9 research outputs found

    Giant Septic Lymphadenitis with Marked Gas Formation Caused by Bacteroides fragilis in a Patient with Adult T-cell Leukemia/lymphoma

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    Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) sometimes causes opportunistic infections. A 53-year-old woman with systemic lymphadenopathies was diagnosed with ATL by inguinal lymph node biopsies and underwent oral chemotherapy. Two months later, high grade fever, lower abdominal pain and lymphadenopathy recurred. Computed tomography revealed the presence of lymphadenopathy with marked gas formation in the pelvic lesion. Blood cultures were suggestive of septic lymphadenitis by Bacteroides fragilis (BF). This represents the first demonstration of giant lymphadenitis with gas formation caused by BF in a patient with ATL. Notably, septic lymphadenitis is pivotal in the differential diagnosis of systemic lymphadenopathy in ATL

    Phosphorylated STAT3 expression predicts better prognosis in smoldering type of adult Tā€cell leukemia/lymphoma

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    Adult Tā€cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL) is a mature Tā€cell neoplasm, and is divided into 2 indolent (smoldering and chronic) and 2 aggressive (acute and lymphoma) clinical subtypes. Based on previous integrated molecular analyses suggesting the importance of the JAKā€STAT pathway in ATLL, we attempted to clarify the clinicopathological significance of this pathway. Clinical and morphological findings were reviewed in 116 cases with ATLL. The nuclear localizations of phosphorylated STAT3 (pSTAT3), pSTAT5, and pSTAT6 were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. Targeted sequencing was undertaken on the portion of STAT3 encoding the Src homology 2 domain. Expression of pSTAT3 was observed in 43% (50/116) of ATLL cases, whereas pSTAT5 and pSTAT6 were largely undetected. Cases with the lymphoma type showed significantly less frequent pSTAT3 expression (8/45, 18%) than those with the other subtypes (41/66, 62%; P < .001). STAT3 mutations were detected in 36% (10/28) and 19% (12/64) of cases with the smoldering and aggressive types of ATLL, respectively. The correlation between STAT3 mutation and pSTAT3 expression was not significant (P = .07). Both univariate and multivariate analysis revealed that pSTAT3 expression was significantly associated with better overall survival and progressionā€free survival in the smoldering type of ATLL, whereas STAT3 mutation was not related to a line of clinical outcome. Collectively, our data show that only the lymphoma type showed a low prevalence of tumor cells positive for pSTAT3 expression, and raises the possibility that pSTAT3 expression is a novel biomarker to predict better prognosis in the smoldering type of ATLL

    Recurrence of Psoriasis Vulgaris Accompanied by Treatment with C-C Chemokine Receptor Type 4 (CCR4) Antibody (Mogamulizumab) Therapies in a Patient with Adult T cell Leukemia/ Lymphoma : Insight into Autoinflammatory Diseases

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    Adult T cell leukemia / lymphoma (ATL) is one of the most aggressive hematological malignancies caused by human T-lymphotropic virus type-I (HTLV-1). Mogamulizumab is a new defucosylated humanized monoclonal antibody agent which targets C-C chemokine receptor type 4 (CCR4) expressed occasionally on the surface of ATL cells. However, adverse events such as drug eruptions have also been highlighted, at least in part, via the dysfunction of regulatory T cells (Tregs). We herein report a pronounced recurrence of systemic psoriasis vulgaris accompanied by the treatment of mogamulizumab in a patient with ATL. Pathological examinations may suggest a mechanistic link between the recurrence of autoinflammatory diseases and anti-CCR4 antibody therapies

    Clinically amyopathic dermatomyositis manifested after the allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation: Case presentation and literature review

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    Clinically amyopathic dermatomyositis (CADM) lacks muscle symptoms, associated with rapidly progressive interstitial lung disease. Anti-melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (MDA-5) antibody has been identified as a disease-labelling autoantibody. We report two cases of CADM manifested after the allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT)ā€”Case 1: a 56-year-old man with acute leukaemia received the allo-HSCT and Case 2: a 45-year-old female patient with lymphoma received the allo-HSCT. She received donor lymphocyte infusion because of a post-transplant relapse. After allo-HSCT or donor lymphocyte infusion, Gottron papules emerged, and both patients were diagnosed as CADM based on dermatological findings coupled with the positivity of anti-MDA-5 antibody, accompanied by interstitial shadows consistent with ILD on chest computed tomography. Case 2 was initially diagnosed as a kind of chronic graft versus host disease. Their symptoms were improved by the combination of immunosuppressive agents with a concomitant decrease in anti-MDA-5 antibody levels. For Case 2, rituximab was subsequently started for relapse of lymphoma, resulting in a substantial decrease in the level of anti-MDA-5 antibody and improvement in rash and ILD. Our cases raise a possibility that CADM emerges after the HSCT, highlighting the importance of early diagnosis to avoid fated progression into ILD

    Evaluation of two prognostic indices for adult Tā€cell leukemia/lymphoma in the subtropical endemic area, Okinawa, Japan

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    Aggressive adult Tā€cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) has an extremely poor prognosis and is hyperendemic in Okinawa, Japan. This study evaluated two prognostic indices (PIs) for aggressive ATL, the ATLā€PI and Japan Clinical Oncology Group (JCOG)ā€PI, in a cohort from Okinawa. The PIs were originally developed using two different Japanese cohorts that included few patients from Okinawa. The endpoint was overall survival (OS). Multivariable Cox regression analyses in the cohort of 433 patients revealed that all seven factors for calculating each PI were statistically significant prognostic predictors. Threeā€year OS rates for ATLā€PI were 35.9% (lowā€risk, n = 66), 10.4% (intermediateā€risk, n = 256), and 1.6% (highā€risk, n = 111), and those for JCOGā€PI were 22.4% (moderateā€risk, n = 176) and 5.3% (highā€risk, n = 257). The JCOGā€PI moderateā€risk group included both the ATLā€PI lowā€ and intermediateā€risk groups. ATLā€PI more clearly identified the lowā€risk patient subgroup than JCOGā€PI. To evaluate the external validity of the two PIs, we also assessed prognostic discriminability among 159 patients who loosely met the eligibility criteria of a previous clinical trial. Threeā€year OS rates for ATLā€PI were 34.5% (lowā€risk, n = 42), 9.2% (intermediateā€risk, n = 109), and 12.5% (highā€risk, n = 8). Those for JCOGā€PI were 22.4% (moderateā€risk, n = 95) and 7.6% (highā€risk, n = 64). The lowā€risk ATLā€PI group had a better prognosis than the JCOGā€PI moderateā€risk group, suggesting that ATLā€PI would be more useful than JCOGā€PI for establishing and examining novel treatment strategies for ATL patients with a better prognosis. In addition, strongyloidiasis, previously suggested to be associated with ATLā€related deaths in Okinawa, was not a prognostic factor in this study
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