Lymphoma Cases Flashcards

1
Q

What lymphoma is a medical emergency?

A

Burkitts Lymphoma! These kids die in days-weeks!!

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2
Q

What was the disease that created oncologists?

A

Hodgkin lymphoma!!

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3
Q

What are the four stages of lymphomas? (Ann Arbor Staging)

A

I. Single LN region
II. One side of diaphragm
III. Both sides of diaphragm
IV. Disseminated

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4
Q

What is the immunohistochemistry consistent with a Reed Sternberg cell?

A

CD15+, CD30+, EBER+, CD20-, CD79a-, CD45-

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5
Q

What must you do if you think something is lymphoma?

A

EXCISIONAL BIOPSY

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6
Q

What translocation is associated with follicular lymphoma?

A

t(14;18)

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7
Q

What is cyclin D1 positive in?

A

Mantle Cell Lymphoma

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8
Q

What is MALT lymphoma often associated with?

A

Helicobacter pylori - stomach

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9
Q

What is the treatment for PTLPD (post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder)?

A

Backing off immune suppression (ex: anti-kidney rejection medication - treated with chemo)

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10
Q

What should you do if someone has hemolysis??

A

JUST TRANSFUSE THEM - don’t take time to blood type them

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11
Q

What should you do if some has a lot of anemia with heart trouble/ischemia?

A

Transfuse them

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12
Q

What are B symptoms?

A

> 10% weight loss, drenching night sweats, fever >38.5

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13
Q

What three side things should you check for with potential lymphoma?

A
  • Hepatitis B (reactivation of chronic infection)
  • Ask about fertility counseling - treatment may make them infertile
  • HIV - much higher rates of lymphoma in HIV tests
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14
Q

What is important to remember about Hodgkin’s Lymphoma?

A
  • Malignant cell is Reed Sternberg Cell (owl eyes)
  • Now recognized as a B-cell, some are CD20+
  • Bulk of tumor is reactive tissue
  • Spreads contiguously from node to node
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15
Q

What are common hodgkin’s lymphoma symptoms?

A
It typically presents with enlarging, rubbery, but not tender lymphadenopathy. Typically in the NECK or CHEST.
Can also have:
-Fatigue
-Fever
-Weight loss
-Nigh sweats
-Pain with EtOH
-Symptoms of cytopenias
-Hepatosplenomegaly
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16
Q

HL is a rare cancer, but in . . .

A

. . .young people with cancer, its common

-Most cases occur 15-19 years or 70-74 years

17
Q

What is the best treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma?

A
  • ABVD - used since 1970s. - Adriamycin, Bleomycin, Vinblastine, Dacarbazine
  • Autotransplant - can be curative - transplant for relapsed/refractory lymphoma
  • Rituximab - Targeted therapy
18
Q

What is the classification of HL by WHO?

A
  • Classical HL (CD30+)
  • –Nodular sclerosis (grades I and II)
  • –Lymphocyte-rich classical
  • –Mixed cellularity
  • –Lymphocyte depleted
  • Nodular lymphocyte predominant (CD20+)
19
Q

What does E and S mean in the staging of lymphomas?

A

E- extralymphatic site

S- Splenic disease

20
Q

What are four late (bad) effects of therapy?

A
  1. Second malignancy
    - Solid tumors (risk continues to increase beyond 15 years)
    - -Lung cancer most common (1/3 of all cancers)
    - -Breast cancer
    - Secondary leukemia (rare beyond 10-15 years)
  2. Heart disease
    - Distant third cause of death after HL and second malignancies
    - Most common is acute MI secondary to CAD
    - Associated with radiation to the mediastinum
  3. Lung disease
    - Acute interstitial pneumonitis - chronic lung injury
    - Most common in bleomycin containing regimens, esp. when combined with chest radiation
    - Significant complication in transplant patients
  4. Impaired fertility
    - - infections (herpes, sepsis)
21
Q

Where does testicular cancer metastasize to?

A

Parasitical nodes

22
Q

For non-hodgkin lymphoma, what do you use other than stage for diagnosis?

A
IPI Scoring System
Prognostic factors: 
-Age over 60
-Stage III/IV
-ECOG 3 (need help grocery shopping) or 4 (need help with everything)
-Elevated LDH
-Two or more extra nodal sties
23
Q

What is the treatment for Diffuse Large B-cell lymphoma (non-hodgkin)?

A

R-CHOP (rituximab, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine & prednisone), followed by field radiation

24
Q

What are important things to remember about Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma?

A
  • Prototype aggressive NHL
  • Accounts for 40% of lymphomas
  • Average age = 67
  • 75.3% cases are over age 55
  • Quickly fatal if left untreated
  • Treated with CHOP and R (rituximab) - with rituximab we now cure about 50% with no added toxicity
25
Q

What is the most common T-cell lymphoma on boards?

A

Usually cutaneous lymphoma, with mycosis fungicides as the prototype.

26
Q

What are the general principles of T cell lymphomas?

A

Ex: mycosis fungicides

  • Not curable
  • Frequently relapse, but systemic involvement is uncommon
  • Treatment is UV radiation, topical or systemic
27
Q

What is the only lymphoma you don’t treat? (and it isn’t curable)

A

Non-Hodgkin Indolent Lymphoma (ex: follicular, MALT, marginal zone, SLL, etc.)

28
Q

What are the aggressive non-hodgkin lymphomas?

A

DLBC, Mantle Cell

29
Q

What are the very aggressive non-hodgkin lymphomas?

A

Lymphoblastic, Burkitt, AIDs related

30
Q

How does PTLPD (post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder) usually occur?

A
  • Solid organ transplant patients, patients with immune suppression, particularly calcineurin inhibitors (tacrolimus & cyclosporine) or ATG, who develop lymphoma
  • EBC induced, poly-clonal, expansion of B cells. It occurs bc suppression of T-cells lead to loss of suppression of B-cell proliferation
31
Q

What to know about systemic T cell lymphoma?

A

These behave badly and don’t end well!!

  • Again, CHOP is often first line treatment
  • No rituximab
  • CD30+, then brentuximab vedotiin as targeted therapy