Both the 2022 World Health Organization Classification of Hematolymphoid Tumors, 5th Edition and the International Consensus Classification of lymphoma have refined the way we now approach high-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBL) with MYC and BCL2 and/or BCL6 rearrangements moving the previous generation of classification a step forward. The unifying biology of MYC/BCL2 tumors has become clearer and their inferior prognosis confirmed compared with those with morphologic similar phenotypes but lacking the classifcation defining cytogenetic abnormalities. Fluorescent in situ hybridization testing has now become largely population based, and we have learned much from this. We can readily define molecular categories and apply these widely to clinical practice. Uncertainty has, however, been shed on the place of MYC/BCL6 translocations in defining a common disease group of double hit lymphoma due to biological heterogeneity. We have enhanced our knowledge of outcomes and the role of therapy intensification to overcome chemotherapy resistance in HGBL. For those patients failed by initial induction chemotherapy, immunotherapy approaches, including chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapies, are improving outcomes. Novel inhibitors, targeting dysregulated oncogenic proteins, are being explored at pace. The rare, but difficult, diagnostic classification HGBL (not otherwise specified) remains a diagnosis of exclusion with limited data on an optimal clinical approach. The days of talking loosely of double- and triple-hit lymphoma are numbered as biology and outcomes may not be shared. This review synergizes the current data on biology, prognosis, and therapies in HGBL.
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