posted on 2021-10-06, 14:04authored byMassimo Granai, Mattia Facchetti, Virginia Mancini, Jacqueline Goedhals, Alicia Sherriff, Lucia Mundo, Cristiana Bellan, Teresa Amato, Ester Sorrentino, Marco Ungari, Martine Raphael, Lorenzo Leoncini, Fabio Facchetti, Stefano Lazzi
Background: Human herpesvirus-8 (HHV8) is a lymphotropic virus associated with different lymphoproliferative disorders, including primary effusion lymphoma
(PEL), multicentric Castleman’s disease (MCD), diffuse
large B-cell lymphomas, not otherwise specified, and the
rare entity known as germinotropic lymphoproliferative
disorder (GLPD). In PELs and GLPD the neoplastic cells
also contain Epstein–Barr virus (EBV). In addition, occasional cases with atypical and overlapping features
among these entities have been recognised, suggesting
that the spectrum of the HHV8-related lesions may not
be fully characterised.
Aims: Here, we report two cases of lymphoproliferative
disorder associated with HHV8 and EBV that further
expand the spectrum of HHV8/EBV-positive lymphoproliferative disease.
Methods and results: Case 1 represented HHV8/EBV positive extracavitary nodal PEL followed by pleural
PEL. The striking characteristic of this case was the almost focal and intrasinusoidal localisation of the
neoplastic cells and the association with Castleman’s
disease features. In the second case, we found the
entire spectrum of HHV8-related disorders, i.e. MCD,
GLPD, and PEL, coexisting in the same lymph node,
underlining the variability, possible overlap and evo lution among these entities. Both cases were well
analysed with immunohistochemistry, determination
of the EBV latency programme, and molecular analysis for clonality of immnoglobulin genes. In both
patients, the disease followed an unexpected indolent
course, both being still alive after 8 and 12 months,
respectively.
Conclusion: Our findings represent further evidence of
the overlap among HHV8/EBV-positive lymphoproliferative disorders, and underline a grey zone that requires
further study; they further confirm the experimental evidence that lytic EBV replication influences HHV8-related
tumorigenesis.