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Pathology review identifies frequent misdiagnoses in recurrent classic Hodgkin lymphoma in a nationwide cohort: implications for clinical and epidemiological studies

Authors :
Max V. Boot
Michael Schaapveld
Esther C. van den Broek
Nathalie J. Hijmering
PALGA Group
Kimberly van der Oord
Flora E. van Leeuwen
Avinash G. Dinmohamed
Lianne Koens
Daphne de Jong
Source :
Haematologica, Vol 108, Iss 5 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ferrata Storti Foundation, 2022.

Abstract

Patients treated for classic Hodgkin lymphoma (CHL) have a reported 13-fold increased risk of developing subsequent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). In light of the growing awareness of CHL mimickers, this study re-assesses this risk based on an in-depth pathology review of a nationwide cohort of patients diagnosed with CHL in the Netherlands (2006-2013) and explores the spectrum of CHL mimickers. Among 2,669 patients with biopsy-proven CHL, 54 were registered with secondary NHL. On review, CHL was confirmed in 25/54 patients. In six of these, the subsequent lymphoma was a primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma/mediastinal gray zone lymphoma, biologically related to CHL and 19/25 were apparently unrelated B-cell NHL. In 29/54 patients, CHL was reclassified as NHL, including T-cell lymphomas with secondary Hodgkin-like B-blasts (n=15), Epstein Barr virus-positive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (n=8), CD30+ T-cell lymphoma (n=3) and indolent B-cell proliferations (n=3). Higher age, disseminated disease at presentation, extensive B-cell marker expression and association with Epstein-Barr virus were identified as markers to alert for CHL mimickers. Based on these data, the risk of developing NHL after CHL treatment was re-calculated to 3.6-fold (standardized incidence ratio 3.61; confidence interval: 2.29-5.42). In addition, this study highlights the clinicopathological pitfalls leading to misinterpretation of CHL and consequences for the care of individual patients, interpretation of trials and epidemiological assessments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03906078 and 15928721
Volume :
108
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Haematologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6bd84b5106094253bea54bd9b2543b7e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2022.280840