Koss M N
Department of Pulmonary and Mediastinal Pathology, Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, DC 20306-6000, USA.
Semin Diagn Pathol. 1995 May;12(2):158-71.
Organized lymphoid aggregates are normally found within the walls of bronchi in many species and may occur, under conditions of disease, in humans. This bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue (BALT) can be viewed as an organizing principle to explain the behavior and distribution of many pulmonary lymphoid proliferations, both hyperplastic and neoplastic. The extent of lymphoid hyperplasia can vary, from multifocal proliferations that arise in and remain in the airway walls (follicular hyperplasia of BALT) to those that form a solitary mass or nodule (nodular lymphoid hyperplasia of BALT or "pseudolymphoma") to multifocal or diffuse lymphoid hyperplasia of BALT ("lymphoid interstitial pneumonitis"). It seems likely that more than one cause accounts for these proliferations. Of interest is the hypothesis that many examples of diffuse lymphoid hyperplasia associated with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome may have a viral cause, possibly human immunodeficiency virus or, in some cases, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Most pulmonary lymphomas are low-grade B cell lymphomas. They exhibit histological diversity in any given case, characterized by small lymphocytes with irregular nuclei and pale cytoplasm (so-called "centrocytelike" cells), scattered immunoblasts, and lymphoplasmacytic or plasma cells. Reactive germinal centers are frequently present, and this, along with the benign clinical behavior of these tumors, may cause diagnostic confusion with reactive lesions. Both the histological appearance and the clinical behavior (in particular, the tendency to recur in extranodal sites) of these low-grade lymphomas can be explained on the basis of origin in BALT. T cell lymphoproliferative processes can occur in the lung but are rare. Lymphomatoid granulomatosis (angioimmunoproliferative lesion) is an angiocentric and necrotizing, polymorphous lymphoid lesion that presents as multiple masses in the lung, involves skin and central nervous system (among other organs), may progress to histologically overt lymphoma, and is immunophenotypically predominantly a T cell process. Microscopically, a lymphohistiocytic infiltrate, including variable numbers of atypical cells, is present. Recent in situ hybridization and immunohistochemical studies have served to show EBV localized to the large cells. In addition, these atypical cells often show B cell immunophenotypic features and are present in a background of small, reactive T cells. It is therefore possible that lymphomatoid granulomatosis is a family of T cell rich lymphoproliferations driven by EBV infection of B cells and/or T cells, analagous to the EBV-associated, posttransplantation B cell lymphoproliferative disorders.
在许多物种的支气管壁内通常可发现有组织的淋巴样聚集物,在患病情况下人类也可能出现。这种支气管相关淋巴样组织(BALT)可被视为一种组织学原理,用以解释许多肺部淋巴样增生性病变(包括增生性和肿瘤性病变)的行为和分布。淋巴样增生的程度各不相同,从气道壁内出现并局限于气道壁的多灶性增生(BALT的滤泡性增生)到形成单个肿块或结节的增生(BALT的结节性淋巴样增生或“假淋巴瘤”),再到BALT的多灶性或弥漫性淋巴样增生(“淋巴样间质性肺炎”)。这些增生可能由多种原因引起。有意思的是,有一种假说认为,许多与获得性免疫缺陷综合征相关的弥漫性淋巴样增生病例可能由病毒引起,可能是人类免疫缺陷病毒,在某些情况下可能是爱泼斯坦 - 巴尔病毒(EBV)。大多数肺淋巴瘤是低度B细胞淋巴瘤。在任何给定病例中,它们都表现出组织学多样性,其特征为核不规则且胞质淡染的小淋巴细胞(所谓的“中心细胞样”细胞)、散在的免疫母细胞以及淋巴浆细胞或浆细胞。通常存在反应性生发中心,这一点连同这些肿瘤的良性临床行为,可能导致与反应性病变的诊断混淆。这些低度淋巴瘤的组织学表现和临床行为(特别是在结外部位复发的倾向)都可以基于其起源于BALT来解释。T细胞淋巴增生性病变可发生于肺部,但较为罕见。淋巴瘤样肉芽肿病(血管免疫增生性病变)是一种以血管为中心的坏死性、多形性淋巴样病变,表现为肺部的多个肿块,累及皮肤和中枢神经系统(以及其他器官),可能进展为组织学上明显的淋巴瘤,免疫表型上主要是T细胞过程。显微镜下可见淋巴细胞和组织细胞浸润,包括数量不等的非典型细胞。最近的原位杂交和免疫组化研究表明EBV定位于大细胞内。此外,这些非典型细胞通常表现出B细胞免疫表型特征,并存在于小的反应性T细胞背景中。因此,淋巴瘤样肉芽肿病可能是一类由B细胞和/或T细胞的EBV感染驱动的富含T细胞的淋巴增生性病变,类似于EBV相关的移植后B细胞淋巴增生性疾病。