Clonality of cutaneous B-cell infiltrates determined by microdissection and immunoglobulin gene rearrangement.

TitleClonality of cutaneous B-cell infiltrates determined by microdissection and immunoglobulin gene rearrangement.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1999
AuthorsSignoretti S, Murphy M, Puddu P, DeCoteau JF, Faraggiana T, Kadin ME, Loda M
JournalDiagn Mol Pathol
Volume8
Issue4
Pagination176-82
Date Published1999 Dec
ISSN1052-9551
KeywordsB-Lymphocyte Subsets, Clone Cells, Dissection, DNA Primers, DNA, Neoplasm, Gene Rearrangement, B-Lymphocyte, Heavy Chain, Genes, Immunoglobulin, Humans, Immunoenzyme Techniques, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating, Lymphoma, B-Cell, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Skin Neoplasms
Abstract

Diagnosis of primary cutaneous B-cell lymphoma (PCBCL) is supported by the demonstration of a monoclonal B-cell population. Immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) gene-rearrangement analysis by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a reliable technique to detect B-cell monoclonality in paraffin-embedded tissue, but the presence of numerous reactive B lymphocytes in PCBCL may complicate the interpretation of clonality test results. To test this hypothesis, IgH gene-rearrangement analysis by PCR was performed on paraffin-embedded whole tissue sections of 19 cutaneous B-cell infiltrates diagnosed either as consistent with PCBCL (10 specimens) or unclassified lymphoid infiltrates (ULI) (9 specimens). In specimens that did not show monoclonal bands by IgH gene-rearrangement on DNA extracted from whole tissue sections, clonality assays were repeated on microdissected B-cell subpopulations suspicious for neoplastic cells. In the analysis of whole tissue sections, 4 (40%) of 10 specimens consistent with PCBCL showed one or two monoclonal bands, whereas 9 of 9 ULI specimens showed either a ladder or a smear. Clonality analysis of microdissected B-cell subpopulations showed 3 additional PCBCL specimens (total, 7 of 10) and 1 ULI specimen (total, 1 of 9) with unequivocal and reproducible monoclonal bands. Addition of microdissection increases the sensitivity of PCR-based B-cell clonality assay in PCBCL compared with analysis performed on the whole section (70% versus 40% monoclonal cases) and allows the recognition of a dominant clone in ULI specimens, possibly representing early PCBCL.

DOI10.1097/00019606-199912000-00002
Alternate JournalDiagn Mol Pathol
PubMed ID10617273
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Massimo Loda, M.D.

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