The pathobiology of primary testicular diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: Implications for novel therapies
- PMID: 29289361
- DOI: 10.1016/j.blre.2017.12.001
The pathobiology of primary testicular diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: Implications for novel therapies
Abstract
Primary testicular lymphomas (PTL) are the most prevalent type of testicular cancer arising in men over the age of 60. PTL accounts for approximately 1-2% of all non-Hodgkin lymphomas and most present with localized disease but despite this, outcome is poor. The majority of cases represent an extranodal manifestation of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), known as primary testicular DLBCL (PT-DLBCL). Gene expression profiling has established that over 75% of PT-DLBCLs resemble the activated B-cell-like (ABC) or non-germinal center subtype of nodal DLBCL. In distilling the specific mutational landscape and immunophenotypic profiles, immune-escape and sustained signalling emerge as prominent features of PT-DLBCL. These include genomic alterations arising within the core components of antigen presentation (CIITA, B2M, and HLA loci) and structural rearrangements of programmed death ligands 1 (CD274) and 2 (PDCD1LG2). Enrichment for somatic mutations within NF-κB pathway genes (MYD88, CD79B, NFKBIZ, BCL10, and MALT1) also feature prominently in PT-DLBCL. Taken together, the unique molecular and clinical characteristics of PT-DLBCL have informed on aspects of the distinct disease biology of this organotypic lymphoma that may guide rational therapeutic strategies.
Keywords: CD274; CIITA; Immune-escape; NF-κB; PDCD1LG2; Primary testicular diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (PT-DLBCL); Programmed death ligands.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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