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Copyright © Agostinelli et al 2008 Peripheral T cell lymphoma, not otherwise specified: the stuff of genes, dreams and therapies 1Department of Haematology and Clinical Oncology “L and A Seràgnoli”, Bologna University School of Medicine, Bologna, Italy 2Institute of Pathology, Triemli Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland 3Institute of Haematology, Perugia University School of Medicine, Perugia, Italy Correspondence to: Professor Stefano A Pileri, Chair of Pathology and Unit of Haematopathology, Department of Haematology and Clinical Oncology “L and A Seràgnoli”, St Orsola Hospital, Via Massarenti 9, 40138 Bologna, Italy; Email: stefano.pileri/at/unibo.it Accepted July 29, 2008. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Peripheral T cell lymphomas (PTCL) account for about 12% of lymphoid tumours worldwide. Almost half show such morphological and molecular variability as to hamper any further classification, and to justify their inclusion in a waste-basket category termed “not otherwise specified (NOS)”. The latter term is used for neoplasms with aggressive presentation, poor response to therapy and dismal prognosis. In contrast to B cell lymphomas, PTCL have been the subject of only a limited number of studies to elucidate their pathobiology and identify novel pharmacological approaches. Herewith, the authors revise the most recent contributions on the subject based on the experience they have gained in the extensive application of microarray technologies. PTCL/NOS are characterised by erratic expression of T cell associated antigens, including CD4 and CD52, which have recently been proposed as targets for ad hoc immunotherapies. PTCL/NOS also show variable Ki-67 marking, with rates >80% heralding a worse prognosis. Gene expression profiling studies have revealed that PTCL/NOS derive from activated T lymphocytes, more often of the CD4+ type, and bear a signature composed of 155 genes and related products that play a pivotal role in cell signalling transduction, proliferation, apoptosis and matrix remodelling. This observation seems to pave the way for the use of innovative drugs such as tyrosine kinase and histone deacetylase inhibitors whose efficacy has been proven in PTCL primary cell cultures. Gene expression profiling also allows better distinction of PTCL/NOS from angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma, the latter being characterised by follicular T helper lymphocyte derivation and CXCL13, PD1 and vascular endothelial growth factor expression. Peripheral T cell lymphomas (PTCL) represent approximately 12% of lymphoid neoplasms.1 Their incidence varies among countries, and it is higher in human T-cell lymphotropic virus-1 endemic areas.1 PTCL are a heterogeneous group of tumours that can be roughly subdivided into: specified and not otherwise specified (NOS) (Box 1).1 2 While specified tumours correspond to distinct but rare entities often occurring at extranodal sites, NOS represent the commonest type of TCL (40–50%), followed by the angioimmunoblastic (AITL) and the anaplastic large cell (ALCL) types.
PTCL/NOS cannot be further classified based on morphology, phenotype and molecular biology in most instances,3–5 although rare distinctive variants have been reported (ie, follicular and lymphoepithelioid).6–8 Usually, PTCL/NOS occurs in the fifth to sixth decade of life, and there is no evidence of sex predilection.4 9 10 PTCL/NOS more often presents in stage III–IV, with nodal, skin, liver, spleen, bone-marrow or peripheral blood involvement.4 9 10 The tumour is highly variable in terms of cell morphology and may contain prominent reactive components.1 3 Immunohistochemistry usually shows T cell associated molecule expression, although the phenotypic profile is aberrant in about 80% of cases.1 3 Clonal rearrangements of T cell receptor encoding genes are generally detected.11 The karyotype is aberrant in most cases, and is often characterised by complex abnormalities.12 Recently, recurrent chromosomal gains and losses have been documented in PTCL/NOS by comparative genomic hybridisation, and these have been found to differ from those seen in AITL and ALCL.12 13 The molecular pathobiology of PTCL/NOS, as in general in all T cell neoplasms, is poorly understood. In particular, only limited numbers of studies have explored the gene expression profile (GEP).14–22 On clinical grounds, PTCL/NOS are among the most aggressive non-Hodgkin lymphomas. Their response to conventional chemotherapy is indeed poor, with 5-year relapse-free and overall survival rates of 26% and 20%, respectively.4 5 9 23–26 Neither the morphology nor the international prognostic index (IPI) significantly correlates with the outcome. Clinical or clinicobiological scores have been proposed to identify cases with different prognoses.26 27 However, the molecular bases of PTCL/NOS drug resistance and aggressiveness remain elusive. In the following, the results recently obtained by our group through the extensive application of microarray technologies will be summarised and commented on, with the scope of defining the pathobiological characteristics of PTCL/NOS, tracing the borders between it and AITL on the one hand and anaplastic large cell lymphoma kinase (ALK)-negative ALCL on the other, and drawing attention to potentially novel prognosticators and therapeutic targets.19–22 27 PHENOTYPIC PROFILE OF PTCL/NOS As mentioned above, PTCL/NOS usually carry phenotypic aberrations, the exact prevalence and spectrum of which have remained unresolved.8 11 25 28 In 2006, we reported PTCL from 193 Italian patients (148 NOS and 45 AITL) that had been collected on tissue microarrays and tested by immunohistochemistry and Epstein–Barr virus encoded RNA 1 (EBER1) and EBER2 in situ hybridisation.27 The βF1 antibody (raised against the T cell receptor β chain) reacted with 96% of tumours. NOS and AITL PTCL demonstrated frequent loss of CD5 and CD7, with CD3 being the conventional marker most commonly expressed in NOS types, and CD2 in the AITL types. CD4 was detected in 46% of cases (see fig 1A
CD56 was detected in 5% of PTCL/NOS: all cases stained with βF1 and three co-expressed TIA-1. Interestingly, CD56 expression suggests a malignant phenotype: in fact, under physiological conditions it is limited to T lymphocytes with spontaneous non-MHC-restricted cytotoxicity.27 49 CD57 was seen in 10% and 5% of PTCL/NOS and AITL respectively. Although numbers of CD57+ normal T lymphocytes increase with age,49 no correlation was found between patient age and CD57 expression.27 50 CD30 was recorded in 6% of cases (see fig 1B In our hands, the mean percentage of Ki-67+ neoplastic cells was around 50%, with 11% of PTCL/NOS exceeding the 80% value. Finally, EBV integration was found at the neoplastic cell level in 5% and 3% of PTCL/NOS and AITL respectively; this value is definitely lower than the one recorded by Dupuis et al in a French cohort.58 GEP OF PTCL/NOS PTCL have been the subject of a limited number of GEP studies14–22 59 60 (table 1). In particular, Tracey et al,60 Lamant et al16 and de Leval et al17 focused on mycosis fungoides, ALK-positive and -negative ALCLs, and AITL, respectively. In contrast, Martinez-Delgado et al14 and Ballester et al15 analysed large collections of PTCL of the NOS, AITL and ALCL types. However, their studies suffered limitations that varied from the usage of chips with a restricted number of genes14 15 to the lack of a reliable normal counterpart for comparison.14 Martinez-Delgado et al14 reported that PTCL/NOS corresponded to a heterogeneous group of tumours whose GEP was difficult to interpret due to the amount of infiltrating reactive cells. According to those authors, the only clinically relevant information provided by GEP pertains the NF-κB gene expression level (see below).14 Ballester et al15 reported that GEP could discriminate among PTCL of the NOS, AITL and ALCL types, although NOS did not share a single profile. Using a multiclass predictor, the authors separated their cases into three molecular subgroups: U1, U2 and U3. However, the corresponding signatures might have been, at least in part, influenced by reactive components, as suggested by the fact that, for instance, the U3 subgroup consisted almost entirely of histiocyte-rich tumours.
Recently, we20 published a GEP study based on the analysis of 28 PTCL/NOS, all corresponding to lymph node biopsy samples containing an amount of neoplastic cells exceeding 70% value of the whole examined population. The mRNA extracted from these cases was hybridised on the HG U133 2.0 Plus gene chip. The results obtained were compared with those of six AITL, six ALCL (two ALK-positive and four ALK-negative) and 20 samples of normal T lymphocytes, which were purified from the peripheral blood and tonsil and corresponded to the main T cell subsets (CD4+, CD8+, resting and activated). Such a study significantly differed from most previous reports14 60 in terms of methodology and selection criteria. In addition, for the first time it provided the rationale for possible targeted therapies in PTCL/NOS by offering clear evidence of their ex vivo effectiveness. In particular, the GEP we detected20 indicated that PTCL/NOS are distinct from normal T and B lymphocytes and are more closely related to activated rather than resting T cells. As in normal mature T lymphocytes, it was possible to identify two main subgroups of PTCL/NOS, with GEPs related to either CD4 or CD8 elements. Notably, this characteristic did not reflect the expression of CD4 and CD8 molecules. In addition to histogenetic information, our analysis20 provided several insights into the functional alterations of PTCL/NOS. A careful comparison of PTCL/NOS with the closest normal counterparts revealed the systematic deregulation of 155 genes controlling functions that are typically damaged in malignant cells, such as matrix remodelling, cell adhesion, transcription, proliferation and apoptosis. In particular, our findings might explain the dissemination pattern of PTCL/NOS, with frequent extranodal and bone-marrow involvement and spread to peripheral blood,1 by showing the upregulation of FN1, LAMB1, COL1A2, COL3A1, COL4A1, COL4A2, and COL12A1 (ie, genes that promote local invasion and metastasis in different types of human cancer).61–63 In addition, it revealed the deregulation of genes involved in apoptosis (eg, MOAP1, ING3, GADD45A and GADD45B)64–70 and chemoresistance (such as CYR61 and NNMT).61–63,71–82 Immunohistochemistry provided in situ validation of the genomic data by showing correspondence between mRNA and protein expression, as seen, for example, with GEP, PDGFRα (see fig 1C and D In the course of the same study, we found that all ALCLs tended to cluster together – irrespective of their ALK positivity or negativity – showing a signature distinct from those of PTCL/NOS and AITL.20 More recently, we succeeded in identifying a gene signature discriminating between PTCL/NOS and AITL (fig 2
PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS OF PHENOTYPIC AND MOLECULAR FINDINGS Diagnosis Along with clonality studies,11 the phenotype plays a basic role in the distinction of PTCL from reactive conditions—such as paracortex hyperplasia—that can mimic malignant lymphoma. In fact, the lack of one or more T cell associated antigens (see above) is a hallmark of neoplastic cells as opposed to the complete phenotype of normal T lymphocytes.27 Immunohistochemical and molecular findings are also of great value for differential diagnosis among PTCL. PTCL/NOS versus AITL Such distinction may be problematic in about 25% of cases, based on conventional criteria.84 Also CD10 staining, proposed as characteristic of AITL,85 86 is actually seen in less than 50% of cases in our experience.27 Notably, the AITL gene signature recently reported by de Leval et al17 and our group22 (see above) provides a rationale to the immunohistochemical observations of Dupuis et al,87 Grogg et al88 and Roncador et al89 who found that most, if not all, AITL stain for typical FTHL-related antigens, such as CXCL13 (see fig 1E PTCL/NOS versus ALCL Lamant et al16 reported that ALK-positive and ALK-negative ALCL have different GEPs. In particular, they found that BCL-6, PTPN12, C/EBPβ and serpinA1 genes overexpressed in ALK-positive ALCL, a result also confirmed at the protein level. In contrast, the molecular signature of ALK-negative ALCL included overexpression of CCR7, CNTFR, IL22 and IL21 genes, but did not provide any obvious clues to its molecular pathogenesis. This led to the question of whether ALK-negative ALCL should be included in PTCL/NOS. In the course of our GEP study, we found that all ALCL tended to cluster together irrespective of their ALK status, and this signature was clearly distinct from that of PTCL/NOS.20 In addition to suggesting that ALK-positive and ALK-negative ALCL probably share a set of deregulated pathways, our findings did not support the proposal that ALK-negative ALCL is a subtype of PTCL/NOS. Such a viewpoint is strengthened by the results of a recent clinicopathological trial showing that ALK-negative ALCL—although more aggressive than ALK-positive ALCL—has 5-year failure-free and overall survival rates that are significantly better than PTCL/NOS.84 Prognosis EBV, CD15 and proliferation In our series of Italian patients, we found that high Ki-67 expression (see fig 1F Clinicopathological score Based on our collective results and those published in the literature,26 58 92–96 we developed a new score that integrates patient- and tumour-specific characteristics (age 60 years, performance status, lactate dehydrogenase, and Ki-67 marking >80%) and identifies three clear-cut groups of patients with different prognosis. Such a score seems to be more effective than previous indices, including international prognostic index and prognostic index for peripheral T cell lymphoma, not otherwise specified.26CYP3A Recently, Rodríguez-Antona et al97 measured tumour CYP3A mRNA content in 44 T cell lymphomas and found a large variation in its expression that might be due to gains affecting the corresponding gene. To test whether CYP3A could influence PTCL treatment outcome, its expression levels were compared with the patient clinical response and survival, and it was observed that a high CYP3A4 expression was significantly associated with a lower complete remission rate. These results indicate that CYP3A as a potential predictor of tumour chemosensitivity. NF-κB pathway Different GEP studies have suggested that PTCL/NOS may show up- or downregulation of NF-κB molecules,14 15 98 with possible prognostic implications (see above).14 98 However, these studies included a limited number of PTCL/NOS14 or cases with prominent non-neoplastic components.15 By contrast, we found that PTCL/NOS mostly consisting of neoplastic cells present with global downregulation of NF-κB genes in comparison with normal T lymphocytes. This observation was corroborated by consistent cytoplasmic localisation of NF-κB molecules, the latter moving to the nucleus in the case of NF-κB pathway activation (unpublished observation). Therapy CD4 and CD52 expression The in vivo administration of monoclonal antibodies targeted to CD4 and CD52 has recently been proposed for the treatment of patients with PTCL.99 However, in our experience this should be regarded with caution when referring to PTCL/NOS. The latter, in fact, characteristically lacks the expression of one or more T cell associated antigens, including those antigens that these antibodies are targeted towards. In particular, we found that CD4 is lacking at the neoplastic cell level in up to 50% of cases.27 CD52 is a molecule expressed by most peripheral blood lymphocytes, macrophages, and monocytes.102 Campath-1H (alemtuzumab) is a humanised antibody against CD52 currently approved for B cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia therapy,103–106 and it has also shown interesting activity in T prolymphocytic leukaemia and cutaneous TCLs.107 Although other factors can affect its response in vivo, the lack of CD52 expression may play a major role in causing refractoriness to the compound. Few data are available regarding the use alemtuzumab in PTCL/NOS.108 109 We studied the expression of CD52 on tissue microarrays containing 97 PTCL/NOS.21 In addition, in 28 cases for which frozen material was available, GEP were generated and compared with those of 20 samples of normal T lymphocytes.21 We found that 17/28 (60%) PTCL/NOS showed CD52 gene expression level lower than the lowest one recorded in normal T cells.21 In addition, the gene product was detected by immunohistochemistry in 40/97 (41%) PTCL (see fig 1G PDGFRα The regular detection of PDGFRα overexpression at the mRNA and protein levels, as well as its frequent phosphorylation (see fig 1D
Histone deacetylation Since silencing of certain genes (such as GADD45A and GADD45B) can be regulated by epigenetic mechanisms including acetylation, we tested a histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) (ITF2357) against PTCL/NOS primary cells. Notably, the compound induced dramatic G0–G1 cell cycle arrest and apoptosis at therapeutic concentrations, suggesting a possible role for this class of drugs in PTCL/NOS therapy, as also supported by preliminary clinical observations.111 Interestingly, the combination of ITF2357 and daunorubicin apparently had a slight additive effect, as already observed with other HDACi.112 VEGF Recently, we observed upregulation of the VEGF gene in AITL.22 The same finding had previously been reported by de Leval et al17 who had attributed it to the rich vascular component of the tumour. However, by immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays, we showed that neoplastic cells strongly express both VEGF (see fig 1H CONCLUSIONS For a long time, PTCL have represented an orphan pathology. This can be explained by their relatively low prevalence (which is in any case higher than that of a “common” tumour, such as CHL), diagnostic difficulties and dismal prognosis. Based on recent advances in the genomic and translational fields, a new scenario can now be envisaged leading the way to more successful therapeutic strategies. This may be the right time to live a dream, never forgetting however that “the truth is not always pure and never simple” (Oscar Wilde). Footnotes Funding: Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC, Milan, Italy), Ministero dell’Università e della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica (PRIN/COFIN and FIRB, Rome, Italy), BolognAIL (Bologna, Italy) and Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio in Bologna (Bologna, Italy). Competing interests: None. REFERENCES 1. 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