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Hodgkin Lymphoma

Lymphomas are broadly classified into 1) Hodgkin lymphoma and 2) non-Hodgkin lymphoma:

  • Hodgkin lymphoma is a distinct lymphoid malignancy (on its own) defined by the presence of Reed-Sternberg cells
  • Non-Hodgkin lymphoma represents a heterogeneous group of lymphoid malignancies characterised by the absence of Reed-Sternberg cells

Definition

Lymphomas are malignancies arising from lymphoid tissue, most commonly derived from B cells, but also T cells or NK cells

Main lymphoid tissues affected in Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma:

Hodgkin lymphoma Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
Primarily affects and presents as nodal disease:
  • Lymph node chains (classic)
  • Spleen

Extra-nodal involvement is uncommon

Can affect and present as BOTH:
  • Nodal disease (lymph nodes and spleen), or
  • Extra-nodal disease (essentially NOT lymph nodes and spleen)
    • Mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) (e.g. stomach, salivary glands, thyroid)
    • Lung
    • Liver
    • Bone and bone marrow

Lymphoma may be confused with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) because both arise from mature lymphocytes.

However, the distinction is based on the predominant site of disease:

  • Lymphoma is a disease that originates and predominantly presents as a solid tumour in lymphoid tissue
  • CLL is a disease that originates in and predominantly involves the bone marrow with spillover into the peripheral blood

Epidemiology

Hodgkin lymphoma demonstrates a bimodal age distribution: [Ref]

  • First peak in young adults (20-30 y/o)
  • Second peak in older adults (50-70 y/o)

Median age of onset is 33 y/o (it is the most frequent lymphoma in adolescents and young adults) [Ref]

Non-Hodgkin lymphoma is more common than Hodgkin lymphoma and in contrast: [Ref]

  • Typically affects older adults
  • Incidence rate increases steadily with age and peaks in >65 y/o

Aetiology

Key risk factors:

  • EBV infection – the most important association (related to 25-40% of cases)
  • Immunodeficiency (e.g. HIV infection, post-transplant immunosuppression)
  • Autoimmune diseases (e.g. RA, SLE, Sjogren’s syndrome, sarcoidosis)

HIV infection increases the risk of both Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

However, the association is strongest with high-grade non-Hodgkin lymphomas (esp. Burkitt lymphoma, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and primary CNS lymphoma). It is also worth noting that high-grade non-Hodgkin lymphomas are AIDS-defining malignancies.

Classification and Subtypes

The WHO histological classification, with relevant high-yield information: [Ref]

Classification Subtype Prevalence and prognosis Pathology
Classical Hodgkin lymphoma (95%) Nodular-sclerosing Most common subtype

Good prognosis

Presence of Reed-Sternberg cells
Mixed-cellularity Good prognosis
Lymphocyte-rich Best prognosis
Lymphocyte-depleted Worse prognosis
Non-classical Hodgkin lymphoma (5%) Nodular lymphocyte-predominant Good prognosis Presence of lymphocyte-predominant (LP) cells

Reed-Sternberg cells vs LP (“popcorn”) cells:

Feature Reed-Sternberg cells Lymphocyte-predominant cells
Nuclear morphology Owl’s eye appearance (binuclear / multinucleate) Popcorn appearance (multilobulated, folded nucleus)
Immunophenotype CD30 +ve (100% cases), and CD15 +ve CD 20 and 45 +ve
Background infiltrate Mixed inflammatory background (eosinophils, plasma cells, histiocytes) Predominantly small reactive lymphocytes

Clinical Features

The clinical features of Hodgkin lymphoma are broadly similar across subtypes: [Ref]

Nodal disease Painless lymphadenopathy – classic feature
  • Classically presents with asymmetrical disease
    • Cervical lymphadenopathy – often the first presentation
    • Supraclavicular and mediastinal lymphadenopathy are also common
  • The disease spreads contiguously through the lymphatic system (cervical → supraclavicular → axillary → inguinal nodes)
Splenomegaly (typically only seen in advanced disease)
Systemic B symptoms B symptoms:
  • Fever (lasting at least 1 week)
  • Weight loss (unexplained weight loss >10% in the preceeding 6 months)
  • Night sweats
Characteristic but rare features
  • Pel-Ebstein fever – cyclical pattern of fever characterised by recurrent episodes of high temperature lasting several days to weeks, followed by afebrile periods
  • Alcohol-induced pain (at the lymph nodes)

Extra-nodal involvement is uncommon in Hodgkin lymphoma, its presence is indicative of poor prognosis.

It is important to differentiate features suggestive of malignant lymphadenopathy (as seen in Hodgkin lymphoma) from reactive lymphadenopathy.

Feature Malignant lymphadenopathy Reactive lymphadenopathy
Mobility Immobile / fixed to surrounding tissue Mobile
Consistency Hard / firm / rubbery Soft / rubbery
Tenderness Non-tender Tender

In contrast, non-Hodgkin lymphoma has the following characteristic features:

  • Symmetrical / generalised lymphadenopathy
  • Non-contiguous spread
  • Extra-nodal disease is common

This is at least true for exams (text-book), but less clean-cut in real practice.

Investigation and Diagnosis

Diagnostic Test

Definitive diagnosis of lymphoma requires a lymph node biopsy [Ref]

  • Preferred: peripheral lymph node excisional biopsy
  • Alternative: CT-guided biopsy on internal nodes (e.g. mediastinal nodes)

Be aware that fine needle aspiration is inadequate to diagnose lymphoma, as the lymph node architecture is lost and immunophenotyping may be incomplete.

If excisional tissue biopsy is not feasible, core biopsy is an alternative (but inferior to excisional biopsy).

Interpretation: [Ref]

  • The presence of characteristic Reed-Sternberg cells, or lymphocyte-predominant (LP) cells is diagnostic
  • Immunophenotyping supports classification rather than being the primary diagnostic tool
Feature Reed-Sternberg cells Lymphocyte-predominant cells
Nuclear morphology Owl’s eye appearance (binuclear / multinucleate) Popcorn appearance (multilobulated, folded nucleus)
Immunophenotype CD30 +ve (100% cases), and CD15 +ve CD 20 and 45 +ve
Background infiltrate Mixed inflammatory background (eosinophils, plasma cells, histiocytes) Predominantly small reactive lymphocytes

Remember, 95% cases of Hodgkin lymphoma are classical, that is, defined by the presence of Reed-Sternberg cells.

The remaining 5% of nodular lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (non-classical), is defined by the presence of lymphocyte-predominant cells.

Laboratory Tests

  • FBC is typically normal in early stages
    • Anaemia is common in advanced cases (typically anaemia of chronic disease)
  • ↑ CRP and ESR
  • ↑ LDH

In lymphoma, FBC is often normal apart from possible anaemia.

In contrast, CLL is characterised by a markedly elevated white cell count due to lymphocytosis.

Staging

Gold standard for staging: PET-CT (of the neck, chest and abdomen) [Ref]

Due to the high sensitivity of PET-CT for showing bone marrow involvement, bone marrow biopsy is NO longer indicated.

Anatomical staging (Ann Arbor / Lugano Classification): [Ref]

Stage Definition
I
  • Involvement of a single lymph-node area
II
  • Involvement of two or more lymph-node areas, THAT are
  • On the same side of the diaphragm
III
  • Involvement of lymph node areas on BOTH sides of the diaphragm
IV
  • 1 or more extra-nodal involvement (e.g. lungs, liver, bones, bone marrow) that are NOT adjacent to a lymph node

As mentioned above, lymph node chains and the spleen are considered a nodal organ. Every other organ affected is classified as extranodal. [Ref]

The numerical stage is accompanied by specific letters and definitions: [Ref]

  • A: absence of B symptoms
  • B: presence of B symptoms
  • E: extranodal contiguous extension (when the disease has spread directly from a lymph node into adjacent tissue)
  • Bulky disease: single nodal mass of at least 10 cm, or mediastinal mass that exceeds 1/3 of the trans-thoracic diameter

Prognosis

Poor prognostic factors: [Ref]

Disease subtype Lymphocyte-depleted classical Hodgkin lymphoma (worse prognosis compared to all other subtypes)
Demographics Older age (specifically >50 y/o)
Presence of significant comorbidities
Symptoms Presence of B symptoms (fever, night sweats, weight loss)
Laboratory markers ↑ ESR or ↑ CRP
Anaemia
Disease extent Stage III / IV disease (involvement of both sides of the diaphragm or extranodal disease)
3 or more nodal involvement
Bulky disease (>10 cm)

Management

Mainstay of treatment is chemotherapy [Ref]

  • Gold standard regimen: ABVD (doxorubicin [adriamycin], bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine)
  • BEACOPP is an alternative intensive chemotherapy regimen for advanced stage disease

 

Site-specific radiotherapy maybe helpful, depending on the stage of disease and response to chemotherapy: [Ref]

  • Typically used if there is +ve PET scan (evidence of disease) following initial chemotherapy
  • If a patient has a -ve PET scan after initial chemotherapy, radiation may be omitted entirely to reduce long-term risks
  • Radiotherapy is NOT very useful in advanced stage (III-IV)

The management of Hodgkin lymphoma is a major success of modern oncology, with cure rates now reaching 90%. [Ref]

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