Author:
Wolfe J T,Chooback L,Finn D T,Jaworsky C,Rook A H,Lessin S R
Abstract
PURPOSE One of the unique characteristics of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) is its ability to undergo cytologic transformation in which the malignant T cells develop the morphologic appearance of a large-cell lymphoma. Reported to occur in up to 20% of advanced cases, large-cell transformation (LCT) is associated with an aggressive clinical course. Little is known about the risk factors or the molecular mechanisms of LCT. Before current immunohistochemical and molecular techniques, it was not possible to determine if LCT represented changes of the initial neoplastic T-cell clone or, in fact, was a distinct second malignancy. The goal of this study was to define the clonal evolution of LCT in CTCL. PATIENTS AND METHODS Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of T-cell receptor-beta (TCR-beta) gene rearrangements and immunohistochemistry with monoclonal antibodies to TCR-V beta regions were used as markers of T-cell clonality to analyze the skin and peripheral blood of a patient with CTCL and LCT. RESULTS We first detected the presence of minimal residual disease (MRD) in a CTCL patient with a complete clinical response to biologic response modifiers (BRMs). When clinical relapse occurred and demonstrated LCT, TCR-beta-PCR and in situ immunohistochemistry with a specific TCR-V beta monoclonal antibody identified a single neoplastic T-cell clone that expressed the identical TCR as the original clone. CONCLUSION Our results confirm a common clonal origin for CTCL and LCT. We also provide evidence of MRD in CTCL by molecular analysis, implying that residual malignant cells maintain a potential for clinical relapse and possibly LCT. The role of MRD detection remains to be defined in the clinical assessment of CTCL. LCT in CTCL provides a unique model to investigate the molecular events that underlie terminal-stage tumor progression.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
41 articles.
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