8/11- Pathology of Leukemia and Lymphoma Flashcards

(63 cards)

1
Q

Name 2 things that distinguish acute from chronic leukemias

A

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2
Q

Name 3 morphological characteristics seen in Hodgkin lymphomas distinguish them from non-Hodgkin lymphoma

A

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3
Q

How is a lymphoma different from a leukemia

A

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4
Q

How can you distinguish myeloid blasts form lymphoid blasts?

A

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5
Q

What is the difference between a leukemoid reaction and leukemia?

A

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6
Q

What cells/organs/tissue comprise the lymphoid system?

A
  • B cells, T cells, NK cells
  • Lymphoid organs: lymph nodes, thymus, spleen, tonsils, adenoids
  • Less well organized tissue: MALT (GI Peyer’s patches), bone marrow, skin
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7
Q

What is this?

A

Lymph node

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8
Q

Describe the architecture of a lymph node

A

Cortex: B cell zone, follicles

Paracortex: T cell zone, T cells, histiocytes, high endothelial venules (HEVs)

Medulla

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9
Q

B cell Development Process (flowchart/picture)

A
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10
Q

T cell Development Process (flowchart/picture)

A
  • Originate in bone marrow and move to thymus to mature
  • Initially 4- and 8-
  • Become either 4+ (Th) or 8+ (CTL)
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11
Q

What are some cell surface markers involved in lymphocyte development?

A

B cells:

  • Very young: CD34 (SC marker)
  • CD19 -> CD10 -> CD20 -> sIg

T cells:

  • Very young: CD34
  • CD2, CD7
  • CD5
  • CD4, CD8
  • At then end, either: (CD3 + CD8) or (CD3 + CD4)
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12
Q

Overall, list the CDs of B cells and T cells

A

B-cells: think in the 20s

  • CD19, 20, 22, 23 (and Ig)

T-cells: think single digits

  • CD2, 3, 5, 7, 4, 8
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13
Q

What are characteristics of neoplastic conditions of the hematopoietic-lymphoid system?

A
  • Clonal diseases of hematopoietic cells
  • Usually resemble their benign counterparts in morphology and immunophenotype
  • Many have recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities (often translocations)
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14
Q

What are a few names for hematopoietic tumors?

A
  • Lymphomas
  • Leukemias
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15
Q

What are a few names for solid tumors?

A
  • Carcinomas
  • Sarcomas
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16
Q

Key features of Hematopoietic tumors vs. Solid tumors

A

Hematopoeitic tumors:

  • Systemic disease
  • Replacement of normal marrow or LN elements
  • Circulating tumor cells in the peripheral blood

Solid tumors:

  • Localized growth
  • Invasion
  • Metastasis
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17
Q

What are main differences between leukemias and lymphomas?

A

Leukemia: marrow based; any Hp lineage

Lymphoma: LN based (or anything non-marrow); lymphoid lineage

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18
Q

Key characteristics of leukemias?

A
  • Malignant marrow-based neoplasms
  • Can be of any hematopoietic lineage (e.g. lymphoid, granulocytic, megakaryocytic, and erythroid)
  • Acute or chronic
  • Often involve the peripheral blood
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19
Q

Key characteristics of lymphomas?

A
  • Malignancies of the immune system, arising in extramedullary sites (outside the BM)
  • Arise from lymphocytes (B, T, or rarely NK cells)
  • Arise from cells at different stages of maturation/development
  • Cell of origin determines morphology and clinical course
  • Diverse group clinically and morphologically
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20
Q

How to distinguish between a lymphoid leukemia vs. a lymphoma

A
  • Lymphocytes normally reside in the bone marrow, peripheral blood, and lymphoid tissues
  • Malignancies of these cells may have the same distribution
  • The distinction is generally based on the predominant clinical manifestation (blood and bone marrow = leukemia, lymph node = lymphoma)
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21
Q

Example of differentiating lymphoid leukemia and lymphoma: Acute lymphoblastic leukemia vs. Lymphoblastic lymphoma

A

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia

  • Blasts in teh blood and bone marrow
  • Express immature markers

Lymphoblastic lymphoma

  • Cells infiltrate thymus or lymph nodes
  • Express immature markers
  • “Blastic morphology”

Both have blasts, they’re just in different places!

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22
Q

How are lymphomas and leukemias classified (by WHO)?

A

Entities distinguished by:

  • Clinical features
  • Morphology
  • Immunophenotype (markers or CDs the cells express)
  • Genotype (cytogenetics, molecular diagnostics)

Based on specific clinicopathologic entities when possible

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23
Q

What features are used to classify leukemias as either acute or chronic?

A
  • Cell maturity
  • Clinical course
  • Age of pt
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24
Q

What is seen in acute vs. chronic leukemia in regard to:

  • Cell maturity
  • Clinical course
  • Age of patient
A
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25
What cells are involved in acute leukemia?
BLASTS!
26
What is shown here?
**BLASTS (Acute Leukemia)** - Medium to large - High N/C ratio - Fine chromatin - +/- nucleoli
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What cells are involved in chronic leukemia?
28
What is shown here?
More mature cells in chronic leukemia (CML)
29
Cells involved in Myeloid vs. Lymphoid cell lines?
**Non-lymphoid:** - Granulocytic - Monocytic - Eosinophilic - Basophilic - Erythroid - Megakaryocytic **Lymphoid** - B cell - T cell - NK cell
30
How to tell if blasts are lymphoid vs. myeloid?
**Myeloid** - Larger - More cytoplasm - More prominent nucleoli - +/- Auer rods **Lymphoid** - Smaller - Scant cytoplasm - Small to no nucleoli
31
What is this?
**Lymphoid blasts** - Smaller - Scant cytoplasm - Small to no nucleoli
32
What is this?
**Myeloid blasts** - Larger - More cytoplasm - More prominent nucleoli - +/- Auer rods
33
What is the only 100% myeloid morphologic marker?
Auer rods!!!
34
Provide leukemia names based on their status as either myeloid/lymphoid and acute/chronic
35
What cells are seen in: - Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) - Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) - Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) - Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)
- AML: **myeloblasts** - ALL: **lymphoblsats** - CML: **neutrophils** and **myeloid precursors** - CLL: **mature B lymphocytes**
36
AML Immunophenotype: **myeloid markers**
(think of the 3s) - **CD13** - **CD33** - May express other markers depending on the lineage and differentiation of the blasts
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AML Immunophenotype: **immature markers (blasts)**
- **CD34** (stem cell marker) - **TdT** (terminal deoxynucleotidal transferase) Can be myeloid or lymphoid; just tells you that cells are immature!
38
What is this? Don't need to know genotype
AML with t(8;21)
39
What is this? Key features?
**Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL)** with t(15;17) - Granules!! - Auer rods ("faggot cell"; lots of Auer rods) - Bi-lobed nucleus Tend to present with DIC (coagulopathic)
40
What is this? Key features?
**AML** with inv(16) - Eos with funny granules!)
41
What is this? Key features?
**AML** with monocytic differentiation - Lobular, folded nucleus
42
What is this? Key features?
AMkL (megakaryoblastic leukemia)
43
AMkL (megakaryoblastic leukemia) is often associated with what?
**Reticulin fibrosis** - When megs are up to no good, fibrosis often follows
44
Chronic myeloid leukemias = myeloproliferative neoplasms (disorders)
THEY'RE THE SAME THING
45
What conditions are included among chronic myeloid leukemias (myeloproliferative neoplasms (disorders))?
- Chronic myelogenous leukemia - Essential thrombocytopenia - Polycythemia vera - Primary myelofibrosis (Chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis)
46
Describe hematopoiesis in myeloproliferative neoplasms?
Effective but abnormal - Hypocellular marrow - High PB counts
47
Describe hematopoiesis in myelodysplastic syndromes?
Ineffective - Hypercellular marrow - Cytopenias in PB
48
What is seen here?
Multilineage dysplasis - Funny looking cells of all types
49
Describe myeloproliferative and myelodysplastic disorders in terms of: - Clonal - PB counts - Marrow cellularity - Dysplastic features - Potential for AML
50
What is a main division in the classification of lymphomas?
Non-Hodgkin lymphomas Hodgkin lymphoma
51
What are characteristics of Non-Hodgkin vs. Hodgkin lymphomas?
**Non-Hodgkin:** - More common - Usually have a monomorphic growth pattern - Neoplastic cell = predominant cell **Hodgkin Lymphoma:** - Less common - Pleomorphic growth pattern - Neoplastic cell is rare - Predominant cells are reactive
52
What cells are involved in Non Hodgkin lymphomas? Classified how? Characteristics?
B, T, and NK-cell lymphomas - Classified in part based on maturity of the cells: lymphoblasts versus mature B and T cells - Some have characteristic patterns of cell marker expression (those CD’s again) - Some have characteristic genetic abnormalities: translocations – similar to the way some leukemias have recurrent genetic abnormalities Many types, corresponding to different classes of lymphocytes
53
Where in the lymphoid tissue are B cell lymphomas likely to arise?
The germinal center is a hazardous place where B cells engage in risky behavior; muck about with their genes (somatic mutations and class switching)
54
Is Follicular lymphoma Hodgkins or NHL?
NHL (It's a peripheral B cell lymphoma)
55
Characteristics of Follicular Lymphoma
- Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma (NHL) - Peripheral B cell lymphoma - Morphology and immunophenotype reminsicent of germinal center B cells --- Nodule follicular architecture --- Small cleaved lymphocytes --- Looks like there are too many follicles!
56
What is shown here?
57
Describe Hodgkin Lymphoma
- Malignant cell = **Reed Sternberg cell (RS cell)** --- Recent studies have shown RS cells are actually post germinal center B-cells --- They have forgotten a lot of their “B-ness” - **Morphology**: few RS cells in a background of lymphocytes, histiocytes, eosinophils, plasma cells, fibrosis - Prognosis and therapy determined by stage (extent of involvement) **- Unlike NHL, has pattern of spread is orderly and contiguous**
58
What is the hallmark of Hodgkin Lymphoma?
**Reed-Sternberg Cell** - Very large compared to other surrounding lymphocytes - Huge nucleoli (like owl eyes)
59
What is this?
Nodular Sclerosing Hodgkin Lymphoma
60
What are the arrows pointing to?
Reed-Sternberg cells
61
What are features of plasma cell neoplasms?
_Have features of leukemia:_ - Involve the bone marrow _Have some features of lymphoma:_ - Usually doesn’t involve the peripheral blood - Cells like to stick together and can cause more localized lesions (plasmacytomas) _Cause a lot of systemic symptoms and laboratory abnormalities_ - Produce a monoclonal immunoglobulin - Anemia, kidney problems, bone lesions, high calcium Morphology: sheets of plasma cells in the bone marrow
62
What is seen here?
WAY too many plasma cells (usually less than 5%)
63
What is this?
Plasma cells (again, way too many)