• Presence of Reed-Sternberg cell is necessary to make diagnosis.

Page 30: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Subtypes of Hodgkin’s Disease

• Lymphocyte predominant• Nodular sclerosis• Mixed cellularity• Lymphocyte depleted

• Unlike non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, in Hodgkin’s Disease

• the histologic subtype does not determine how the• disease is treated.

Page 31: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

CHL Pathologic Variants • Nodular Sclerosis (NS) (70%) • • Large RS cells • • Cervical nodes • • Anterior mediastinum • • Adolescent patients • • Lymphocyte Rich (5%) • • Rare RS cells. Many lymphocytes. Age <35 y/o with localized disease. Good • prognosis. M>F (4:1). • • Lymphocyte Depleted (rare) • • Many RS cells, few lymphocytes • • Age > 50. • • Diffuse abdominal disease, marrow, and liver involvement. Most patients p/w • advanced disease • • Poorest prognosis • • Mixed cellularity (25%) • • Moderate RS cells, mixed infiltrate of neutrophils, eosinophils, and plasma cells. • • Age 30-50, EBV associated, developing countries • • Retro-peritoneal presentation • • Intermediate prognosis

Page 32: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Hodgkin lymphoma

• cell of origin: germinal centre B-cell

• Reed-Sternberg cells (or RS variants) in the affected tissues

• most cells in affected lymph node are polyclonal reactive lymphoid cells, not neoplastic cells

Page 33: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Histology

• Reed-Stenberg Cell: “owl eyes” • – Large, with abundant cytoplasm, 2-3 nuclei with • prominent nucleolus “owl eyes” appearance • – NOT pathognomonic, can be reactive, infectious or • malignant • – RS cells stain for CD30/15+, but are CD45/20- • *Contrast w/ NLPHL which are CD30/15-, • CD45/20+

Page 34: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Reed-Sternberg cell

Page 35: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

RS cell and variants

popcorn celllacunar cellclassic RS cell

(mixed cellularity) (nodular sclerosis) (lymphocytepredominance)

Page 36: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Molecular Biology

• The Reed Sternberg (RS) cell likely arises from

• either lymphocyte or antigen-presenting cells of

• the monocyte-macrophage line. Regarding • lymphocyte origin, 60% of RS cells have T or

B • cell specific antigens, and B cells are the

usual • target for EBV

Page 37: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Molecular Biology

• RS-like cells are found in several infectious, inflammatory, and • neoplastic conditions including infectious mononucleosis, reactive • lymphoid hyperplasia, and immunoblastic lymphoma. • • Thus, diagnosing Hodgkin’s depends on finding RS cells in the • appropriate clinical setting. The lymphocytes are predominantly CD-• 4 positive T-cells. • • The BCL2 Oncogene is found in 1/3 of Hodgkins patients. • • The p53 suppressor gene is found in almost all Hodgkin’s patients • except those with lymphocyte predominant disease. • • The common t(14:18) translocation of B cell lymphoma are RARE in • RS cells.

Page 38: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

A possible model of pathogenesis

germinalcentreB cell

transformingevent(s)

loss of apoptosis

RS cellinflammatory

response

EBV?

cytokines

Page 39: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Etiology ofHodgkin’s Disease

• Reed-Sternberg cells are the malignant cells.• Minor population in the malignant tissues

– many normal lymphocytes, eosinophils, other cells

• Cell of origin is unknown: T, B, both, neither.• Some R-S cells contain EBV genomes.

Page 40: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Epidemiology

• less frequent than non-Hodgkin lymphoma

• overall M>F

• peak incidence in 3rd decade

Page 41: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Clinical Features

• T cell mediated immune deficiency, even in early stage disease. Prone to infections:– Herpes zoster (“shingles”) in one fourth of

patients– Fungal or mycobacterial infections

• Immune defect may persist even after lymphoma is cured.

Page 42: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Clinical manifestations:

• lymphadenopathy

• contiguous spread

• extranodal sites relatively uncommon except in advanced disease

• “B” symptoms

Page 43: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Clinical Features

• Predictable contiguous spread of disease:– cervical nodes to mediastinum or axilla– mediastinum to periaortic nodes or spleen,

etc.

• Basis for staging and treatment decisions.

Page 44: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Diagnosis

• Excisional biopsy of a lymph node.

Fine needle aspirate is not sufficient to make the diagnosis of Hodgkin’s disease.

Page 45: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Staging of Hodgkin’s Disease

Same as for non-Hodgkin’s:

• H + P, labs, CT scans, bone marrow biopsy

PLUS:

• Gallium scan

• Lymphangiogram or staging laparotomy ONLY if results would affect treatment decisions

Page 46: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Treatment by Stage

Stage Therapy % Cure

IA XRT 95

IIA XRT 85

IB, IIB XRT (Total Nodal) 70

IIIA XRT 70

IIIB, IV Combination Chemo 50

Page 47: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Chemotherapy Regimens

• MOPP

– Mechlorethamine, Oncovin, Procarbazine, Prednisone

• ABVD

– Adriamycin, Bleomycin, Vinblastine, Dacarbazine

• BEACOPP

Page 48: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Treatment Options

• Often, patients who relapse after radiotherapy can be cured by salvage chemotherapy.

• Combined chemotherapy and radiotherapy is given for bulky mediastinal masses.

• Chemotherapy now being tested for earlier stages of the disease.

Page 49: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Late Complications ofHodgkin’s Disease

• High incidence of second malignancies– leukemia first 10 years, solid tumors over

time.

• Leukemia in patients receiving alkylating agents or combined chemo/XRT.

• Lung cancer and breast cancer in patients receiving XRT to chest. Lung cancer especially high in smokers.

Page 50: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Late Complications ofHodgkin’s Disease

• Hypothyroidism after irradiation of the neck.

• Constrictive pericarditis after radiotherapy to the mediastinum.

• Infertility after use of alkylating agents.

• Heart failure after Adriamycin treatment.

Page 51: Lymphoma Uglyar T.Y. Adapted from Joe Waller, MD 2013 Drs. Wang and Young and By David Lee MD, FRCPC

Treatment • Overall survival exceeds 80%, therefore therapy is evolving to • minimize toxicity while maintaining excellent disease control • The German Hodgkin's Study Group (GHSG) has performed a • number of trials with various iterations of treatment regimens • Major chemotherapy options: • ABVD • Doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine • Most commonly prescribed regimen • Stanford V • Doxorubicin, vinblastine, mechlorethamine, etoposide,

vincristine, • bleomycin, and prednisone • Overall lower doses bleo/doxo than ABVD • BEACOPP • Bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicine, cyclophosphamide,

vincristine, • procarbazine, and prednisone • Dose dense • Being studied for advanced disease