Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Extreme lymphocytosis with myelomonocytic morphology in a horse with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.
- Journal:
- Veterinary clinical pathology
- Year:
- 2017
- Authors:
- Meichner, Kristina et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Pathology · United States
- Species:
- horse
Plain-English summary
An 11-year-old Haflinger mare was taken to the veterinary hospital after showing signs of being very tired and not eating for three days. She had a fever, a fast heart rate, and swelling in her belly, along with swollen lymph nodes and a mass in her abdomen. Blood tests showed a very high white blood cell count and signs of a specific type of cancer called diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, which affects the immune system. Further tests confirmed that the cancer had spread to many organs, but there was no evidence of it affecting her bone marrow. Unfortunately, the diagnosis indicated a serious condition, and the treatment options would depend on the specific circumstances of her case.
Abstract
An 11-year-old, 443-kg Haflinger mare was presented to the North Carolina State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital with a 2-week history of lethargy and a 3-day duration of anorexia, pyrexia, tachycardia, and ventral edema. Severe pitting edema, peripheral lymphadenopathy, and a caudal abdominal mass were noted on physical examination. An extreme leukocytosis (154.3 × 10/μL) and microscopic hematologic findings suggestive of myelomonocytic leukemia were observed. Serum protein electrophoresis revealed a monoclonal gammopathy and urine protein electrophoresis revealed a monoclonal light chain proteinuria. Necropsy and histopathology confirmed widespread neoplastic infiltration in many organs with a heterogenous population of cells; there was no apparent evidence of bone marrow involvement. Immunohistochemistry confirmed presence of a majority of B cells with a limited antigen expression, admixed with a lower number of T cells. Molecular clonality analysis of IgH2, IgH3, and kappa-deleting element (KDE, B cell) on whole blood and KDE on infiltrated tissues revealed clonal rearrangements, and the KDE intron clones that amplified in blood and in infiltrated tissue were identical. In contrast, the clonality analysis of T-cell receptor γ revealed no clonality on blood cells and infiltrated tissues. In conjunction with the histopathologic changes, the lesion was interpreted to be composed of neoplastic B cells with a reactive T-cell population. Polymerase chain reaction testing for equine herpes virus 5 was negative. The final diagnosis was diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with a marked hematogenous component.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28001311/