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Chest Radiology Conference 7202

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Donor origin PTLD limited to allograft, presents at 5 months, regresses after ... 50% with extranodal masses GI, lung, skin, liver, CNS (20-25%), allograft, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chest Radiology Conference 7202


1
Chest Radiology Conference7/2/02
  • Kenneth T. Horlander, MD
  • Emory University

2
X Year Old Male With Fever, Malaise, and Cough
  • This admission presented to EUH 6/15/02.
  • 54 year old man, Heart Transplant 1/15/02.
  • Symptoms including fever, non-productive cough,
    and malaise all started approximately 1 month
    prior to admission and have been getting
    progressively worse.

3
  • Social 50 pack-year history previous smoker,
    quit 5 years ago
  • Physical Exam 97 on 2l n/c,
  • A-a gradient 30
  • Lung exam revealed prolonged expiratory phase.
  • No clubbing, cyanosis, nor edema
  • No lymphadenopathy

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Tissue Is The Issue
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  • Transthoracic needle biopsy one of the pleural
    based lesions lymphosytes flow cytometry
    showed CD-20 positive Lymphocytes B cells,
    Monoclonal.
  • Open biopsy via mediastinoscopy was performed
    architecture seen rubbery white mass with areas
    of necrosis.
  • Diagnosis Monomorphic Diffuse Large B Cell
    Lymphoma. EBV positive (LMP-1 antigen).

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Pathology
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Necrosis
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Discussion
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Lymphoproliferative Disorders Following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • Most common malignancy complicating organ
    transplant
  • 21 of all malignancies (5 in general
    population)
  • Non-Hodgkins lymphoma 95 (65 in gen. Pop.)
  • Mostly large cell, b-cell, 70 extranodal
    involvement

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Lymphoproliferative Disorders Following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • B cell proliferation induced by infection with
    Epstein Barr virus in setting of chronic
    immunosuppression
  • Recipient origin PTLD multisystem disease,
    presents at 76 months, 5 of 8 died
  • Donor origin PTLD limited to allograft,
    presents at 5 months, regresses after reduction
    of immunosuppression

22
Lymphoproliferative Disorders Following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • 3 types
  • -Benign polyclonal B cell lymphoproliferation
    infectious mononucleosis-type acute illness. 2-8
    weeks after induction or antirejection therapy,
    normal cytogenetics (55 of cases).
  • -Polyclonal B cell lymphoproliferation with
    evidence of early malignant transformation, ie
    clonal cytogenetic abnormalities and
    immunoglobulin gene transformation (30).
  • Monoclonal B cell proliferation - malignant
    transformation, immunoglobulin gene
    transformation (15) similar to AIDS related
    lymphomas.

23
Lymphoproliferative Disorders following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • 50 with extranodal masses GI, lung, skin,
    liver, CNS (20-25), allograft,
  • If not due to EBV more virulent (mean survival
    1 month vs 37 mo).
  • PTLD 2-6 in heart transplant, 1-3 in renal,
    1-2 in liver 1 overall (30-50x higher than
    general population.
  • Higher in those that are more immunosuppressed,
    more if on both cyclosporin and azathioprine, or
    with any antithymocyte Ab (OKT3, or
    antilymphocyte serum).
  • More often in the first year, greatest in heart
    transplant.
  • Heart transplant more likely to see PTLD in heart
    or lungs (18 vs 6.8).

24
Lymphoproliferative Disorders Following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • If lung transplant EBV seronegative convert
    then 42 get PTLD.
  • Excisional tissue biopsy is required for full
    characterization.
  • PATH disruption of the architecture, mono or
    oligoclonal populations (cellular or viral
    markers), EBV infection of many cells.
  • Avoid steroid use pre-diagnosis (alters the
    histopath and radiologic evaluation).

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Lymphoproliferative Disorders following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • Prevention! Reduction and removal of agents for
    graft acceptance.
  • gangcyclovir, acyclovir.
  • TREATMENT type 1 2) reduction of
    immunosuppression. Type 3) if severly ill stop
    all immunosuppression, prednisone reduced to 7.5
    10mg / day. Less ill limited disease reduce
    cyclosporin and prednisone by 50 and stop
    Azathioprine (or tacrolimus), another 50
    reduction in 2 weeks if needed.

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Lymphoproliferative Disorders following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • Antiviral therapy no good efficacy evidence,
    some anecdotel case reports. Lack of thymidine
    kinase expression in EBV cells due to viral
    latency makes viral therapy alone ineffective.
  • Surgical resection localized monoclonal disease.
  • Chemotherapy maybe useful in the monoclonal
    form. CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxyrubicin,
    vincristine, prednisone) tried, as well as
    others.
  • Radiation therapy for localized disease, and
    those with CNS disease.

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Lymphoproliferative Disorders following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • Interferon alpha has antiviral activity.
    Remission has been seen in case reports. Largest
    series 16 patients 8 got total regression, 7
    failed and then got chemo, 1 didnt get full
    course. At end, 1 died of uncontrolled PTLD
  • Ongoing trial evaluating a sequential approach
  • - Reduce immunosuppression
  • - Interferon alpha
  • - ProMACE-cytoBOM plus GM-CSF

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Lymphoproliferative Disorders following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • Anti-b cell antibodies anti-cd21 and anti-cd24.
    61 remission, 8 relapse
  • Anti-cd20 rituximab
  • IVIG in combination with other therapies
  • Adoptive immunotherapy lymphokine activated
    autologous natural killer cells (can precipitate
    rejection)

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Lymphoproliferative Disorders Following Solid
Organ Transplant
  • PROGNOSIS overall survival rates of 25 35.
    T-cell have extremely poor prognosis. Monoclonal
    have 80 mortality.
  • Performance status and whether limited or more
    than one site these were 2 factors that
    predicted prognosis in a multivariate analysis.
    If 1 of these median survival 34 months, if 2
    then 1 month.

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Lymphoproliferative Disorders Following Solid
Organ Transplant
References
  • Paya, CV et al. ASTS/ASTP EBV-PTLD task force and
    the mayo clinic organized international Concensus
    development meeting. Transplantation
    1999681517.
  • Penn, I. Cancers complicating organ transplant.
    NEJM 1990 3231767.
  • Nalesnik, MA et al. The diagnosis and treatment
    of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders.
    Curr Probl Surg 1988 25367.

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