An aggressive extranodal NK-cell lymphoma arising from indolent NK-cell lymphoproliferative disorder

Abstract

Indolent NK-cell lymphoproliferative disorder, also known as chronic natural killer (NK) cell large granular lymphocytosis (leukemia), is a very rare entity in the World Health Organization (WHO) Classification of Tumors of Hematopoietic & Lymphoid Tissues. Unlike aggressive NK-cell leukemia, which is malignant, the WHO does not specify whether indolent NK-cell lymphoproliferative disorder is reactive or neoplastic. Patients with indolent NK-cell lymphoproliferative disorder are usually asymptomatic older adults who have a nonprogressive, very stable clinical course. We report an unusual case of an aggressive extranodal NK-cell lymphoma, non-nasal type, which presented as a subcutaneous tissue mass, which apparently transformed from a preexisting, untreated indolent NK-cell lymphoproliferative disorder in an 65-year-old otherwise healthy white man. The extranodal NK-cell lymphoma and the NK-cell lymphoproliferative disorder in the blood and bone marrow share a distinctive and identical NK-cell immunophenotype and genotype: CD56/CD8/TIA-1-positive and surface CD3-negative, negative for Epstein-Barr virus infection, and no evidence of T-cell and B-cell receptor gene rearrangements. To the best of our knowledge, such aggressive lymphomatous transformation in an indolent NK-cell lymphoproliferative disorder has not been previously reported. Copyright © 2005 by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Publication Title

American Journal of Surgical Pathology

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