Blokx Willeke A M, Andriessen Monique P M, van Hamersvelt Henk W, van Krieken Johan H J M
Department of Pathology, University Medical Center St Radboud, Nijmegen, The Netherland.
Am J Dermatopathol. 2002 Oct;24(5):414-22. doi: 10.1097/00000372-200210000-00008.
Primary cutaneous posttransplantation B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder is rare. The few previously reported patients were all treated with surgery, radiotherapy, or lowering of immunosuppression. We describe a 65-year-old woman presenting with an intermammary skin ulcer 21 years after renal transplantation, proving on biopsy to be an Epstein Barr virus (EBV)-related posttransplantation B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder. A few weeks later, the skin ulcer showed complete clinical regression. Hematologic staging evaluation showed no evidence of extracutaneous involvement. Despite continuation of immunosuppression, the patient stayed free of disease until 18 months after initial diagnosis, when she developed a progressive hemiparesis and died of acute myocardial infarction. At autopsy, a recurrent B-cell posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorder in the left side of the thalamus region (measuring 1 x 0.8 cm) was established. The long interval between the primary cutaneous lesion and the localized brain recurrence supports primary skin posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorder, especially because the patient was not treated for her posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorder. Review of the literature on primary cutaneous posttransplantation B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder and this case gives the impression that cutaneous posttransplantation B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders of B-cell lineage behave in a more benign manner than identical lesions arising extracutaneously. Because of the rare occurrence of posttransplantation B-cell lymphoproliferative disorder primarily involving the skin, extracutaneous origin should be excluded. If B-cell lineage can be established, EBV is present, alterations in oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes associated with malignant lymphoma are absent, and bcl-6 gene mutation associated with progression is absent, initially aggressive treatment might be avoided. However, long-term clinical follow-up with prolonged maintenance therapy (reduction of immunosuppression or antiviral therapy) for prevention of recurrent posttransplantation lymphoproliferative disorder seems indicated, as is demonstrated by the case reported in the current study.
原发性皮肤移植后B细胞淋巴增殖性疾病很罕见。之前报道的少数患者均接受了手术、放疗或免疫抑制降低治疗。我们描述了一名65岁女性,在肾移植21年后出现乳房间皮肤溃疡,活检证实为与爱泼斯坦-巴尔病毒(EBV)相关的移植后B细胞淋巴增殖性疾病。几周后,皮肤溃疡临床完全消退。血液学分期评估显示无皮肤外受累证据。尽管继续进行免疫抑制治疗,但患者在初始诊断后18个月一直无疾病,之后出现进行性偏瘫并死于急性心肌梗死。尸检时,在丘脑区域左侧发现复发性B细胞移植后淋巴增殖性疾病(大小为1×0.8 cm)。原发性皮肤病变与局限性脑复发之间的长时间间隔支持原发性皮肤移植后淋巴增殖性疾病,特别是因为该患者未接受移植后淋巴增殖性疾病的治疗。对原发性皮肤移植后B细胞淋巴增殖性疾病的文献回顾以及该病例表明,B细胞系的皮肤移植后B细胞淋巴增殖性疾病的行为比皮肤外出现的相同病变更为良性。由于主要累及皮肤的移植后B细胞淋巴增殖性疾病罕见,应排除皮肤外起源。如果可以确定B细胞系,存在EBV,不存在与恶性淋巴瘤相关的癌基因或肿瘤抑制基因改变,且不存在与疾病进展相关的bcl-6基因突变,则可避免最初的积极治疗。然而,如本研究报道的病例所示,似乎需要进行长期临床随访并进行延长的维持治疗(降低免疫抑制或抗病毒治疗)以预防移植后淋巴增殖性疾病复发。