Cases reported "Paraproteinemias"

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1/44. Cryopathic gangrene with an IgM lambda cryoprecipitating cold agglutinin.

    Immunochemical and serologic studies of cold agglutinis in patients with chronic cold agglutinin disease (CCAD) have shown the almost exclusive occurrence of IgM kappa antibodies with specificity for the I antigen of red cells. An unusual subgroup of patients has been delineated in which the cryoprotein is IgM lambda, frequently lacks I specificity and often cryoprecipitates. Studies of such a protein from a patient with an unusual array of immunoproliferative disorders including Grave's disease with exophthalmos and Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia indicate that the cryoprecipitating and cold agglutinating properties probably derive from the sam protein. The occurrence of this type of antibody should suggest the presence of a more aggressive lymphoproliferative disorder than simple CCAD.
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2/44. autoimmunity and extranodal lymphocytic infiltrates in lymphoproliferative disorders.

    OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between autoimmunity and extranodal lymphocytic infiltrates in different lymphoproliferative disorders with immunoglobulin alterations. SUBJECTS AND DESIGN: A clinical review combined with a retrospective cohort study of 380 patients, 28 with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance, three with common variable immunodeficiency, 147 with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, 57 with Waldenstrom's macroglobulinaemia and 145 with non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma. SETTING: A university hospital and The State serum Institute in Copenhagen. INTERVENTION: Clinical examination of each patient with special attention to chronic inflammatory and autoimmune manifestations. Biopsies were taken from non-infectious infiltrates, some of which were additionally tested with PCR analysis for gene rearrangements. Serological screening with a test battery for various autoantibodies was used in combination with techniques for the detection of M-components and monoclonal B-cell proliferation. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinical and/or serological autoimmune manifestations, M-component and other immunoglobulin alterations, and inflammatory tissue changes were studied in patients with chronic inflammatory, polyclonal or oligoclonal pseudolymphomas and in monoclonal, malignant extranodal lymphomas. RESULTS: In 380 consecutive patients, 49 (12.9%) had extranodal manifestations, of whom 47 also had autoimmune manifestations. Nearly half of the 47 patients had more than one autoimmune manifestation. There was a strong correlation between clinical signs and corresponding autoantibodies such as anti-SSA and -SSB antibodies in sjogren's syndrome (10 cases), antithyroid peroxidase antibodies in thyroiditis and Graves' disease (10 cases), and parietal cell antibodies in gastric ulcers with maltoma (12 cases). Clinical and serological signs of autoimmunity correlated strongly with female sex (34, 72% women; and 13, 28% men) and with immunoglobulin alterations. CONCLUSIONS: To our knowledge this is the first systematic review of B-lymphoproliferative and autoimmune disorders indicating that pseudolymphoma and malignant lymphomas, including maltomas, may develop in the context of a permanent autoantigenic drive.
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3/44. Treatment of plasma cell dyscrasias by antibody-mediated immunotherapy.

    The use of serotherapy to treat patients with plasma cell dyscrasias (PCDs) has been sought by us and others. Candidate antigens that have been targeted or proposed for targeting in PCDs include the immunoglobulin idiotype, CD19, CD38, CD54, CD126, HM1.24, and Muc-1 core protein. Unfortunately, many of these antigens are not ideal for use in serotherapy since they are not selectively expressed, are either shed or secreted, or have not been fully characterized. Serotherapy with an anti-CD19 monoclonal antibody (B4) conjugated to a blocked ricin toxin had no significant activity in patients with multiple myeloma (MM). Circulating CD20 clonotypic B cells have been detected in the circulation of most MM and Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia (WM) patients. plasma cells from most WM patients express CD20, but most MM patient plasma cells either lack CD20 or express it weakly. In view of recent successes with anti-CD20-directed serotherapy in other B-cell malignancies, we initiated a phase II trial to study the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab (Rituxan; IDEC Pharmaceuticals, San Diego, CA, and Genentech, Inc, san francisco, CA) in patients with MM. We describe two PCD patients (one with WM and one with MM) who responded to therapy. By flow cytometric analysis, CD20 plasma cells and B cells present in the bone marrow and peripheral blood of a patient with MM disappeared with response to rituximab therapy. However, residual CD20- tumor cells remained in the bone marrow following rituximab therapy, and after 6 months this patient progressed with CD20- myeloma cells. As a potential strategy to overcome this limitation, we demonstrated that interferon-gamma at pharmacologically achievable levels induced CD20 expression on these CD20- plasma cells, consistent with our recent findings that interferon-gamma is a potent inducer of CD20 expression on MM patient plasma cells and B cells. We also characterize a response to rituximab with a decrease in paraprotein and resolution of anemia in a patient with WM whose response to rituximab is ongoing after 19 months. This preliminary experience supports the potential use of serotherapy targeting CD20 in PCDs. Our studies further suggest that interferon-gamma may enhance CD20 expression on MM plasma cells, thereby increasing their susceptibility to anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody therapies.
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4/44. A paraneoplastic mixed bullous skin disease: breakdown in tolerance to multiple epidermal antigens.

    We report a new type of paraneoplastic mixed bullous skin disease in a patient with a B-cell lymphoma associated with monoclonal IgM kappa paraproteinaemia. The patient's clinical and histological features were reminiscent of bullous pemphigoid. Characterization of antiepidermal antibodies by immunoblotting and indirect immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated a novel pattern of reactivity: IgG antibodies were directed against desmoplakins I-II and BPAG2, and were associated with antidesmoglein 3 polyclonal IgM antibodies. Such an autoreactive pattern involving antidesmoplakins, anti-BPAG2 and antidesmoglein 3 antibodies has not been previously reported. It reflects the breakdown of tolerance to multiple epidermal antigens observed in some patients with malignancy.
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5/44. A paraprotein in severe combined immunodefeciency disease detected by immunoelectrophoretic analysis of plasma.

    A qualitative study was made of the plasma immunoglobulins of a child with severe combined immunodeficiency. By immunoelectrophoresis an immunoglobulin with an abnormal electrophoretic mobility was detected. This protein possessed mu heavy chain determinants, gave no detectable reaction with antisera specific for light chains, was of a relatively small molecular size, and was probably not composed of subunits held together by easily reduced disulfide bonds. The light chains that were present in this patient's plasma had a homogeneous electrophoretic mobility. The patient's plasma also contained at least two other immunoglobulins whose antigenic identity could not be established. One of these was abnormal in its electrophoretic mobility. The presence of the abnormal protein with mu determinants in the plasma of the second unrelated child with a similar disease suggests that the detection of this protein may have implications for the diagnosis or classification of immunodeficiency diseases.
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6/44. Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia with paraproteinemia but no detectable plasmacytosis: a detailed cytological and immunological study.

    A patient with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia with IgG K paraproteinemia, but no detectable plasmacytosis, is described. The patient was entering a blastic phase at the time of the most detailed studies. Cytological, cytochemical, and ultrastructural studies revealed a mixed myeloid proliferation with granulocytic forms predominating over monocytic elements. A variety of ultrastructural abnormalities, including defective granulation, was observed but no cells with highly developed rough endoplasmic reticulum were observed. Immunological marker studies showed that the mature myeloid cells possessed receptors for the Fc of IgG and weakly expressed the Ia-like P29/34 antigen. The mature myeloid cells also expressed both surface and intracytoplasmic Ig restricted to IgG K, and this IgG K persisted after 4 weeks in culture. A reverse plaque assay showed that the myeloid cells were capable of releasing IgG K in vitro, but studies involving the incorporation of radio-labeled amino acids showed no detectable Ig production by the myeloid cells. The possible interpretations of these data are discussed in some detail in relation to previous reports of paraproteinemia in myeloid proliferative disorders.
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7/44. monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance predisposing to helicobacter pylori-related gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma.

    gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT)-associated B-cell proliferation may range from benign to malignant, and helicobacter pylori is the only identified critical antigenic stimulus to the development of gastric MALT. monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) is characterized by B-cell hyper-activation and clonal expansion and is know to predispose to B-cell malignancies. We report a patient with MGUS and H. pylori infection in whom we noted the progression of gastritis to acquired gastric MALT and gastric MALT to MALT lymphoma during a 3-year follow-up.
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8/44. A case of Sweet's syndrome associated with monoclonal immunoglobulin of IgG-lambada type and p-ANCA positivity.

    We report a case of Sweet's syndrome associated with monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance (MGUS) and positivity for perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (p-ANCA). A 65-year-old man patient came to our hospital complaining of remittent-intermittent fever, weight loss, associated with papules affecting all his body and without mucosal or ocular involvement. histology of biopsy specimens of papules allowed the diagnosis of Sweet's syndrome. This is the first case of this rare syndrome associated both with MGUS and p-ANCA positivity. The monoclonal immunoglobulin, possibly directed to neutrophils like an antibody, may cause both their fragmentation and release of antigens responsible of p-ANCA appearance.
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9/44. Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma with monoclonal gammopathy-related pseudo-Gaucher cell infiltration in bone marrow and spleen--diagnostic and therapeutic dilemmas.

    Gaucher-like cells have occasionally been described in various haematological malignancies including Hodgkin's disease, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, multiple myeloma (MM) and chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML). A special type of this phenomenon is crystal-storing histocytosis or the so-called pseudo-pseudo Gaucher cells (PPGC) in which crystalline protein storage in macrophages is induced by paraproteinemia. Here we describe a 54-year-old man with an initial suspicion of gaucher disease and monoclonal IgA gammopathy in whom a correct diagnosis of lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) with massive infiltration of bone marrow and spleen by PPGC was confirmed by immunological, ultrastructural and molecular characterisation. The activity of leukocyte beta-glucocerebrosidase was only slightly elevated (7.3 nmol/mg protein/1 h) which ruled out the diagnosis of classic Gaucher's disease. The patient received two courses of CHOP without improvement and anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (rituximab) with only temporary stabilisation. Subsequently, he underwent splenectomy because of prolonged severe pancytopenia and a suspicion of hypersplenism. After splenectomy significant haematological improvement was observed. Following anti-CD20 therapy, changes in immunoprofile and morphology of tumour cells were evident. Before treatment the population of LPL was more divergent, with expression of LCA, CD20, CD38 and CD138. However, after the treatment, there were more mature plasma cells which no longer expressed CD20 antigen-this picture was more consistent with the diagnosis of plasma cell myeloma. Similarly, in the spleen there were no CD-20-positive cells evident. Finally, the patient received two courses of VAD vincristine, doxorubicin, dexamethasone) with further haematological improvement but complete response was not achieved.
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10/44. Primary splenic presentation of plasma cell dyscrasia: report of two cases.

    Primary splenic presentation of plasma cell tumors is extremely rare. Recently we observed two female patients with primary (initially solitary) plasmacytoma of the spleen. While the pathoanatomical diagnosis of plasmacytoma could be established easily, the clinical picture in both cases was puzzling and allowed no definitive diagnosis to be made. One of the patients exhibited a long-standing monoclonal gammopathy. Repeated bone marrow examinations in both patients revealed slight increase in plasma cells (between 5 and 10% of all nucleated cells), but no infiltrates of multiple myeloma. The leading clinical feature in both cases was pronounced splenomegaly (780 g and 1600 g). Histologically both spleens exhibited marked infiltration by pleomorphic plasma cells, with monotypic expression of IgG kappa in one case and of the light chain lambda in the other. A broad panel of monoclonal antibodies detecting various hemopoietic and nonhemopoietic antigens was used to determine the immunophenotype of the neoplastic plasma cells, but in both cases they reacted only with a minority of the antibodies applied. The bone marrow in both cases remained free of tumorous infiltrates, but the disease progressed a few months after splenectomy with infiltration of the liver in one case and of lymph nodes in the other. To summarize, these two cases are definitely not multiple myelomas but could represent a distinct entity among the plasma cell dyscrasias for which the preliminary term "disseminated plasmacytoma with primary splenic presentation" is proposed.
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