Yoshida T, Kikuchi M, Ooshima K, Takeshita M, Kimura N, Kozuru M, Satoh H
First Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Fukuoka University, Japan.
Cancer. 1989 Dec 15;64(12):2515-24. doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(19891215)64:12<2515::aid-cncr2820641219>3.0.co;2-f.
Proviral DNA of adult T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV-I) was examined by the standard Southern blotting method in lymph nodes of 45 patients with anti-HTLV-I antibody (ATLA)-positive adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). Six of these patients revealed no monoclonal proviral HTLV-I DNA in tumor cells. These six patients showed typical flower cells in peripheral blood; they comprised five cases of the smoldering type and one of lymphoma type. They showed a longer clinical course than ATLL patients with integrated proviral HTLV-I DNA. Five of the six patients were alive from 8 to 36 months after onset; the other patient died 9 months after onset. Histologically, they exhibited features of T-cell malignancy but with absence of the typical cerebriform giant cells that are usually present in ATLL. The tumor cells represented T-cell markers, usually CD4, but CD25 was negative. Rearrangement of the T-cell receptor gene C beta was found in four of the six cases. On the basis of these results, cases of ATLL with no monoclonal proviral HTLV-I DNA should be clinicopathologically differentiated from those with integrated proviral DNA.