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Lecture 8 in hematology by Dr. Alaa F. Alwan

Hodgkin’s lymphoma

Hodgkin’s lymphoma  described by Thomas Hodgkin in 1832. . 
EPIDEMIOLOGY
In the United States,  three to four new cases of HL are diagnosed in 
100,000 people each year. The age distribution frequency is bimodal, 
with one peak occurring at 15–30 yr, followed by a second peak in older 
patients. The incidence of HL has increased in recent years. There is a 
slight male predominance and, in addition, an increased risk of the 
disease is associated with higher socioeconomic status.
 ETIOLOGY
 The etiology of HL remains unknown, associated with Epstein-Barr virus 
.giant Reed-Sternberg cells are pathognomonic for HL, 
 CLINICAL FEATURES
The typical presentation of HL is an indolent enlargement of a lymph 
node or of several lymph nodes, most often at the neck and less 
frequently at the axillae. Although any lymphatic region can be affected, 
inguinal or femoral lymph nodes are involved in less than 10% of the 
cases as the only disease localization. A typical manifestation of the 
disease is a mediastinal enlargement that may cause dyspnea or no 
symptoms, which is only discovered on a routine chest X-ray. Abdominal 
lymph nodes and the spleen may be enlarged, causing abdominal 
discomfort, or may be discovered only during staging procedures. Solid 
organs like the lung or the liver may be involved, generally indicating 
disseminated disease, but may also be infiltrated by direct extension from 
a lymphatic mass. The bone marrow is involved in less than 5% of 
unselected patients. Involvement of the central nervous system is rare at 
the time of diagnosis and usually occurs only in late progressive disease. 
Patients may have B-symptoms, especially in advanced stages (night 
sweats and unexplained fever, which may be of the Pel-Ebstein type, and 
weight loss of >10% within 6 mo). An unusual (<2% of cases) but typical 
symptom is pain in the enlarged lymph nodes or involved tissues felt after 
the ingestion of alcohol. More often (in about 10% of cases), patients 
experience nonspecific pruritus. 
 DIAGNOSIS AND DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS, STAGING OF 
HL
If a suspicious lymph node is larger than 2 cm in diameter or smaller 
lymph nodes persist for more than 4–6 wk, or if B-symptoms or other 
signs suggest malignant lymphoma, the lymph node should be biopsied 
without delay. If no clear diagnosis can be made, the biopsy should be 
repeated, whenever possible, on a peripheral node. 
The differential diagnoses 


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1. NHL
2. reactive processes, such as toxoplasmosis or virus like infectious 
mononucleosis.
 If the diagnosis is HL, then the exact stage has to be determined (staging)  
Other staging procedures may also be useful. For example, magnetic 
resonance tomographies may also detect an enlarged spleen or abdominal 
lymph nodes. Lymphography is a sensitive, but invasive, method to 
detect abdominal lymph nodes and has been abandoned by most centers. 
In some situations, positron emission tomography (PET) using 
fluorodeoxyglucose has been found useful for the staging and follow-up 
of patients with HL. PET is sensitive and, in most instances, specific 
enough to detect involvement by HL. 
The Reed-Sternberg cells (large lobulated, multinucleated cells with 
prominent nucleoli) are generally considered to be a part of the tumor cell 
population found in the affected tissues along with stroma cells, reactive 
lymphoid cells, eosinophils, and neutrophils. As already mentioned, 
Reed-Sternberg cells belong in most cases to the B-cell lineage. Marker 
analysis reveals them to be positive for CD30, frequently positive for 
CD15 and for CD25, and negative in most cases for CD45 and for CD20.
CLASSIFICATION

a. Nodular lymphocyte-predominant HL 5% ( CD 20 positive)

    b.Classical HL:95% (CD15 positive, CD 30 positive)
1. Lymphocyte-rich HL 5–8%
2. Nodular-sclerosis HL 35–55%
3. Mixed-cellularity HL 20–35%
4. Lymphocytic-depletion HL 3–4%
The frequency of these subtypes differs in different parts of the world. At 
present, with effective treatments for HL, the subtypes are no longer 
prognostically relevant. However, some of these types have particular 
clinical features: nodular sclerosis is more frequent in young women with 
a large mediastinal mass. The lymphocyte-predominant HL resembles a 
low-grade, B-cell lymphoma, and can be treated with limited irradiation 
at least in early stages.
Staging Procedures for Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
Clinical examination, Complete laboratory status (including lactate 
dehydrogenase, complete blood count, ESR , C-reactive protein, alkaline 
phosphatase), Chest X-ray
CT scan of thorax, abdomen, and neck
Ultrasound of abdomen
Positron emission tomography imaging (PET-CT scan) (in selected 
circumstances)
Bone marrow biopsy, Liver biopsy (if liver involvement is suspected


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Clinical Stages of Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
(Ann Arbor Classification 1971, Cotswold Modification 1990)
Stage I : Involvement of one lymphatic area on one side of the diaphragm 
or of a single extra-lymphatic site (IE)
Stage II : Involvement of two or more lymphatic areas on one side of the 
diaphragm
Stage III : Lymphatic involvement on both sides of the diaphragm
Stage IV: Diffuse involvement of solid organs(s) or bone marrow and/or 
lymphatic involvement
The letter A or B is indicated for all stages: A, no general symptoms; B, 
general symptoms (night sweats, fever, weight loss of >10%; 
The letter E indicate localized extra-nodal involvement of a solid organ. 
The letter X indicates a mass of >10 cm in diameter or a mediastinal mass 
less than one-third of the thoracic diameter is

Treatment
Chemotherapy ABVD (A = adriamycine, B= bleomycine, V= vinblastin, 
D=Dacarbazine)and radiation 

 LATE EFFECTS OF TREATMENT
1. Hypothyroidism, which may require treatment by thyroid hormones.
2. Cardiovascular disease, radiation pneumonitis and pericarditis. 
3. Lung fibrosis from radiation plus bleomycin.
4. Sterility due to radiotherapy (80%). 
5. A rare (<0.5%) but serious second cancers e.g acute myelogenous 
leukemias (increased risk within 3–8 yr), myelodysplastic syndromes, 
NHLs, and various solid tumors.




رفعت المحاضرة من قبل: Gaith Ali
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