Title: Histiocytic Disorders Diagnosis and Treatment
1Histiocytic DisordersDiagnosis and Treatment
- Resident Education Lecture Series
2Histiocytosis
- Group of Disorders-
- Clonal proliferation of cells of mononuclear
phagocyte system (histiocytes) - Histiocyte- central cell
- Form of a WBC
3Classes of Histiocyte Disorders
- Class I
- Langerhans cell histiocytosis
- Class II
- Non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis
- Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis (HLH)
- Class III
- Malignant Histiocytic Disorder
4Class ILangerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH)
- Other names
- Histiocytosis-X
- Eosinophilic granuloma
- Hand-Schüller-Christian syndrome
- Letterer-Siwe disease
5LCH
- LCH can be local and asymptomatic, as in isolated
bone lesions, or it can involve multiple organs
and systems with significant symptomatology and
consequences - Thus, clinical manifestations depend on the
site(s) of the lesions, the organs and systems
involved, and their function(s) - Restrictive vs. Extensive LCH
6Restricted LCH
- Skin lesions without any other site of
involvement - Monostotic lesion with or without diabetes
insipidus, adjacent lymph node involvement, or
rash - Polyostotic lesions involving several bones or
more than 2 lesions in one bone, with or without
diabetes insipidus, adjacent lymph node
involvement, or rash
7Extensive LCH
- Visceral organ involvement /- bone lesions,
diabetes insipidus, adjacent lymph node
involvement, and/or rash - without signs of organ dysfunction of the lungs,
liver, or hematopoietic system - Visceral organ involvement /- bone lesions,
diabetes insipidus, adjacent lymph node
involvement, and/or rash - with signs of organ dysfunction of the lungs,
liver, or hematopoietic system
8LCH-diagnosis
- S100 protein
- CD1 antigen
- Birbeck granule positive cells by Electron
Microscopy
9Langerhans Histiocytosis in Lymph node
Low magnification showing lymph node sinuses
filled with pale staining Langerhans cells
10Cytospin of Langerhans cells dissociated from
lymph node. Note abundant pale staining
eosinophilic cytoplasm and kidney shaped nuclei
11Electron micrograph showing characteristic
Birbeck granules.
12LCH- sites of involvement
- Skin (rash)
- Bone (single or multiple lesions)
- Lung, liver and spleen (dysfunction)
- Teeth and gums
- Ear (chronic infections or discharge)
- Eye (vision problem or bulging)
- CNS (Diabetes Insipidus)
- Fever, weakness and failure to gain weight
13Bone involvement
- Bone involvement is observed in 78 of cases and
often includes the skull 49, innominate bone
23, femur 17, orbit 11, and ribs 8. - Single or multiple lesions.
- Vertebral collapse can occur.
- Long bone involvement can induce fractures.
14Bone Involvement with LCH
15Skull lytic lesions with LCH
16Characteristic rash of LCH
17Characteristic Scalp Rash with LCH
18STUDY
Not Involved
Single bone
Involved
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23LCH TREATMENT
- Localized disease-skin, bone, lymph nodes
- Good prognosis
- Minimal/no treatment
- Localized skin lesions, especially in infants,
can regress spontaneously - If treatment is required, topical corticosteroids
may be tried - Intralesional steroids
24LCH Treatment-Extensive
- Multiple Organ disease
- Benefit from chemotherapy and/or steroids
- 80 survival using prednisone, 6MP, VP16 or
vinblastine (Velban). - If you do not respond to chemotherapy in the
first 12 weeks- 20 survival.
25Sinus histiocytosis with massive lymphadenopathy
Rosai-Dorfman disease
- A persistent massive enlargement of the nodes
with an inflammatory process characterizes this
condition. The disease rarely is familial
26Rosai-Dorfman disease
- The male-to-female ratio is 43, with a higher
prevalence in blacks than in whites. - Fever, weight loss, malaise, joint pain, and
night sweats may be present. - Cervical lymph nodes
- Other areas, including extranodal regions, can be
affected. - These disorders can manifest with only rash or
bone involvement
27Rosai-Dorfman disease
- Immunologic abnormalities in conjunction with the
disease can be observed - Leukocytosis mild normochromic, normocytic, or
microcytic anemia increased Immune globulins
(Igs) abnormal rheumatoid factor and positive
lupus erythematosus
28Rosai-Dorfman Disease
High power magnification (immersion oil 1000 X)
reveals histiocytes, with abundant cytoplasm
and vesicular nuclei, engulfing many
lymphocytes, a process known as emperipolesis.
29Treatment
- The disease is benign and has a high rate of
spontaneous remission, but persistent cases
requiring therapy have been observed
30Class IIIMalignant Histiocytic Disorders
- True neoplasms
- Extremely rare
- Acute monocytic leukemia, malignant
histiocytosis, true histiocytic lymphoma - Symptoms
- fever, wasting, LAD, hepatosplenomegaly, rash
- Treatment-
- Induction
- prednisone, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin
- Maintenance
- vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin
31Class IIHLH
- Underlying immune disorder
- Uncontrolled activation of the cellular immune
system - Defective triggering of apoptosis
- Incidence 1.2/ 1,000,000
- MF
- Age Familial usually present lt 1yr
Secondary may present at any age
32HLH
- Familial Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis
(FHLH) - Primary HLH
- Infection Associated Hemophagocytic Syndrome
(IAHS) - Secondary HLH
33Familial HLH
- FHLH, FHL, FEL
- Hereditary transmitted disorder
- Autosomal recessive
- Affects immune regulation
- Family history often negative
- Triggered by infections
- Presence of perforin gene mutation leads to
deficiency in triggering of apoptosis - Only 20-40 of familial HLH have perforin
mutation - H-Munc 13-4 (17q25) discovered 2003 assoc FHLH
34Perforin
- Membranolytic protein expressed in the
cytoplasmic granules of cytotoxic T cells and NK
cells. - Responsible for the translocation of granzyme B
from cytotoxic cells into target cells granzyme
B then migrates to target cell nucleus to
participate in triggering apoptosis. - Without perforin, cytoxic T cells NK cells show
reduced or no cytolytic effect on target cells.
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36Infection-associated HLH
- VAHS
- Develops as the result of infection
- Viral (most common), bacterial, fungal, parasites
- Often in immunocompromised hosts (HIV, oncologic,
Crohns disease)
37Clinical Presentation
- Fever
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Neurological symptoms (seizures)
- Large lymph nodes
- Skin rash
- Jaundice
- Edema
38CNS disease
- CNS infiltration
- most devastating consequence(s) of HLH
- Seizures
- Alteration in consciousness-coma
- CNS deficits-cranial nerve palsies, ataxia
- Irritability
- Neck stiffness
- Bulging fontanel
39Laboratory Abnormalities
- Cytopenias (Platelets, Hgb,WBC)
- High Triglycerides
- Prolonged PT, PTT, low Fibrinogen
- High AST, ALT
- CSF- high protein, high WBC
- Low Natural Killer cell activity
- High Ferritin
40Histopathological Findings
- Increased numbers of lymphocytes mature
macrophages - Prominent hemophagocytosis
- Spleen, lymph nodes, bone marrow, CNS
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42Diagnostic Criteria
- Clinical criteria fever, splenomegaly.
- Laboratory Criteria
- Cytopenia (gt 2 of 3 cell lines)
- Hgb lt 9 gm/dl, plts lt 100, anc lt 1000
- High triglycerides (gt 3SD of normal for age) /-
low fibrinogen (lt150) - Pathology Criteria
- hemophagocytosis - bone marrow, spleen or lymph
nodes - No evidence of malignancy
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44Additional Laboratory Criteria
- CSF-high WBC, high protein
- Liver-histiological- chronic persistent hepatitis
- Low Natural Killer Cell activity
- Familial etiology cannot be determined in first
affected infant
45Treatment
- Without treatment FHLH is rapidly fatal
- Median survival- 2 months
46Continuation therapy, BMT if donor
Familial Disease
8 wks chemo
Persistent non-familial
HLH Pts
Continuation therapy, BMT if donor
If 2nd HLH
Resolved non-familial
Stop therapy
Treat cause of immune reactivation
Reactivation
If persistent consider 1st HLH
Continuation therapy, BMT if donor
47Treatment
- Initial therapy (8 weeks)-induction
- Decadron (8wks), CSA
- VP16 (2x/wk x 2 wks, 1x/wk x 6wks)
- ITM and steroids if CNS disease is present after
2 wks of therapy for 4 doses - In non -familial cases treatment is stopped after
8 weeks if complete resolution of disease
48HLH- 2004 Treatment Protocol
49Treatment
- Continuation Therapy
- Week 9-52
- VP16 every other week
- Decadron pulses every 2 wks for 3 days
- CSA (level 300) QD
50Bone Marrow Transplant
- In FHLH BMT - only curative therapy
- BMT performed ASAP
- acceptable donor
- disease is non-active
- Non-familial disease
- BMT offered at relapse
51HLH-94 Protocol Results
- 113 patients treated on protocol
- 56 (63/113) alive at median 37.5 m.
- 3 year OS 55 /- 9
- BMT patients (n65)
- 3 year OS 62
- Only 15 /65 patients had matched related donors.
The majority were unrelated.
52HLH-94 Results
- Neurological symptoms
- severe and permanent CNS dysfunction
- (32) 35/109 pts
- 21/31 survivors had resolution of symptoms with
therapy
53More information
- Histiocytosis Association of America
- www. histio.org/association
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55From ABP Certifying Exam Content Outline
- Histiocytosis syndromes of childhood
- Recognize the clinical manifestations of
childhood histiocytosis syndromes
56Credits