Blood Advances (Apr 2025)

Characterizing the heterogeneity of Castleman disease and oligocentric subtype: findings from the ACCELERATE registry

  • Sheila K. Pierson,
  • Joshua D. Brandstadter,
  • Drew A. Torigian,
  • Adam Bagg,
  • Mary Jo Lechowicz,
  • Daisy Alapat,
  • Corey Casper,
  • Amy Chadburn,
  • Shanmuganathan Chandrakasan,
  • Angela Dispenzieri,
  • Alexander Fosså,
  • Christian Hoffmann,
  • Makoto Ide,
  • Razelle Kurzrock,
  • Sudipto Mukherjee,
  • Sunita Nasta,
  • José-Tomás Navarro,
  • Ariela Noy,
  • Eric Oksenhendler,
  • Mateo Sarmiento Bustamante,
  • Saishravan Shyamsundar,
  • Matthew Streetly,
  • Raymond S. M. Wong,
  • Lu Zhang,
  • Megan S. Lim,
  • Gordan Srkalovic,
  • Frits van Rhee,
  • David C. Fajgenbaum

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
pp. 1952 – 1965

Abstract

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Abstract: Castleman disease (CD) describes a group of rare lymphoproliferative disorders that exhibit a wide range of symptomatology and degree of lymphadenopathy, particularly across the 2 forms of CD with unknown etiology, unicentric CD (UCD), and human herpesvirus-8–negative/idiopathic multicentric CD (iMCD). Whereas UCD cases typically present with localized lymphadenopathy and mild symptoms, iMCD involves multicentric lymphadenopathy and cytokine storm–driven symptoms with 3 recognized clinical phenotypes. Increasingly, there are anecdotal reports of cases that do not fit into this framework, but these cases have not been systematically described. Herein, we use the ACCELERATE natural history registry to characterize the spectrum of CD based on disease features, symptomatology, and severity. Our results characterize a cohort of 179 CD cases, which were reviewed and confirmed by an expert panel of clinicians and hematopathologists. We show that patients with CD present on a continuous spectrum of clinical phenotypes, and we describe oligocentric CD (OligoCD), an intermediate phenotype that does not fit the criteria for UCD or iMCD. These cases tend to have “oligocentric” lymphadenopathy (median [interquartile range] regions of lymphadenopathy, 3.0 [2.0-4.0]) in a regional pattern and exhibit a mild clinical phenotype that is more similar to UCD than iMCD. We also show that patients with OligoCD are inconsistently categorized as UCD vs iMCD, highlighting the need for this characterization. Future data collected through ACCELERATE may further elucidate the natural history and risk profile of these patients.