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Diagnostic pitfalls in two cases of primary cutaneous neoplasia of precursor lymphocytes

The lymphoblastic lymphoma (LBL) is a malignant neoplasm of precursor lymphocytes (B, T or NK-cells). The primary involvement of the skin is rare. We examined the clinical, anatomopathological and immunophenotypic features of two patients with primary cutaneous involvement. Histologically they showed an infiltrate of immature cells. The immunophenotypic analysis was performed with a comprehensive panel of antibodies. T-cell receptor rearrangement (TCR-gamma) was analyzed with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and it was positive in one case, which was CD56 positive, classified as blastic NK-cell-like lymphoma. This case represents a distinct entity derived from precursor cells at an early stage of a common developmental pathway for T and NK cells. The other case was classified as T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma with aberrant expression of CD79a, what could be a diagnostic pitfall. The accurate diagnosis depends on the use of a comprehensive panel of antibodies for immunophenotypic characterization and molecular analysis.

Primary cutaneous lymphoma; Lymphoblastic lymphoma; Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; Blastic NK-cell-like lymphoma


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