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1/24. cardiac tamponade originating from primary gastric signet ring cell carcinoma.

    A 45-year-old man with dry cough and dyspnea was referred by a medical practitioner for evaluation of heart failure on February 10, 1996. Chest X-ray revealed increased cardiothoracic ratio, and ultrasonographic echocardiography disclosed massive pericardial effusion with right ventricular collapse. cardiac tamponade was diagnosed and pericardiocentesis was performed. Ten days after admission, the pleural effusion had become more pronounced, and thoracocentesis was performed. carcinoembryonic antigen level was elevated in both the pericardial and pleural effusion, and cytology implicated adenocarcinoma, which suggested malignant effusion. Endoscopic study disclosed gastric cancer in the posterior wall of the upper body, and the histopathological diagnosis was signet-ring cell carcinoma. The patient died of respiratory failure on May 2, 1996, and autopsy was performed. The final diagnosis was gastric cancer with pulmonary lymphangitis, pericarditis, and pleuritis carcinomatosa, accompanied by enlargement of mediastinal and paraaortic lymph nodes. Interestingly, the primary signet-ring cell carcinoma of the stomach was situated mostly in the mucosa. Deep in the submucosal region, there was prominent invasion of the intralymphatic vessels, without direct destruction of the mucosa muscularis.
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2/24. A mass in the buttock of a schizophrenic.

    A 70-year-old man with a 10-year history of depot injections with anti-psychotic drugs for schizophrenia developed a diffuse large B-cell lymphoma at the injection site in the buttock. This would appear to be a unique case and lends weight to the suggestion that prolonged local antigenic stimulation may be responsible for the development of extranodal lymphomas.
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3/24. Human herpes virus-8 associated primary effusion lymphoma of the pleural cavity in HIV-negative elderly men.

    Human herpes virus-8 (HHV-8)-associated primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) is an unusual lymphoma confined to the body cavities, which primarily affects human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive men at high risk for Kaposi's sarcoma (KS). We describe two HIV-negative elderly Italian men, who developed pleural HHV-8-positive PEL in association with other diseases (systemic hypertension, colonic carcinoma, chronic obstructive airways disease, dilated cardiomyopathy), but without KS. Thoracic computed tomography revealed unilateral pleural effusion and pleural thickening. Thoracentesis disclosed large lymphoma cells, with no T- or B-cell associated antigens, clonal rearrangement of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene and the presence of HHV-8 but not Epstein-Barr virus deoxyribonucleic acid sequences. Our cases differ from most pleural effusion lymphomas, in that they are non-acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related. This highlights the possible human herpes virus-8-associated primary effusion lymphoma risk among elderly human immunodeficiency virus-negative patients, particularly Italians, in whom human herpes virus-8 seroprevalence rates and incidence of classic Kaposi's sarcoma are high.
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4/24. Pleural fluid cytology of Hodgkin's disease: cytomorphologic features and the value of immunohistochemical studies.

    Two cases in which Hodgkin's disease (HD) was cytologically diagnosed in pleural effusions are presented. The presence of Reed-Sternberg (R-S) cells was confirmed by positive staining for both CD15 and CD30, and negative staining for leukocyte common antigen. In addition, the differential diagnosis of HD in effusion cytology is presented, including look-alikes of R-S cells that can potentially lead to an incorrect diagnosis. To the best of our knowledge, we believe this is only the second cytologic report of HD diagnosed in a pleural effusion using immunohistochemistry to confirm the diagnosis.
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5/24. Virological and molecular characterisation of a new B lymphoid cell line, established from an AIDS patient with primary effusion lymphoma, harbouring both KSHV/HHV8 and EBV viruses.

    We report here a new case of primary effusion lymphoma (PEL), occurring in a French homosexual hiv-1 infected male with a pericardial, pleural and mesenteric tumour dissemination, and the establishment from his pleural effusion of a new cell line, Cra-BCBL, dually infected by EBV and KSHV/HHV8. Cra-BCBL cells are of B-cell origin as judged by their clonal immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) gene rearrangement, identical to that of the parental tumour. Both the cell line and the lymphoma cells expressed CD38 and CD45 antigens but no classical B-cell or T-cell lineage-restricted antigens. Cra-BCBL harbours a type I EBV virus, expressing a latency type II. Expression of KSHV/HHV8 ORF72 and ORF75 was detected by RT/PCR. In addition, KSHV lytic replication could be induced by treatment by n-butyrate. An equivalent and high copy number of KSHV genomes (20 to 200 copies by cell) was detected both in the primary tumour cells and in the cell line. Southern blot (SB) analysis of EBV terminal repeats (TR) displayed the same unique band in the cell line dna and in the original tumour cells, consistent with a monoclonal infection of EBV. Furthermore, SB analysis of KSHV/HHV8 TR revealed the same hybridisation pattern between Cra-BCBL and the effusion cells, with a common band at around 30-40 kb corresponding to the fused termini of the viral episomes and a 5 Kb rearranged fragment. The new cell line characterised here could be a useful model to study interactions between two human herpes viruses and their contribution to lymphomagenesis.
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6/24. CD138-positive and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV)-negative B-cell lymphoma with serosal spreading of the body cavity and lymphadenopathy: an autopsy case.

    CD138-positive and Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpes virus (KSHV)-negative B cell lymphoma with serosal spreading of the body cavity and lymphadenopathy is presented. Our lymphoma cells showed pleomorphic morphology and a clonal immunoglobulin gene rearrangement. Immunophenotypically, they lacked B- and T-cell-associated antigens but expressed strong membranous CD138 antigen along the serosa. Although our case was not conventional primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) because of the absence of KSHV and the presence of lymphadenopathy, its unique phenotype and serosal spreading were consistent with those of PEL. Our case suggests that, irrespective of KSHV infection, some pleomorphic B cell lymphomas with membranous CD138 expression show a peculiar serosal spreading.
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7/24. Primary pleural effusion posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder: Distinction from secondary involvement and effusion lymphoma.

    pleural effusion presentation of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) is relatively uncommon. Most examples of effusion-based PTLD have been secondary to widespread solid organ involvement, and are associated with an aggressive clinical course. We report on a case of primary effusion PTLD in a 70-yr-old male liver transplant recipient with a history of hepatitis b infection. Cytomorphologically, the pleural fluid specimen showed a monomorphous population of intermediate to large-sized transformed lymphoid cells, with irregular multilobated nuclear contours and readily identifiable mitotic figures. Flow cytometric immunophenotypic studies revealed a CD5-negative, CD10-negative, lambda immunoglobulin light chain-positive, monoclonal B-lymphocyte (CD19-positive/CD20-positive) population. The immunocytochemical stain for CD30 antigen was negative. in situ hybridization study for Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) early rna (EBER) and Southern blot analysis for EBV terminal repeat sequences were both positive. Southern blot analysis for human herpes virus-8 (HHV-8) was negative. No solid-organ PTLD was identified, and the cytologic results supported the diagnosis of primary effusion PTLD. immunosuppression was decreased, and 8 mo following the diagnosis of pleural fluid PTLD, the patient was stable and his pleural effusion had markedly diminished. Recognition of primary effusion PTLD and its distinction from PTLD secondarily involving the body fluids and from other lymphomas is important, since the behavior and prognosis appear different.
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8/24. Chronic T-cell lymphoproliferative disease expressing natural killer cell receptors: clinicopathological and molecular features.

    The frequency and clinicopathological significance of the expression of natural killer cell receptors (NKRs) in T-cell malignancies remain undefined. A 71-year-old man presented with leukocytosis, generalized lymphoadenopathy, and hepatosplenomegaly. bone marrow and lymph node biopsies showed a T-cell lymphoproliferative disease expressing NKRs (CD2( ), CD3( ), CD4( ), CD5( ), CD7( ), CD8(-), CD56(-), CD94( ), CD158a( ), CD158b( ), CD161(-), p70(-), TCRalphabeta(1), TCRgammadelta(2), TIA-1(-)). An abnormal clone, 46,Y,add(X)(p14),der(1)t(1;6)(p33;p21),t(7;12)(p10;q10), was found on conventional karyotyping. comparative genomic hybridization confirmed these findings, and showed a deletion of 12p that was not apparent on karyotyping. Clinically, the disease remained indolent and responded transiently to purine analogs but not to intensive chemotherapy. Peripheral T-cell lymphoproliferative disease of CD4( )alphabeta(1)NKR( ) phenotype is hitherto undescribed. The issues of whether this case was derived from transformation of a rare T-cell subtype or represented aberrant T-cell expression of NK-cell antigens, and the clinicopathologic significance of these T-cell neoplasms warrant further studies.
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9/24. Human herpes virus 8-negative primary effusion lymphoma in a patient with a ventriculoperitoneal shunt tube.

    A 60-year-old woman was referred to our hospital in 1996 due to an abdominal distension in the right lower quadrant. She had undergone a partial resection of a cholesteatoma at the right temporal lobe of the cerebrum 30 years previously, and a ventriculoperitoneal shunt (VPS) tube had been placed with drainage into the right lower peritoneal cavity. The patient developed paralytic ileus in December 1966, and ultrasound and computed tomography of the abdomen revealed a cystic mass in the right lower quadrant without lymphadenopathies or masses. Cytologic examinations of the fluid in the cystic mass revealed signs of malignant lymphoma. After the resection of the cystic mass, lymphoma cells were detected in the fluid, but the wall of the cyst consisted of only fibrous tissues. Results of immunophenotypic analysis of the lymphoma cells by immunocytochemistry or flow cytometry were positive for CD19, CD20, CD22, CD45, and HLA-DR but negative for CD45RO, CD3, CD4, and CD8. The genome of human herpes virus (HHV)-8 was not detected in the lymphoma cells, but Epstein-Barr (EB) nuclear antigen 1 and EB virus (EBV)-encoded small nuclear RNAs were detected. Chromosome analysis by the G-banding method showed complicated abnormalities including der(8)t(2;8)(q31;q24), but Southern blotting analysis suggested that the c-myc oncogene did not participate in the lymphomagenesis. The patient's disease was diagnosed as HHV-8-negative primary effusion lymphoma (PEL). The long-standing inflammatory stimulation by a VPS tube might have contributed to the clonal evolution of EBV-infected lymphocytes. resulting in the development of PEL.
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10/24. A large quantity of CD3-/CD19-/CD16- lymphocytes in malignant pleural effusion from a patient with recurrent cholangio cell carcinoma.

    Tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are candidates for adoptive cellular immunotherapy. Here we report on a patient whose TILs presented unusual lymphocyte antigens. Pleural effusions were collected from a 47-year-old man with recurrent cholangio cell carcinoma and malignant effusion. Effusion-associated lymphocytes (EALs) were separated by ficoll-Hypaque gradient, and the EAL phenotype was determined by flow cytometry. The percentage of positive cells was determined for each lymphocyte-related differentiation antigen. The percentages of CD3 , CD19 , and CD16 lymphocyte subpopulations among EALs were 20%, 7%, and 3%, respectively. Nearly 70% of EALs were CD3-/CD19-/CD56-/CD16- cells. The phenotypes of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) collected simultaneously from the patient's peripheral blood were CD3 (52%), CD19 (20%), and CD16 (20%). When EALs were cultured in medium without pleural effusion, T cell-related antigens, but not B cell- or natural killer (NK) cell-related antigens, were newly expressed on EALs, and this expression reached a plateau after 48 h in culture. The proportions of CD3 , CD19 , and CD16 cells were 69%, 7%, and 3%, respectively. However, when EALs were cultured in medium with pleural effusion, increased expression of T cell-related antigens was not observed; the proportions of CD3 , CD19 , and CD16 cells were 16%, 6%, and 1%, respectively. Neither total cell numbers nor cellular viability of EALs changed significantly after in-vitro culture, suggesting that significant proliferation or death of EALs did not occur during the culture period. Co-culture of the patient's PBLs with autologous pleural effusion for 96 h did not alter the expression of lymphocyte-related antigens on the PBLs. These results indicate that expression of T cell-related antigens, but not B cell- or NK cell-related antigens, on EALs was blocked temporarily by the malignant pleural effusion. This is the first report concerning the existence of a large quantity of unclassified lymphocytes in which the T cell-related antigens were reversibly masked in the malignant pleural effusion.
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