CD30+ lymphoproliferative disorders (LD) represent a spectrum of entities ranging from self-limited proliferations or cutaneous lesions with favorable prognosis, such as lymphomatoid papulosis and primary cutaneous anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL), to more aggressive malignancies such as systemic ALK-positive and ALK-negative ALCL.
The aggregate results of these studies indicate that the t(2;5) translocation or other somatic mutations resulting in inappropriate expression of ALK are involved rarely if at all in the pathogenesis of Hodgkin's disease, but may be present in about 10% of cases of lymphomatoid papulosis and 20% of cases of CD30+ primary cutaneous large cell lymphoma.
Although initially found in primary nodal ALCL, recent studies suggest that NPM-ALK expression may occur in lymphoma at extranodal sites, including the skin; it remains controversial, however, whether CD30+ primary cutaneous lymphoma and its benign counterpart, lymphomatoid papulosis (LyP), express NPM-ALK in some cases.
All other cases comprising T or null ALCL (17 cases), B ALCL (8 cases), Hodgkin's disease (HD) (15 cases), HD-like ALCL (23 cases), and lymphomatoid papulosis (9 cases), were negative forALK expression.
Fusion of the NPM and ALK genes was detected in three of 18 patients with ALCL who had amplifiable DNA (17%, 95% confidence intervals 4% to 41%), but not in any patients with other NHL, HD, or lymphomatoid papulosis.