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Malignant Lymphomas: A multidisciplinary approach to Diagnosis and Treatment

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Title: Malignant Lymphomas: A multidisciplinary approach to Diagnosis and Treatment


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Malignant LymphomasA multidisciplinary approach
to Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Mona F. Melhem, M.D.
  • Professor, Anatomic and Clinical Pathology
  • University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
  • Chief Hematopathology
  • VA Medical Center of Pittsburgh

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Lymphoproliferative disorders
  • Clonal proliferation of lymphocytes at different
    stages of differentiation
  • They include T-cell, B-cell and Natural killer
    cell neoplasms.
  • Recapitulates stages of normal lymphocyte
    differentiation
  • 4 of new cancers each year
  • Incidence 15/100,000

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WHO Histologic Classification of lymphocytic
Neoplasms
  • Precursor B lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma
  • CLL/Small lymphocytic lymphoma
  • Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
  • Marginal Zone Lymphoma (splenic and MALT)
  • Follicular Lymphoma
  • Mantle cell Lymphoma
  • Primary effusion lymphoma
  • Burkitts Lymphoma

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Etiology
  • Epstein Barr virus in Burkitts lymphoma
  • Human Herpesvirus-8/ Kaposi sarcoma virus in
    primary effusion lymphoma
  • Hepatitis C virus in lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma
  • Helicobacter Pylori in gastric MALT lymphomas

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Cell Markers
  • As normal lymphocytes mature, they gain and/or
    loose certain surface, cytoplasmic or nuclear
    markers that distinguish every stage of
    development.
  • These markers are important and are used in the
    diagnosis, and later specific treatment of
    specific neoplasms.

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Immunohistochemistry
  • The poor man immunophenotyping
  • Can use
  • paraffin-embedded (archival)
  • frozen tissues
  • 5 micron section slides
  • Monoclonal vs. polyclonal antibodies

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CD 20
CD 3
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CD30/Ki-1
CD15
EMA
ALK-1
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Anaplastic Large Cell Lymphoma
  • AKA Ki-1 lymphoma
  • CD20-, CD3 Tcells
  • Ki-1 (CD30) , CD 15, ALK-1 positive
  • Specific cytogenetics t(25) leading to
    anaplastic large cell kinase (ALK) ptn
    accumulation in cells
  • Differential Diagnosis
  • Immunoblastic Lymphoma
  • B-cell Large cell lymphoma

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CD 20
CD 3
CD 10
BCL-2
Follicular lymphoma
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Follicular Lymphomas
  • CD 20, CD3-, CD10, BCL-2
  • Cells resemble the centrocytes or small cleaved
    cells seen normally within germinal centers
  • Specific cytogenetic t(1418)

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Flowcytometry and cell sorting
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CD 3 (T cells)
CD 20 (B cells)
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Cytogenetic Chromosomal Translocations
Mantle cell lymphoma
Burkitts
Anaplastic LCL
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Laser Capture Microscope Technique (LCM)
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Principles of Laser Capture Microdissection (LCM)
Image taken from the Arcturus website at
www.arctur.com
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Standard treatment modalities
  • Chemotherapy
  • Radiation therapy
  • Bone Marrow transplant
  • Newer Chemotherapeutic agents
  • - Topoisomerase I inhibitors
  • - Protein kinase inhibitors

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Drug Immunoconjugates
  • Deliver conventional chemotherapy to tumor sites
  • High tumor-toxic doses with acceptable host
    toxicity IgG BR96-DOXORUBICIN
  • Calicheamicin-Anti-CD33
  • Genistein-anti-CD19

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Considerations in the design of MABS
  • Specificity for tumor antigen LOW
    CROSS-REACTIVITY
  • High purity and large quantities
  • Design flexibility
  • Customized effector functions
  • Shuttle for toxic payloads

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Ideal features of tumor antigens for MAB therapy
  • High expression, tumor-specific
  • Extracellular epitope
  • High affinity binding
  • Epitope not internalized
  • Epitope not secreted or shed

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Antibody conjugates
  • Immunotoxins
  • Very potent
  • Couples MABs to highly lethal toxins
  • Plants (Ricin)
  • Bacterial (Pseudomonas Exotoxin)
  • Ricin a(toxic) and ß chains
  • Replace or block ß chain
  • Anti-CD 19 and anti-CD 22 Mab conjugates to Ricin
    in the ttt of B-cell lymphoma

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MABS IN LEUKEMIA/ MYELOMA
  • LEUKEMIAS
  • Radiolabeled anti-CD33 and anti-CD45
  • anti-CD38 AND anti-CD64
  • Anti-idiotype antibody, anti-CD19, anti-CD54
  • MYELOMA
  • Anti-CD19, Anti-CD138, Anti-CD54
  • Anti-CD20 with interferon gamma

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ANTIBODY-INDUCED BIOLOGICAL RESPONSES
  • Direct Anti-tumor effect
  • Apoptosis/ligand-receptor interference/ prevent
    protein expression
  • Anti-idiotype network induction
  • Complement mediated cytotoxicity
  • Antibody-directed cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC).

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RITUXIMAB
  • CD20 antigen is an attractive target, given its
    stable, high-level surface expression on normal
    and malignant B-cells.
  • CD20 297 AA phosphoprotein
  • Tightly held in the cell membrane.
  • gt 100,000 sites/cell in many B-cell lymphomas
  • Follicular
  • Mantle
  • HCL
  • Large cell NHL
  • Antigen loss variants are very rare
  • Lower density in CLL/SLL

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  • No known natural ligand or function
  • Expression restricted to B cell with minimal
    expression on pre B-cells and plasma cells.
  • RITUXIMAB is a chimeric Anti-CD20 MAb Variable
    regions of CD20-binding murine IgG1 MAb and human
    IgG1 ? constant
  • Long serum half life
  • lt 1 HAMA REACTIONS
  • Mechanism of action IN VITRO/ INVIVO

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  • FDA approved for relapsed/refractory CD20
    positive B-cell Low-grade/ follicular NHL
  • Outpatient IV. weekly 4-8 weeks
  • Large multicenter trial (N166)
  • - Overall response rate 48 ( 6 complete and 42
    partial response)
  • - Median duration of response 11.6 mo.
  • 40 response rate on retreatment
  • - Effective even in bulky disease
  • Combination therapy with interferon/CHOP/Radioimmu
    notherapy.

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Other promising MABS
  • Anti-CD52(Campath-1H) monoclonal Ab
  • CD52 is present on most normal and malignant
    mature B and T lymphocytes and monocytes/ not on
    Stem cells.
  • 500,000 copies/cell
  • CDC AND ADCC
  • T-Cell PLL/ B-Cell CLL resistant to chemotherapy

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Impediments to MAB therapy
  • Distribution/delivery to tumor site
  • Poor tumor trafficking of cytotoxic/immunomodulati
    ng cells
  • Antigenic heterogeneity
  • Shed/internalized antigens
  • Human anti-mouse antibody reactions

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  • RADIONUCLIDES USED
  • FOR RADIOIMMUNOTHERAPY
  • Radionuclide Decay Mode Half-life Range
    in tissues(mm)
  • 67Cu ß, ?
    62 hrs 2.2
  • 177 Lu ß, ?
    6.7 hrs 2.2
  • 131 I ß, ?
    8.0 days 2.4
  • 90 Y ß
    64 hrs 11.9
  • 212 Bi a, ß
    1 hr 0.09
  • 125 I Auger electrons
    Nuclear/Perinuclear.

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Implications for laboratory medicine
  • FLOW CYTOMETRY
  • Negative immunophenotypic studies
  • Artifactual vs. real
  • Knowledge of MAB dosage and kinetics
  • Correlation with immunohistochemistry
  • Safety concerns with circulating
    radioimmunoconjugates
  • Molecular Diagnostics
  • Minimal residual disease APL/ follicular NHL

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