Pediatric-type follicular lymphoma and pediatric nodal marginal zone lymphoma: additional evidence to support they are a single disease with variation in the histologic spectrum

Virchows Arch. 2024 Nov;485(5):889-900. doi: 10.1007/s00428-024-03941-2. Epub 2024 Oct 8.

Abstract

Pediatric-type follicular lymphoma (PTFL) and pediatric nodal marginal zone lymphoma (PNMZL) are two rare indolent B-cell lymphomas with overlapping features. Recently, cases showing hybridizing features of PTFL and PNMZL have been reported. Herein, we retrospectively analyzed the clinicopathologic features of 59 patients, including 39 with PTFL, 5 with PNMZL, and 15 with mixed-type tumors (MTT). And next-generation sequencing analysis was performed on 3 PTFL, 2 PNMZL, and 2 MTT cases. In addition, previously published mutational data of 96 PTFLs, 25 PNMZLs, and 46 MTTs were also analyzed. There were 52 male and 7 female patients, with a median age of 17 years. Most patients (96.6%) had lymph node involvement in the head and neck region and were diagnosed with stage I disease. Among the 50 patients (85%) with telephone follow-up, 44 (88%) adopted a watch-and-wait strategy after surgical resection of the lesions. Only one PTFL patient experienced a relapse 6 months after diagnosis. Microscopically, not only the MTT cases showed a composite form of enlarged follicles and interfollicular lymphocytic proliferation producing a progressively transformed germinal center (PTGC) pattern, but also focal follicles with a PTGC-like pattern were observed in PTFL cases. Genetically, the most frequently mutated genes were TNFRSF14 (in 3 PTFLs and 2 MTTs), MAP2K1 (in 2 PTFLs, 1 PNMZL and 1 MTT), and IRF8 (in 2 MTTs and 1 PNMZL). Based on the similar or overlapping clinical, pathologic, and genetic features, PTFL and PNMZL are likely to represent two different histologic patterns of the same disease.

Keywords: Gene mutation; Next-generation sequencing; Pediatric nodal marginal zone lymphoma; Pediatric-type follicular lymphoma.