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EIGHTY-five percent of
non-Hodgkin's lymphomas originate from B-cells. This origin is inferrable
in most cases from: |
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You can see some diagrams of normal lymphocyte
maturation and the lymphoma equivalents to these stages.
The following table contrasts features of low and higher grade lymphomas, but first an important clarification: In the obsolete Working Formulation, high grade lymphomas referred specifically to lymphoblastic lymphoma and Burkitt lymphoma. Diffuse large cell lymphoma was considered intermediate grade. With the passage of this classification, the distinction is no longer strictly enforced, and diffuse large B-cell lymphomas are often referred to as high grade. | |||||||||||||||||
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It is, however, a paradox of all lymphomas that the indolent, low grade lymphomas permit long survivals but are virtually uncurable and may not be treated initially. On the other hand, the higher grade lymphomas are often rapidly deadly, but all patients are treated and some respond even to the point of complete cure. Behind this paradox is the observation that both chemotherapy and radiotherapy target rapidly dividing cells. For some lymphomas, such as Burkitt's lymphoma, the cell of derivation has not been definitively identified. Other lymphomas start by resembling their cell of origin but subsequently dedifferentiate. For example, follicular center cell lymphomas may enter a diffuse growth phase, belying their origin from cells that grow in follicles. In such cases their follicular nature must be inferred from softer evidence, such as the presence of characteristic small-cleaved follicular center cells, certain antigens such as CD10, or the characteristic t(14;18) BCL-2 gene rearrangement. Also, many low-grade lymphomas tend to progress to higher grade disease. In Richter's transformation, for example, small lymphocytic lymphoma promotes itself to diffuse large cell lymphoma. Immuno- and Genophenotype:
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