Infectious Agents and Cancer (Nov 2021)

Metagenomic analysis to identify novel infectious agents in systemic anaplastic large cell lymphoma

  • Parag Mahale,
  • Jason Nomburg,
  • Joo Y. Song,
  • Mia Steinberg,
  • Gabriel Starrett,
  • Joseph Boland,
  • Charles F. Lynch,
  • Amy Chadburn,
  • Paul G. Rubinstein,
  • Brenda Y. Hernandez,
  • Dennis D. Weisenburger,
  • Susan Bullman,
  • Eric A. Engels

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13027-021-00404-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Systemic anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) is a rare CD30-expressing T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Risk of systemic ALCL is highly increased among immunosuppressed individuals. Because risk of cancers associated with viruses is increased with immunosuppression, we conducted a metagenomic analysis of systemic ALCL to determine whether a known or novel pathogen is associated with this malignancy. Total RNA was extracted and sequenced from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumor specimens from 19 systemic ALCL cases (including one case from an immunosuppressed individual with human immunodeficiency virus infection), 3 Epstein-Barr virus positive diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs) occurring in solid organ transplant recipients (positive controls), and 3 breast cancers (negative controls). We used a pipeline based on the Genome Analysis Toolkit (GATK)-PathSeq algorithm to subtract out human RNA reads and map the remaining RNA reads to microbes. No microbial association with ALCL was identified, but we found Epstein-Barr virus in the DLBCL positive controls and determined the breast cancers to be negative. In conclusion, we did not find a pathogen associated with systemic ALCL, but because we analyzed only one ALCL tumor from an immunosuppressed person, we cannot exclude the possibility that a pathogen is associated with some cases that arise in the setting of immunosuppression.

Keywords