2. Marginal Zone Lymphoma of Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue (MALT Lymphoma)
MALT lymphoma is the most common type of primary pulmonary lymphoma (70–80% of cases) [
1,
2,
4]. The disease primarily affects adults (median age 68 years) [
5], but it may develop in younger individuals who are immunosuppressed or are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. About a third of patients have an underlying autoimmune disorder, such as Sjögren syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, or lupus erythematosus, and a similar proportion are asymptomatic. The association between the Gram-negative bacterium
Achromobacter xylosoxidans and pulmonary MALT lymphoma is controversial [
6,
7]. Symptomatic individuals have non-specific findings that are confused with pneumonia, such as fever, cough, dyspnea, or hemoptysis, but these symptoms do not respond to antibiotics.
On a chest X-ray, pulmonary MALT lymphoma usually presents as a solitary lung mass. On high resolution computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), this lymphoma may present as a ground glass infiltrate with air bronchograms (
Figure 1), as a peripheral mass with pleural thickening [
8,
9,
10], or as consolidated lung parenchyma with air bronchograms and areas of apparent cavitation [
11,
12,
13].
Multiple or bilateral lesions, a pattern resembling LIP, or endobronchial lesions may occur but are uncommon [
10,
14]. Hilar or mediastinal lymphadenopathy is seen in ~30% of cases [
15].
Histopathologic features in biopsies. MALT lymphoma is a polymorphic lymphoma composed predominantly of sheets of small lymphocytes, centrocyte-like cells, and monocytoid cells, with few scattered large immunoblast-like cells and a variable number of plasma cells. This process typically effaces the lung parenchyma (
Figure 2 and
Figure 3).
Residual distorted lymphoid follicles “colonized” by monocytoid cells or reactive lymphoid follicles with prominent marginal zones may be seen. Lymphoepithelial lesions involving the airways may or may not be appreciated depending on the extent of involvement and if an airway was sampled in the biopsy (
Figure 3).
However, lymphoepithelial lesions are not exclusive of lymphoma and may be seen in reactive conditions. Plasma cells may be located beneath the airway epithelium or may form small clusters admixed with lymphocytes. A few multinucleated giant cells, non-necrotizing granulomas, or areas of fibrosis may be present.
Differential diagnosis. If the lesion is mass-forming on imaging, the polymorphic nature of the specimen and the presence of plasma cells should raise concern for MALT lymphoma versus a reactive and dense lymphoplasmacytic process, such as non-specific chronic inflammation, nodular lymphoid hyperplasia, or IgG4-related lung disease (IgG4-RLD) [
16,
17]. The required IHC in this scenario includes CD3, CD20, CD10, bcl-2, bcl-6, CD21/CD23, IgG, IgG4, and kappa and lambda by IHC or in situ hybridization (ISH).
In a reactive process, including nodular lymphoid hyperplasia and IgG4-RLD, there is a predominance of CD3 over CD20 with no CD20+ intraepithelial lymphocytes, and the B-cells are negative for bcl-2. CD10 and bcl-6 highlight germinal centers that are negative for bcl-2. CD21/CD23 are positive in normal follicular dendritic cell meshworks, and plasma cells are always polytypic by IHC and/or ISH. Pan-cytokeratin shows no lymphoepithelial lesions (
Figure 4).
In a biopsy, the lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate of LIP or severe lung involvement by a connective tissue disease may be quite brisk to raise concern for MALT lymphoma (
Figure 5).
Lack of lymphoepithelial lesions or numerous B-cells and the presence of polytypic plasma cells in the setting of ground-glass opacities instead of a mass favor LIP or lung involvement by connective tissue disease over MALT lymphoma (
Figure 5). As in all extranodal plasma cell-rich polytypic processes, it is important to exclude IgG4-RLD by evaluating the IgG4:IgG ratio. The criteria to suggest the possibility of IgG4-RLD consists of >20 IgG4+ plasma cells/high power field and an IgG4:IgG ratio > 40% [
18]. However, in IgG4-RLD, there are usually areas of fibrosis and scattered eosinophils with/without the presence of vasculitis. The latter is not a feature typically seen in MALT lymphoma or nodular lymphoid hyperplasia. Importantly, a subset of cases of nodular lymphoid hyperplasia and MALT lymphoma can also have increased IgG4+ plasma cells outside of the context of IgG4-RLD. Therefore, pathologists should be careful about establishing a diagnosis of IgG4+-RLD without a proper morphologic evaluation and correlation with clinical and radiologic findings. For cases with features of nodular lymphoid hyperplasia and increased IgG4+ plasma cells, it is better to give a descriptive diagnosis of “lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate with increased IgG4+ plasma cells” and recommend clinical and laboratory correlation before establishing a diagnosis of IgG4-RLD [
19]. Recommended laboratory studies include serology for IgG subclasses, IgE, and a thorough work up to exclude an underlying autoimmune disorder. See below for cases of MALT lymphoma with increased IgG4+ plasma cells.
In MALT lymphoma, contrary to a reactive process, there is usually CD20 predominance over CD3, although not always (
Figure 6).
The neoplastic B-cells co-express bcl-2 and are negative for CD10 and bcl-6. Distorted germinal centers may show residual labeling with CD10 and bcl-6, with a variable number of bcl-2+ lymphoma cells colonizing follicles (
Figure 6). CD20 or pan-cytokeratin highlight lymphoepithelial lesions if present (
Figure 6). Plasma cells may or may not be monotypic; therefore, it is crucial to know that a lack of monotypic plasma cells does not rule out a diagnosis of MALT lymphoma (
Figure 6). Similarly, it is not uncommon to have increased IgG4+ plasma cells in MALT lymphomas, which may be misinterpreted as IgG4-RLD [
20]. This is readily excluded when the IgG4+ plasma cells are monotypic. If a case with increased IgG4+ plasma cells is polytypic, using the other features described above should be sufficient to support a diagnosis of MALT lymphoma over IgG4-RLD. However, if no convincing morphologic or immunophenotypic features supportive of MALT lymphoma are seen, the diagnosis may be rendered as “lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate, cannot exclude MALT lymphoma”. Despite the traditional recommendation to perform
IGH clonality studies in these kinds of cases to favor a reactive or malignant process, it should be clarified that these results should never be used to make a definitive diagnosis of benign or malignant. Alternatively, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) looking for the t(11;18)(q21;q21)(
API2::MALT1) may be helpful for diagnosis since this is the most common genetic alteration in lung MALT lymphoma; however, this translocation is only present in 40–50% of cases (only helpful if it is detected) [
21]. Close follow up of these patients and an attempt for a new biopsy with material submitted for flow cytometry may be the best recommendation.
Some MALT lymphomas composed of a more monotonous lymphocytic infiltrate are hard to distinguish morphologically from other low-grade B-cell lymphomas, including follicular lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma, and mantle cell lymphoma. Usually, these lymphomas tend to involve the lungs at advanced stages, and there is already a known diagnosis. However, rarely, lung involvement may be the initial clinical manifestation, and thus, a biopsy may be performed. The required IHC in this scenario includes CD3, CD20, CD5, CD10, bcl-2, bcl-6, CD21/CD23, CD43, cyclin D1, and Ki-67. MALT lymphoma is a CD5−/CD10− B-cell lymphoma with co-expression of bcl-2 in B-cells. About 40–50% of cases may also co-express CD43 (
Figure 6).
MALT lymphoma with numerous “colonized” follicles may be difficult to distinguish morphologically from low-grade follicular lymphoma. The presence of a polymorphic tumor composed of monocytoid cells, plasma cells, and lymphoepithelial lesions supports MALT lymphoma over follicular lymphoma, whereas in follicular lymphoma the tumor is composed of variable number of centrocytes and centroblasts. IHC helps to distinguish this neoplasm since follicular lymphoma is positive for CD10 and bcl-2 and negative for CD5, CD23, CD43, and cyclin D1. However, prominent follicular colonization with numerous bcl-2+ lymphoma MALT cells may not be readily distinguished from the bcl-2+ neoplastic follicles of follicular lymphoma, and CD10 and bcl-6 may be difficult to interpret as either residual germinal centers or as lymphoma cells. Additionally, some cases of follicular lymphoma can show marginal zone differentiation and are negative for CD10 and bcl-6. In these difficult cases, it is recommended to perform FISH to detect the characteristic translocation of follicular lymphoma t(14;18)(
BCL2::IGH) to attempt to confirm the diagnosis, but this translocation may also be absent in follicular lymphomas with marginal zone differentiation. Alternatively, FISH looking for the t(11;18)(q21;q21)(
API2::MALT1) may be helpful for diagnosis since this is the most common genetic alteration in lung MALT lymphoma; however, this translocation is only present in 40–50% of cases [
21]. If it is not possible to discern between these two lymphomas, a diagnosis of “CD5−/CD10− low-grade B-cell lymphoma” may be sufficient. If a more refined diagnosis is needed and no other sites of involvement are detected, molecular studies may prove helpful to identify alterations seen more frequently in lung MALT lymphoma (
TBL1XR1 and
TET2 mutations) than in follicular lymphoma (
KMT2D,
EZH,
CREBBP, and
EP300 mutations) [
22].
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma is composed of small monotonous lymphocytes with clumped chromatin and proliferation centers containing prolymphocytes and paraimmunoblasts that may appear as nodular pale areas within the tumor, mimicking MALT lymphoma morphologically. However, the lymphoma B-cells are positive for CD5, and CD23 but lack CD10, CD21, and cyclin D1, and this confirms the diagnosis and excludes MALT lymphoma (
Figure 7).
Mantle cell lymphoma is a B-cell lymphoma composed of small lymphocytes with indented nuclei that may resemble centrocyte-like cells. In addition, this lymphoma may show a vague nodular arrangement, hyalinized venules, and epithelioid macrophages. By IHC, mantle cell lymphoma is positive for CD5 and cyclin D1 and is negative for CD10 and CD23. This immunophenotype rules out MALT lymphoma.
Lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma also enters the differential diagnosis of MALT lymphoma since this is also a CD5−/CD10− B-cell lymphoma, but in the lung, this neoplasm is extremely rare, and it should only be considered as a diagnosis of exclusion or if the patient had a prior diagnosis of lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma.
Cases of MALT lymphoma with extensive plasmacytic differentiation enter the differential diagnosis of lung plasmacytoma (solitary plasmacytoma or extramedullary plasma cell myeloma). The presence of small lymphocytes and monocytoid cells (both CD20+), reactive follicles, and lymphoepithelial lesions is diagnostic of MALT lymphoma and excludes plasmacytoma, where only sheets of plasma cells are seen. However, in a core biopsy, not all these features may be present [
23,
24,
25]. By IHC, a plasma cell neoplasm (either solitary plasmacytoma or extramedullary plasma cell myeloma) is favored over MALT lymphoma if the plasma cells are positive for CD56 and CD117 and lack CD45. Amyloid deposition may be observed in both entities and can be confirmed by Congo red stain.
If increased large cells are seen in MALT lymphoma, but criteria for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma are not met (sheets of large cells), this should be documented and discussed with the clinical team since these cases behave more aggressively than classic MALT lymphoma.
Importantly, the edges of a pulmonary MALT lymphoma are ill-defined and show alveolar septal expansion with numerous lymphocytes with variable degrees of alveolar edema, intra-alveolar proteinaceous debris, and reactive pneumocyte changes (
Figure 8).
These features are morphologically indistinguishable from LIP (
Figure 8). Therefore, mandatory correlation with imaging is needed in a transbronchial or core needle biopsy with morphologic features of LIP where the imaging shows a mass rather than diffuse ground-glass opacities. In this setting, CD3 and CD20 IHC should be performed to document the type of predominant lymphocytes (LIP usually has more CD3+ than CD20+ cells, whereas MALT lymphoma is the opposite). We recommend signing cases of nodules or masses with morphologic features of LIP in a biopsy as ”prominent septal alveolar lymphocytic infiltrate, B-cell-rich or T-cell-rich” (based on the IHC results) and comment that the possibility of MALT lymphoma cannot be entirely excluded, particularly if the lymphoid infiltrate is B-cell-rich. Close clinical and imaging correlation as well as a recommendation for additional material with a sample submitted for flow cytometry are encouraged. Lastly, the edges of nodular lymphoid hyperplasia are typically sharply demarcated from the lung (
Figure 8) in contrast to the findings described for LIP and MALT lymphoma, but this is difficult to appreciate in a core biopsy.
3. Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL)
DLBCL is the second most common pulmonary lymphoma (10–20% of cases) [
2,
4]. Most cases of primary lung DLBCL correspond to large cell transformation of pulmonary MALT lymphoma, whereas the pathogenesis of de novo DLBCL is unclear. DLBCL is a disease of adults, with a mean age of 60 years. Contrary to MALT lymphoma, most patients present with B symptoms. On imaging, primary pulmonary DLBCL tends to present as a single peripheral mass with sharply demarcated borders, but this may not be the case for a DLBCL arising from MALT lymphoma that may present as an ill-defined mass. DLBCL may present as multiple lung nodules, usually in the setting of systemic disease. On CT scan, DLBCL can show central necrosis [
15], and about 50% of patients have hilar lymphadenopathy.
Histopathologic features in biopsies. DLBCL is composed of sheets of large lymphoid cells with centroblastic and immunoblastic features (
Figure 9).
Centroblastic morphology refers to cells with an oval to irregular nucleus with fine chromatin, >1 basophilic nucleoli with a juxtanuclear membrane location, and a moderate amount of amphophilic to pale eosinophilic cytoplasm. Immunoblastic features refer to cells with a round nucleus with fine chromatin, a central eosinophilic nucleolus, and radial projections of “wispy” chromatin threads and more abundant cytoplasm, sometimes with plasmacytoid morphology (
Figure 9). The tumor produces effacement of the lung architecture, and there are abundant mitoses and apoptotic bodies and variable degrees of necrosis. In areas with preserved lung parenchyma, the tumor cells may be seen admixed with fibrin and filling the alveolar spaces, a phenomenon called “tumoral pneumonia” (
Figure 9) [
26].
Differential diagnosis. The morphology of the tumor is highly suggestive of large cell lymphoma, and a limited panel of IHC markers may solve the issue, including CD45, CD3, and CD20, that will point to a diagnosis of DLBCL (
Figure 10).
However, in some instances, the morphologic features may not be obvious or may be obscured by crush artefact and/or necrosis. The presence of anaplastic cells or a “starry sky” pattern may raise concern for a primary lung or metastatic carcinoma, melanoma, small cell carcinoma (
Figure 11), or small blue round cell tumors metastatic to the lung, including but not limited to Ewing sarcoma, neuroblastoma, embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, etc.
Curiously, in biopsies, DLBCL tends to show spindle morphology mimicking sarcomatoid carcinoma or sarcoma. In these cases, IHC for pan-cytokeratin, S100, and CD45 is required to first classify a case as a hematolymphoid neoplasm and exclude carcinoma or melanoma. Other specific markers are required if a hematolymphoid origin is excluded, e.g., FLI1, CD99, and NKX2.2 for Ewing sarcoma; neuroendocrine markers for neuroblastoma; desmin and myogenin for embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma; etc.
Once confirmation of a hematolymphoid origin is established with CD45, the ideal IHC lymphoma work up for DLBCL includes CD3, CD20, CD5, CD10, bcl-2, bcl-6, MUM1, cyclin D1, CD30, Ki-67, and Epstein-Barr virus-encoded RNA (EBER) ISH. These markers are the minimum to best classify a lymphoma as of B-phenotype (CD20+,CD3−), from germinal center origin (CD10+, bcl-6+, MUM1-) or non-germinal center origin (CD10−, bcl-6−/+, MUM1+), as a “double expressor” or not (bcl-2+ and c-myc+), as an EBV+ LBCL, and to exclude the diagnosis of blastoid or pleomorphic mantle cell lymphoma (CD5+ and cyclin D1+). Knowing the cell of origin of a DLBCL (germinal center vs non-germinal center) as well as the status of bcl-2 and c-myc (“double expressor”) confers prognostic value, although this has not been properly studied specifically in primary pulmonary DLBCL. The expression of CD30 can be used to record the potential use of targeted treatment with the anti-CD30 antibody therapy, brentuximab vedotin. Ki-67 is helpful to know the proliferation index. If Ki-67 is >90%, this may suggest a diagnosis of high-grade LBCL. If not all the above markers can be performed, we recommend 1) attempting to determine the B-cell lineage of the tumor by performing CD20 or PAX5 and 2) by performing cyclin D1 IHC to at least exclude mantle cell lymphoma. PAX5, CD20, and CD79a highlight the intra-alveolar malignant cells in areas of “tumoral pneumonia” (
Figure 10). Careful interpretation of PAX5 without confirmation of a hematolymphoid origin (CD45, CD43) should be kept in mind since up to 30% of small cell carcinomas can be positive for PAX5 [
27], and some cases of small cell carcinoma may be negative or only patchy positive for keratins and synaptophysin.
Rarely, myeloid sarcoma may present as a lung mass mimicking DLBCL on morphology. Clinical history of prior or concurrent acute myeloid leukemia is extremely helpful to consider this possibility. IHC for CD34, CD117, MPO, and myeloid or monocytic markers (CD33, CD14, CD4) as well as for B-cell markers (CD20, CD79a, PAX5) is helpful to confirm the diagnosis.
A more challenging differential diagnosis of pulmonary DLBCL is with other large cell lymphomas involving the lung, such as grade 3 lymphomatoid granulomatosis (LyG), primary mediastinal (thymic) LBCL extending into the lung, Burkitt lymphoma, or anaplastic large cell lymphoma. Grade 3 LyG shows an angiocentric pattern that is not typical of DLBCL, but this may not be present in a core needle or transbronchial biopsy. Grade 3 LyG is strongly and diffusely positive for EBER, which is negative in DLBCL unless the case is an EBV+ LBCL, and that distinction requires clinical and imaging correlation (see section “Differential diagnosis of high-grade LyG”).
Primary mediastinal (thymic) LBCL extending to the lung should be ruled out by clinical and imaging correlation, such as the case of a young woman with an anterior mediastinal mass that is extending into the lung, versus that of an older man or an adult with a single peripheral lung nodule or multiple lung nodules [
28]. This lymphoma shows clear cells and variable degrees of fibrosis, and these features may or may not be observed in cases involving the lung (
Figure 12).
By IHC, primary mediastinal (thymic) LBCL is positive for B-cell markers, and for MUM1, CD23 and p63 in about 70% of cases with variable to weak expression of CD30.
Burkitt lymphoma is a CD10+ B-cell lymphoma of intermediate-sized cells that also enters the differential diagnosis of a DLBCL of germinal center origin (CD10+). This diagnosis should be considered when a LBCL is negative for bcl-2 and shows strong expression of c-myc with a “starry sky” pattern and a Ki-67 close to 100%. EBV may be positive or negative. Confirmation or exclusion of the diagnosis requires correlation with FISH and/or molecular analysis. This discussion is out of the scope of this review, but it is worth mentioning that pulmonary involvement by Burkitt lymphoma is exceedingly rare as compared to that of DLBCL.
For anaplastic large cell lymphoma, the use of CD3 and other T-cell markers, as well as CD4, CD8, CD20, PAX5, ALK, and CD30, are helpful for diagnosis. Anaplastic large cell lymphoma is a CD30+ T-cell lymphoma, usually positive for CD2, CD4, and variable expression of CD5, CD7, and CD8 but negative for B-cell markers. About half of the cases are ALK+. It is important to be aware that the anaplastic variant of DLBCL is also positive for CD30, but the tumor expresses B-cell (not T-cell) markers.
4. Intravascular Large B-Cell Lymphoma (IV-LBCL)
Intravascular LBCL is a rare subtype of LBCL with specific clinicopathologic features. This neoplasm shows characteristic intravascular involvement by large lymphoma cells in multiple organs, hence the name. A lack of homing receptor molecules, such as CD29 (beta-1 integrin) and CD54 (ICAM-1), on the surface of lymphoma cells impairs their ability to exit the tissues and partially explains their peculiar intravascular location [
29]. The most common affected sites include the skin, the lungs, and the central nervous system, but any organ may be involved by IV-LBCL. Lung involvement is part of the so-called “Asian form of IV-LBCL” that features multisystemic involvement along with hemophagocytic syndrome [
30,
31,
32]. The disease shows non-specific clinical and imaging findings, and only a high index of suspicion will point toward this diagnosis, which may only happen after several other conditions have been excluded. Unfortunately, most patients go underrecognized and the histopathologic diagnosis is established at late stages of the disease or only at autopsy. Overall, IV-LBCL has a poor prognosis despite the use of current DLBCL-based chemotherapy.
Histopathologic features in biopsies. IV-LBCL may be inconspicuous with only a few lymphoma cells seen within blood vessels, or it may show a patchy distribution (
Figure 13).
For these reasons, the diagnosis can be easily overlooked, and only a high index of suspicion will point to this diagnosis. On the contrary, cases with high tumor burden produce expansion of blood vessels that appear as alveolar septal expansion and may be interpreted as an interstitial pneumonic process [
33]. The lymphoma cells show similar morphologic features to those described for DLBCL (centroblastic or immunoblastic) and are seen in the lumen of capillaries and of small- to intermediate-sized blood vessels. In some cases, the lymphoma cells are seen floating in the lumen, whereas in other cases, they may “pack” the entire blood vessel lumen, show “margination”, or may be admixed with fibrin or a thrombus [
4]. IV-LBCL is positive for CD45, CD20, PAX5, CD79a, and bcl-2, with variable expression of CD5, CD10, bcl-6, and MUM1. CD15 and CD30 are usually negative (
Figure 13). Most cases have a non-germinal center type immunophenotype, CD10−/bcl-6+/−/MUM1+. The lymphoma cells are negative for T-cell markers, ALK, EBER, keratins, and melanoma markers.
Differential diagnosis. IV-LBCL should be distinguished from carcinoma or melanoma with lymphangitic spread (
Figure 14), acute leukemia (usually cases with hyperleukocytosis), and an intravascular large T-cell lymphoma (usually NK/T-cell lymphoma or anaplastic large cell lymphoma) [
34].
A proper set of IHC is sufficient to make the correct diagnosis, which includes CD45, ≥1 B-cell markers (CD20, PAX5, CD79a), CD3, CD56, EBER, pan-cytokeratin, or S100 (
Figure 14). If the consideration of leukemia is high, the addition of CD34, CD117, MPO, or other myeloid or monocytic markers (CD33, CD14, CD4) may be helpful. We recommend to always consider IV-LBCL as a potential diagnosis in cases where there appears to be no significant pathologic findings or there only appears to be mild alveolar septal expansion in the lung biopsy and the patient has severe systemic symptoms (weight loss, shortness of breath), and an unimpressive imaging or one with ground-glass opacities. The utility of CD20 in this context is highly valuable and confirms the diagnosis.
5. Lymphomatoid Granulomatosis (LyG)
LyG is a clonal proliferation of EBV-infected large B-cells associated with vasculitis and necrosis [
35,
36]. LyG predominantly affects males (M:F ratio 2:1), with a mean age of presentation of 46 to 48 years, who are immunosuppressed, including patients with acquired immunodeficient syndrome, who are status post ablation chemotherapy, and patients with hereditary immune deficiencies (e.g., Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome) [
37,
38,
39,
40]. Rarely, immunocompetent individuals may also develop LyG. This disease affects the lungs commonly (~85% of cases), followed by involvement of the brain, skin, and kidneys, but with peculiar sparing of the reticuloendothelial system [
35]. Clinical symptoms include cough, dyspnea, chest discomfort, hemoptysis, and fever, and these symptoms wax and wane for months to years [
35,
36]. On imaging, most patients show bilateral lung nodules ranging from 0.5 cm to >10 cm, with a preferential peribronchial and vascular distribution. The nodules become confluent over time and develop central cavitation and necrosis [
8,
15]. Over time, well-developed nodules may decrease in size or show “regression”, leaving only a ground glass opacity indicative of a previous focus of active disease, while new nodules may appear simultaneously. This is the reason why they have been referred to as “migratory” nodules [
15]. Rarely, LyG may present as a single lesion. Hilar lymphadenopathy is not seen.
Histopathologic features in biopsies. The diagnosis of LyG in core biopsies is challenging. LyG is classified on histopathology into 3 grades: grades 1 and 2 are considered “low-grade”, whereas grade 3 is considered a “high-grade” lesion. They all vary on the amount of large, atypical EBER+ B-cells present and the amount of necrosis. Due to the presence of necrosis, transbronchial biopsies are diagnostic for LyG only in ~30% of cases.
Grades 1 and 2 LyG vary from lesions composed of a polymorphic infiltrate of small lymphocytes, plasma cells, and macrophages, with a few scattered large atypical lymphoid cells with immunoblastic or Reed–Sternberg-like features (
Figure 15).
Grade 1 cases have <5 large atypical EBV+ B-cells/10 high power fields with no necrosis, whereas grade 2 lesions contain 5–20 EBV+ B-cells/10 high power fields and focal necrosis (
Figure 15). However, in a core biopsy, these features may be difficult to appreciate, and lesions may just be reported as “grade 1–2/low-grade LyG”. On the other hand, grade 3 LyG is composed of sheets of large EBV+ B-cells with extensive necrosis (
Figure 16 and
Figure 17).
Additionally, a common denominator in LyG is the presence of lymphocytic vasculitis. In cases with necrosis, the latter is of coagulative/eosinophilic type and lacks neutrophils or karyorrhectic debris. Despite its name, LyG is devoid of granulomas (the term “granulomatosis” is a misnomer), and eosinophils and neutrophils are infrequent. If the edge of a LyG nodule is sampled, there is usually a sharp demarcation from the adjacent normal lung parenchyma. In a core biopsy, the diagnostic accuracy depends on the identification of large EBER+ B-cells. In a case with clinical and radiologic features of LyG where the right background is seen but no large EBER+ B-cells are noted, it is recommended to perform additional deeper levels to try to find these cells. If a “regressed” nodule is biopsied, the findings are non-specific, showing fibrosis with recanalized blood vessels, scant chronic inflammation, and adjacent hemorrhage and lung edema, with no residual large cells [
35].
By IHC, the large B-cells are positive for CD20, PAX5, and CD79a, and for EBER by ISH and LMP1 by IHC, indicating a type II latency of EBV infection (
Figure 16).
The large atypical cells are negative for T-cell markers and CD15, with variable expression of CD30 [
37]. The background infiltrate is composed of CD3+ small T-cells (CD4 > CD8). CD68 highlights macrophages and CD138, and kappa and lambda highlight polytypic plasma cells. Special stains are negative for microorganisms.
Grading LyG using EBER is controversial since cases with extensive necrosis may be falsely negative for detection of the virus RNA. Likewise, there have been reports of EBV-negative LyG cases, which pose a problem using EBER+ cells for grading [
38]. Some authors recommend grading LyG lesions using CD20 since this is a robust marker even in necrotic tissues (
Figure 17) [
38].
Additionally, diagnosing low-grade LyG in a core biopsy of a nodule does not exclude that this same nodule or other nodules may have high-grade LyG [
37], since low-grade and high-grade LyG have been shown to co-exist in some cases (sampling bias issue). On small biopsies, we recommend that cases of low-grade LyG should be signed out with a comment saying that “a high-grade LyG component cannot be excluded due to sampling issues since a LyG nodule may contain admixed low-grade and high-grade areas and because the patient has multiple lung nodules”. If a high-grade LyG is sampled, then this comment is not needed, but if there is extensive necrosis, recommendation for an excisional biopsy should be done since there may not be sufficient material to establish a definitive diagnosis. Ultimately, the diagnosis made in a small biopsy should trigger the clinical team to resect one (or more) of these lesions via VATS or an open lung biopsy to have a more definitive diagnosis and avoid missing high-grade LyG or other diagnoses, such as those listed below.
Differential diagnosis of low-grade LyG. It includes granulomatosis with polyangiitis and polymorphic lymphoproliferative disorders with scattered large cells, such as classic Hodgkin lymphoma, T-cell/histiocyte-rich LBCL, peripheral T-cell lymphoma, not otherwise specified (PTCL-NOS), NK/T-cell lymphoma with polymorphic morphology, and EBV+ polymorphic post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) [
16]. Correlation with the clinical presentation (history of immunosuppression, status post chemotherapy, hereditary immunodeficiency, etc.), presence of bilateral lung nodules, and skin or central nervous system involvement are helpful to place LyG at the top of the differential diagnosis. IHC and ISH are required to confirm the diagnosis, which shows a heavy infiltration of CD3+ T-cells with scattered large EBER+/CD20+ B-cells. In classic Hodgkin lymphoma, the Reed–Sternberg cells are CD20−, CD30+, and CD15+/−, which contrasts with the immunophenotype described for the large cells of LyG. T-cell/histiocyte-rich LBCL has a similar immunophenotype to LyG, but this tumor is negative for EBER and contains abundant CD68+/CD163+ macrophages. Both classic Hodgkin lymphoma and T-cell/histiocyte-rich LBCL may contain non-necrotizing granulomas, a feature not seen in LyG, and may affect the lung only in advanced stages of disease. Therefore, prior clinical history is extremely helpful in this context.
PTCL-NOS is CD3+ in small and large cells, and NK/T-cell lymphoma shows angiocentricity with necrosis with lymphoma cells positive for CD3, CD8, CD56, and cytotoxic markers (TIA-1, granzyme-B, perforin). All these markers are negative in the large cells of LyG. Additionally, the necrosis of NK/T-cell lymphomas has numerous karyorrhectic debris, which contrasts with the eosinophilic necrosis seen in LyG devoid of debris.
The diagnosis of LyG should not be made in a patient with a history of prior bone marrow or solid organ transplantation, where the diagnosis of a polymorphic lesion with scattered EBV+ B-cells should be polymorphic PTLD, EBV+ [
38]. Similarly, patients receiving methotrexate who develop lung lesions with “low-grade LyG features” should be diagnosed as iatrogenic immunodeficiency-associated lymphoproliferative disorder (LPD) and not LyG [
41]. Most of these lesions are reversible once the drug is withdrawn.
Differential diagnosis of high-grade LyG. It is similar to that described for pulmonary DLBCL, and given the EBV positivity, it also includes EBV+ DLBCL (without prior history of transplant) and monomorphic PTLD/EBV+ DLBCL. Other differential diagnoses include primary or metastatic carcinoma or melanoma with extensive necrosis, PTCL-NOS and NK/T-cell lymphoma with large cell morphology, and anaplastic large cell lymphoma [
16]. Recognition of angiocentricity supports LyG since this is not a feature seen in B-cell lymphomas but is common in extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma and PTCL-NOS. Here again, correlation with the clinical presentation (history of immunosuppression, status post chemotherapy, hereditary immunodeficiency, etc.), presence of bilateral lung nodules, and skin or central nervous system involvement are helpful to place LyG at the top of the differential diagnosis. Primary lung DLBCL is negative for EBER, but if EBER is positive in a case suspected to be DLBCL, then the lymphoma most likely represents grade 3 LyG, and clinical history and imaging are required to confirm this finding or exclude other conditions (iatrogenic immunodeficiency associated LPD or PTLD). Establishing a diagnosis of EBV+ DLBCL in the lung should always be correlated with clinical and radiologic presentation. Most of these cases likely represent high-grade LyG (grade 3 LyG is morphologically indistinguishable from EBV+ LBCL) (
Figure 16) unless the patient has a clinical presentation different from that of LyG, such as older age, lymph node, bone marrow, or spleen involvement without skin or brain involvement.
The diagnosis of high-grade LyG should not be made in a patient with a history of prior bone marrow or solid organ transplantation, where the diagnosis of monomorphic EBV+ B-cell lymphoma should be monomorphic PTLD/EBV+ DLBCL [
38]. Similarly, patients receiving methotrexate who develop lung lesions with “high-grade LyG features” should be diagnosed as iatrogenic immunodeficiency-associated LPD and not LyG [
41]. However, it is likely that these patients may require chemotherapy and not just withdrawal of the drug, as seen in cases with polymorphic features (see above differential diagnosis of low-grade LyG).
PTCL-NOS with large cells is CD3+, and NK/T-cell lymphoma shows angiocentricity with necrosis with lymphoma cells positive for CD3, CD8, CD56, and cytotoxic markers (TIA-1, granzyme-B, perforin). All these markers are negative in the large cells of LyG. Additionally, the necrosis seen in NK/T-cell lymphomas contains numerous karyorrhectic debris, which is not a feature of the eosinophilic necrosis seen in LyG, which is devoid of nuclear debris. For anaplastic large cell lymphoma, the use of CD3 and other T-cell markers, as well as CD4, CD8, ALK, and CD30, is helpful for diagnosis. This tumor is a CD30+ T-cell lymphoma that is usually positive for CD2 and CD4 with variable expression of CD5, CD7, and CD8 but it is negative for EBER. About half of the cases are ALK+.
Primary lung or metastatic carcinoma, melanoma, or small cell carcinoma are readily excluded from LyG by confirming the tumor cell lineage using IHC, such as pan-cytokeratin and S100, and then additional markers can be performed to further confirm if the tumor is primary or metastatic.
Lesions that are entirely necrotic are indistinguishable from a pulmonary infarct,
Pseudomonas or
Klebsiella pneumonia, non-infectious necrotizing pneumonias, a necrotic metastasis, or granulomatosis with polyangiitis with extensive necrosis (
Figure 17). Special stains for bacteria, fungi, and acid-fast bacilli as well as correlation with microbiology studies are required to exclude infection. In granulomatosis with polyangiitis with extensive necrosis there are abundant karyorrhectic debris and neutrophils, which contrast with the “clean” coagulative/eosinophilic necrosis of LyG. Moreover, granulomatosis with polyangiitis shows multinucleated giant cells, neutrophils, and capillaritis, and it lacks the large, atypical EBER+ B-cells seen in LyG. Adding pan-cytokeratin, CD3, and CD20 IHC in cases with extensive necrosis is helpful to attempt to rule out a necrotic metastasis (highlighting the “ghost” tumor cells with keratin) or a necrotic LBCL (highlighting “ghost” tumor cells positive for CD20 and negative for CD3) (
Figure 17). The latter, in the right clinical and radiologic context, could suggest LyG but could not exclude DLBCL. If no specific findings are obtained, the recommendation should be to request an open lung biopsy, VATS biopsy, or a larger resection with additional material submitted for microbiology studies. If obtained, these lesions require extensive sampling to attempt to identify potential areas of LyG not present in the biopsy.
We discourage submitting material for flow cytometry and/or clonality studies if the clinical impression and diagnostic consideration is LyG. Although
IGH gene rearrangements have been detected in grade 2 and grade 3 LyG with more frequency than in grade 1 LyG (50% in grade 2, 70% in grade 3, and <10% in grade 1) [
37], the presence of necrosis may limit the viability of a sample and correct interpretation. Flow cytometry may not detect the already few large B-cells present in a cellular sample in low-grade LyG or may show non-specific staining due to extensive necrosis in high-grade LyG. Morphology, IHC, and ISH remain the gold standard for diagnosis.