Different biological risk factors in young poor-prognosis and elderly patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
Prognostically relevant risk factors in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) have predominantly been evaluated in elderly populations. We tested whether previously described risk factors are also valid in younger, poor-prognosis DLBCL patients. Paraffin-embedded samples from 112 patie...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Leukemia 2015-07, Vol.29 (7), p.1564-1570 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Prognostically relevant risk factors in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) have predominantly been evaluated in elderly populations. We tested whether previously described risk factors are also valid in younger, poor-prognosis DLBCL patients. Paraffin-embedded samples from 112 patients with
de novo
DLBCL, enrolled in the R-MegaCHOEP trial of the German High Grade Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Study Group (DSHNHL) were investigated using immunohistochemistry (MYC, FOXP1, LMO2, GCET1, CD5, CD10, BCL2, BCL6, IRF4/MUM1) and fluorescence
in situ
hybridization (
MYC
,
BCL2
,
BCL6)
.
MYC
,
BCL2
and
BCL6
breaks occurred in 14, 21 and 31%, respectively. In the majority of cases,
MYC
was simultaneously rearranged with
BCL2
and/or
BCL6
. The adverse impact of
MYC
rearrangements was confirmed, but the sole presence of
BCL2
breaks emerged as a novel prognostic marker associated with inferior overall survival (OS) (
P
=0.002). Combined overexpression of MYC and BCL2 showed only limited association with inferior OS. All immunohistochemical cell of origin classifiers applied failed to predict survival time. DLBCL tumors with significant proportion of immunoblastic and/or immunoblastic-plasmacytoid cells had inferior OS, independently from from
BCL2
break. Younger, poor-prognosis DLBCL patients, therefore, display different biological risk factors compared with an elderly population, with
BCL2
translocations emerging as a powerful negative prognostic marker. |
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ISSN: | 0887-6924 1476-5551 |
DOI: | 10.1038/leu.2015.43 |