Lymphomatoid papulosis - Reappraisal of clinicopathologic presentation and classification into subtypes A, B, and C

被引:133
作者
El Shabrawi-Caelen, L [1 ]
Kerl, H [1 ]
Cerroni, L [1 ]
机构
[1] Graz Univ, Dept Dermatol, A-8036 Graz, Austria
关键词
D O I
10.1001/archderm.140.4.441
中图分类号
R75 [皮肤病学与性病学];
学科分类号
100206 ;
摘要
Objectives: To analyze clinicopathologic features of lymphomatoid papulosis and delineate the characteristics of histopathologic variants (types A, B, and C). Design: Retrospective nonrandomized study Setting: University-based dermatologic referral center Patients: Eighty-five patients with lymphomatoid papulosis. Clinical data and 1 or more biopsy specimens were available for review in all cases. When possible, immunophenotypic and molecular analyses were carried out. Results: Of these patients, 78 presented only 1 histopathologic subtype of lymphomatoid papulosis (64 had type A, 3 had type B, and 11 had type C). The last 7 patients presented more than 1 subtype (1 had A and B, 5 had A and C, and 1 had A, B, and C). Two patients had regional lymphomatoid papulosis, an unusual clinical presentation characterized by groups of lesions localized to 1 anatomic region. We observed, we believe for the first time, that some histopathologic patterns, ie, follicular mucinosis (n=1), syringotropic infiltrates (n=1), epidermal vesicle formation (n=2), and syringosquamous metaplasia (n=1), were associated with lymphomatoid papulosis. A distribution along hair follicles, or follicular lymphomatoid papulosis, was observed in 5 biopsy specimens. A bandlike rather than a wedge distribution of the infiltrate was seen in 5 specimens from patients with lymphomatoid papulosis type A. Of 8 patients who had associated lymphoid malignancies, 4 had Hodgkin disease and 4 had mycosis fungoides. Conclusions: Lymphomatoid papulosis is a cutaneous disorder with multiple clinicopathologic features. Differentiating between mycosis fungoides and anaplastic large cell lymphoma may be very difficult and sometimes impossible. In the spectrum of CD30(+) cutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders, boundaries between these 2 entities are not clear-cut.
引用
收藏
页码:441 / 447
页数:7
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]   HOST RESPONSE IN LYMPHOMATOID PAPULOSIS [J].
AGNARSSON, BA ;
KADIN, ME .
HUMAN PATHOLOGY, 1989, 20 (08) :747-752
[2]  
Basarab T, 1998, BRIT J DERMATOL, V139, P630
[3]   Primary and secondary cutaneous CD30+ lymphoproliferative disorders:: a report from the Dutch Cutaneous Lymphoma Group on the long-term follow-up data of 219 patients and guidelines for diagnosis and treatment [J].
Bekkenk, MW ;
Geelen, FAMJ ;
Vader, PCV ;
Heule, F ;
Geerts, ML ;
van Vloten, WA ;
Meijer, CJLM ;
Willemze, R .
BLOOD, 2000, 95 (12) :3653-3661
[4]   Lymphomatoid papulosis with a natural killer-cell phenotype [J].
Bekkenk, MW ;
Kluin, PM ;
Jansen, PM ;
Meijer, CJLM ;
Willemze, R .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGY, 2001, 145 (02) :318-322
[5]  
BELJAARDS RC, 1992, BRIT J DERMATOL, V126, P596
[6]  
Boulland ML, 2000, HISTOPATHOLOGY, V36, P136
[7]   Is there a special relationship between CD30-positive lymphoproliferative disorders and epidermal proliferation? [J].
Cespedes, YP ;
Rockley, PF ;
Flores, F ;
Ruiz, P ;
Kaiser, MR ;
Elgart, GW .
JOURNAL OF CUTANEOUS PATHOLOGY, 2000, 27 (06) :271-275
[8]   The same dominant T cell clone is present in multiple regressing skin lesions and associated T cell lymphomas of patients with lymphomatoid papulosis [J].
Chott, A ;
Vonderheid, EC ;
Olbricht, S ;
Miao, NN ;
Balk, SP ;
Kadin, ME .
JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 1996, 106 (04) :696-700
[9]   HODGKINS-DISEASE, LYMPHOMATOID PAPULOSIS, AND CUTANEOUS T-CELL LYMPHOMA DERIVED FROM A COMMON T-CELL CLONE [J].
DAVIS, TH ;
MORTON, CC ;
MILLERCASSMAN, R ;
BALK, SP ;
KADIN, ME .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1992, 326 (17) :1115-1122
[10]   Lymphomatoid papulosis and anaplastic large cell lymphomas of the skin [J].
Drews, R ;
Samel, A ;
Kadin, ME .
SEMINARS IN CUTANEOUS MEDICINE AND SURGERY, 2000, 19 (02) :109-117