Nodal and extranodal lymphoproliferative disorders in Sjogren's syndrome: a clinical and immunopathologic study
Abstract
Sjogren's syndrome (SS) is frequently associated with both reactive and neoplastic lymphoproliferative disease. Over a 12-year period beginning in 1970, 21 of 138 patients with SS followed at two tertiary university medical centers had biopsies taken of enlarged lymph nodes (18) or extranodal lymphoid infiltrates (8). Many had immunologic studies performed on fresh tissue and all had paraffin-embedded tissue available for histochemical and immunoperoxidase studies. Eight of our patients had malignant lymphomas which were chiefly B cell neoplasms including two lymphoplasmacytic lymphomas and two follicular center cell lymphomas. The remaining 13 patients had either reactive adenitis (usually with follicular hyperplasia) or atypical lymphoid hyperplasia which failed to meet both histopathologic and immunopathologic criteria for malignancy. None of the nine patients with reactive hyperplasia has yet progressed to lymphoma, while one of four patients with atypical lymphoid hyperplasia progressed to overt lymphoma. Clinical features such as age, duration of disease, extent of lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, or parotid swelling failed to identify those subsets of patients with lymphadenopathy at increased risk for lymphoma. Recognitio...Continue Reading
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