Thirty-four cases were classified as anaplastic large cell lymphomas (ALCL), 2 cases as non-anaplastic large cell lymphomas (LCL), and 1 case as the small cell variant of CD30+ lymphoma.
A distinct pathologic entity characterized by expression of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) protein (hence described as ALK lymphoma) has emerged within the heterogeneous group of CD30 anaplastic large-cell lymphomas.
To definitively clarify whether the large atypical CD30(+) cells in LyP without associated lymphoma all belong to the same clone or represent individually rearranged T cells, we analyzed the T-cell receptor-gamma rearrangements of single CD30+ as well as of single CD30- cells isolated from 14 LyP lesions of 11 patients.
Aiming to functionally analyze the malignant T cells at a clonal level, we generated a total of 150 T-cell clones (TCC) from lesional skin and peripheral blood of three patients with mycosis fungoides and one patient with a CD30+ lymphoma.
A loss of response to transforming growth factor-beta, which normally dampens cellular proliferation, may differentiate CD30+ lymphoma from lymphomatoid papulosis.
No mutation was detected in any of the three CD30-positive Alc lymphoma analyzed, whereas an aberrant SSCP pattern was found in all the four SNCC samples tested.
While our understanding of the biology of CD30 in lymphoma continues to evolve, our need to detect and measure its expression at the protein level remains critically important for diagnosis and patient care.
The relatively benign clinical course of this lymphoma type has been explained with CD30-induced apoptosis, on the assumption that expression of CD30 defines the tumor clone; however, this hypothesis has not been tested on the molecular level to date.
Upon cocultivation with autologous CD30(+)lymphoma cells, grafted T cells increase IFN-gamma secretion and lyse specifically lymphoma cells with high efficiency, even at an effector to target cell ratio of as low as 1:20.
Areas covered: The following article examines the current and emerging monoclonal antibody-based therapies for CTCL, with a particular focus on mycosis fungoides, primary cutaneous anaplastic large cell CD30+ lymphoma and Sezary syndrome.
This review gives a critical overview about anti-CD30 therapies with unconjugated, engineered, and conjugated mAbs and the therapeutic challenges of treatment of CD30(+) lymphoma.
Once a diagnosis of lymphoma is established, it is important to exclude systemic anaplastic lymphoma kinase-negative ALCL involving the breast, primary cutaneous ALCL, and other CD30(+) lymphoproliferative disorders.
The gross appearance of the capsules as well as the presence, extent and depth of tumor cells on the luminal side and number of sections involved by lymphoma were determined by review of routine stains and CD30 immunohistochemistry.
A 47-year-old woman developed numerous violaceous nodules in the perineal and upper thigh area 3 years after multimodal treatment and complete remission of primary anaplastic large-cell CD30+ lymphoma.
We used the murine anti-CD30 hybridoma Ki-4 to construct a new recombinant immunotoxin (rIT) for possible clinical use in patients with CD30(+) lymphoma.
We discuss the diagnostic and clinical implications in the case of a 42-yr-old female with a peripheral CD30+ lymphoma that displayed both characteristic B- and T-cell surface antigens and clonal rearrangement of B- and T-cell antigen receptor gene loci.
The Epstein-Barr virus has been implicated in the etiology of endemic Burkitt's lymphoma, post-transplant lymphoma, large-cell anaplastic CD30 (Ki-1)-positive lymphoma, and in many T-cell lymphomas.
Their specific features and relationship to CD30-expressing Hodgkin and Reed/Sternberg (HRS) cells of Hodgkin lymphoma are unclear but highly relevant, because numerous patients with lymphoma are currently treated with an anti-CD30 immunotoxin.
To mobilize both adoptive and innate immune cells for an anti-tumor attack we fused the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL2 and IL12 to an anti-CD30 scFv antibody in a dual cytokine fusion protein to accumulate both cytokines at the malignant CD30(+) Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg cells in the lymphoma lesion.