Diagnostic Pathology (Dec 2023)

Recognizing puzzling PD1 + infiltrates in marginal zone lymphoma by integrating clonal and mutational findings: pitfalls in both nodal and transformed splenic cases

  • Jili Deng,
  • Youjun Cao,
  • Xinting Diao,
  • Meng Wu,
  • Xianghong Li,
  • Yunfei Shi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13000-023-01422-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background A marked increase in PD1-positive TFH cells in nodal MZL cases (NMZL) was reported previously and could prompt suspicion for a diagnosis of peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL), especially angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL). Case presentation To demonstrate that the pitfall might exist not only in NMZL but also in transformed splenic MZL (tSMZL), two NMZL cases (70 y/o female with enlarged left cervical lymph node and 75 y/o male with generalized lymphadenopathy) and one case of tSMZL (47 y/o male with nodal and extranodal involvement) with obvious PD1-positive T-cell hyperplasia were described here. Although all their initial diagnoses were prompted to be AITL, they were comprehensively characterized by clinical features, morphologic, immunophenotypic, clonality, and targeted exosome sequencing (TES) findings. Case 1 and Case 2 were NMZL with increased PD1 + T cells in the “peripheral pattern” or “mixed peripheral and central pattern”, and Case 3 was SMZL with abundant PD1-positive T cells in the “nodular pattern” that transformed to tSMZL (DLBCL) with PD1-positive T cells distributed in the “diffuse pattern.” In addition to the monoclonal IG rearrangement and polyclonal TCR rearrangement results, TES demonstrated enriched and recurrent mutations in MZLs and failed to find aberrations described in AITL- or TFH-derived lymphomas. Conclusions It is important to realize that this pitfall can also occur in more diagnostically difficult tSMZL cases; the integration of histopathology with clonality and mutation studies is also highlighted.

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