Angiocentric T-cell Lymphoma In Skin
Mayou S.C., Anstey A., Norighton A. J., et al. (1991) Angiocentric T-cell lymphoma in skin. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol. 84 November 1991. p683-684. https://doi.org/10.1055/b-0034-55775
View Original Source →Abstract
Among 37 consecutive cases of malignant lymphoma in which the skin was either the only site of disease or one of the prominent sites of initial involvement, 19 cases had a distinctive histological appearance. These cases corresponded to what has been termed "angiocentric lymphoma," and all were found to exhibit a T-cell phenotype either by frozen-section immunohistochemistry or by using monoclonal antibodies reactive in paraffin sections. There were nine men and 10 women; the mean age was 48.2 years. The lesions were nodular and were either ulcerated or had intact skin. One case presented with involvement of one anatomical region of skin, five had involvement of multiple regions of skin, and 13 had concurrent extracutaneous disease. The disease pursued an aggressive course and was not uncommonly resistant to treatment. Histologically, the lymphomatous infiltrate occurred predominantly in the mid to deep dermis with involvement of the subcutaneous layer. The pattern was mainly perivascular and peri-adnexal with or without confluence; the overlying epidermis and papillary dermis were often spared. A prominent feature was invasion of small or large blood vessels by lymphoma cells. Eight cases showed extensive coagulative necrosis of the neoplastic and normal tissues, and 12 cases showed intraneural invasion. The neoplastic lymphoid cells consisted of either a monomorphous population or a variable mixture of small, medium-sized, and large cells with stippled chromatin and distinct nucleoli. Although the nuclei were often irregularly folded, few exhibited a cerebriform configuration. The cytoplasm was pale to clear. These cases exhibit a remarkable histological similarity to the T-cell lymphomas of the nasal/nasopharyngeal region; in addition, there are features that overlap with so-called lymphomatoid granulomatosis of the skin.
Case Details
Disease Location
Skin (ankle, breast, buttock and axilla)
Personal Characteristics
43 -year-old woman turkish
Clinical Characteristics
Presented with a 2 week history of ulcerated nodules on the ankle, breast, buttock and axilla similar nodule on the buttock 6 weeks previously had healed spotaneousneously leaving a scar she had lost 10 kg in weight over the past 3 months cuteaneous exam revealed 6 well demarcated erythematous nodules 1-2cm in diameter with superficial black crust on the right buttock, left breast, left axilla and left ankle skin biopsy from the axilla showed full thickness necrosis extending to the fat. There was a dense inflammatory dermal infiltrate composed of eosinophils, large mononuclear cells and lymphocytes with cuffs of atypical large blast cells with mitoses surrounding vessels there was de monthstration of gross expansion and disrupatiention of an arterial wall by invading neoplastic cells immunophenotyping performed on formalin-fixed tissue revealed a t-cell phenotype of the infiltrating cells, these showed positive staining with the pan t-cell marker CD3 erighthrocyte sedimentation rate was raised at 26mm/h, antinuclear antibody was positive at a titre of 1/160 with negative antibodies to double stranded DNA, positive parietal cell and skeletal muscle auto-antibodies and raised alpha2 globulin on protein electrophoresis histological and ihc features were those of an angiocentric t-cell lymphoma
Remission Characteristics
Nodules resolved spontaneously and she currently remains well 6 months after initial presentation
Treatment & Mechanisms
Proposed Remission Mechanisms
No major mechanism proposed may be similar to the regression of atypical cutaneous histiocytosis
Clinical Treatment
None reported
Non-Clinical Treatment
None reported