Three patients with both Hodgkin’s lymphoma and Castleman’s disease: Clinicopathologic correlations and lack of association with HHV-8

Background : The relationship between Hodgkin’s lymphoma (HL) and plasma cell-type Castleman’s


INTRODUCTION
The concept of Castleman's disease (CD) (angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia, "giant" lymph node hyperplasia, angiomatous lymphoid hamartoma) has been evolving since Castleman first described it in 1956. [1]This disease is now recognized to include a widely variable range of clinical presentations, histological findings, variable disease course, and ancillary study findings.Clinical presentations range from an incidental finding in the course of an unrelated health issue to multiple systemic symptoms and syndromes.The tumor can be localized and solitary or systemic and

A B S T R A C T
Background: The relationship between Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) and plasma cell-type Castleman's disease (PCD) has been well documented.There have been over 20 cases reported in the literature and nearly all of them were either diagnosed concurrently, or were initially diagnosed as PCD and upon review were found to have interfollicular HL.Human herpes virus type 8 (HHV-8) is present in about 40% of cases with PCD.It predisposes patients to a much higher risk of other malignancies, including Kaposi's sarcoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.Cases linked to HHV-8 are associated with a different morphology than cases that are not linked to HHV-8.It has been proposed that patients with both HL and CD will have lymph nodes with HHV-8-negative morphology.

Materials and Methods:
We present a series of three cases in a retrospective study where patients had both HL and PCD.Surgical pathology reports, clinical histories, and H and E and various immunohistochemical stains on initial work-up were examined and subsequent immunohistochemical stains for HHV-8 were obtained from the Methodist Hospital.Results: Patient 1 was diagnosed with PCD and interfollicular HL in the same lymph node.Patient 2 was first diagnosed with classic HL and 2 years later returned with enlarged lymph nodes clinically suspected to be recurrent HL.Histology showed angiofollicular hyperplasia and interfollicular plasmacytosis without Reed-Sternberg cells and a diagnosis of PCD was rendered.Patient 3, a male in his third decade, was diagnosed with nodular sclerosing HL in the thymus, and concurrently PCD in the mediastinal lymph nodes.All three cases had architectural features consistent with an HHV-8-negative morphology.Immunohistochemical stains for HHV-8 were done retrospectively and were negative.Conclusion: All three of our patients with both HL and CD had HHV-8-negative lymph node morphology and absence of HHV-8 by immunohistochemistry.These patients, therefore, are not at an increased risk for the development of subsequent malignancies, when compared to HHV-8-positive patients.Included in our series is one unique case where the diagnosis of HL preceded CD by 2 years.lymphoma [2] when compared to HHV-8-negative cases.
A relationship between Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) and PCD has been well documented.There have been 29 cases reported in the literature and nearly all of them were either diagnosed concurrently, or were initially diagnosed as PCD and upon review were found to have interfollicular HL. [3][4][5][6][7] To our knowledge, the HHV-8 status of these types of cases has not been reported, with the exception of few case reports. [8]In the following study, we report three cases of patients with both HL and CD and classify them by HHV-8 status based on morphology and immunohistochemical studies.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Three patients are included in this series.Cases 1 and 2 were obtained from the Metro Health Medical Center archives.Case 3 was obtained from the Medical College of Wisconsin.Surgical pathology reports and clinical histories were obtained from the hospital information systems.
A ll cases initially had H and E and va r i o us immunohistochemical stains on initial work-up.Immunohistochemical stains for HHV-8 were done by Methodist Hospital (Houston, TX) retrospectively.

RESULTS
Case 1, a 62-year-old HIV-negative female, was diagnosed with PCD and interfollicular HL concurrently in the same mediastinal lymph node [Figure 1].The node morphology showed intact follicles and distinct mantle zones.
Case 2 was a 67-year-old HIV-negative male who was first diagnosed with mixed cellularity HL in a cervical lymph node [Figure 2].Following treatment with chemotherapy and 10 months of remission, the patient returned with enlarged axillary lymph nodes clinically suspected to be recurrent HL.Histology showed angiofollicular hyperplasia and interfollicular plasmacytosis without Reed-Sternberg cells and a diagnosis of PCD was rendered.The follicles were intact, without lysis or hemorrhage, and mantle zones were well delineated.
Case 3, a 27-year-old HIV-negative male, was diagnosed with nodular sclerosing HL in the thymus [Figure 3] and concurrently PCD in the mediastinal lymph nodes.
All three cases had architectural features consistent with an HHV-8-negative morphology.Immunohistochemical stains for HHV-8 were negative in all cases [Figure 4].

DISCUSSION
Our study validated that cases associated with both HL and CD typically demonstrate an HHV-8-negative lymph node morphology.
HHV-8 is present in about 40% of cases with multicentric PCD and a minority of cases with localized PCD. [9]It predisposes patients to a much higher risk of other malignancies, including Kaposi's sarcoma and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and is associated with a worse prognosis.
HHV-8-positive cases are associated with a different morphology than HHV-8-negative cases. [2]HHV-8negative cases have enlarged, active, hyperplastic follicular centers with mitoses, macrophages with nuclear debris, and increased follicular dendritic cells.There is usually a thin but distinct mantle zone.HHV-8-positive PCD cases have follicles that show severe hemorrhage and lysis with dissolution of the germinal center.The mantle zone-interfollicular area boundary is obliterated with the presence of indistinct, irregular mantle zones.Additionally, HHV-8-positive cases are more likely to have plasma cell atypia with immunoblasts and plasmablasts present in the mantle zones and more pronounced vascular proliferation in the interfollicular areas.There is also intranodal sinus dilatation which is absent in HHV-8-negative cases. [2]ll three of the patients in our series had a morphology consistent with the HHV-8-negative type of PCD.
The etiology of this apparently heterogenous group of diseases currently classified as CD is not well understood.[12] This may help explain the HHV-8-associated changes because HHV-8 encodes an IL-6 homolog. [13]In CD with concurrent HHV-8 infection, there is a total increase in the systemic levels of IL-6, which causes the different morphologies seen in HHV-8-positive cases.
[12] This would include HIV, autoimmune disorders, and plasma cell dyscrasias.It has also been shown that Reed-Sternberg cells and mononuclear-variant cells produce IL-6. [11]One report says of 19 cases with both HL and CD, that the diagnosis of Hodgkin's disease was delayed in 16 cases. [3][5][6][7] Our series included one case (case 1) of interfollicular HL that was diagnosed concurrently in a mediastinal lymph node.Another case (case 3) presented concurrently with nodular sclerosing HL in the thymus and PCD in a mediastinal node.The most unusual in our series was the case 2 who presented with mixed cellularity HL first, and then 16 months later (10 months postchemotherapy induced remission) returned with PCD.To our knowledge, this is the first case of its kind.
Our three patients each had a different subtype of classical HL (interfollicular, nodular sclerosing, mixed cellularity).This is not unusual because previous reports in patients with both HL and PCD included all types of classical HL as well as nodular lymphocyte-predominant HL.

CONCLUSION
It has been proposed that patients with both HL and CD will most often have lymph nodes with an HHV-8-negative morphology, [2] but our series is the first report to verify this concept in multiple patients.Our series of three cases showed morphology with HHV-8-negative features and were negative for HHV-8 by immunohistochemical studies.Included is the first reported case of HL preceding the PCD changes.