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{{Infobox_Disease
{{ Mantle cell lymphoma }}
| Name          = Mantle cell lymphoma
| Image          = Gray602.png
| Caption        = '''Lymph Nodes''' of the head and neck, from Gray's Anatomy
| DiseasesDB    =
| ICD10          =
| ICD9          =
| ICDO          = 9673/3
| OMIM          =
| MedlinePlus    =
| eMedicineSubj  = med
| eMedicineTopic = 1361
| MeshName      = Lymphoma,+Mantle-Cell
| MeshNumber    = C04.557.386.480.300.725.500
}}
{{SI}}
{{CMG}}


'''For patient information click [[{{PAGENAME}} (patient information)|here]]'''


{{CMG}}; {{AE}} {{Akram}} {{AS}}


'''Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL)''' is one of the rarer of the [[Non-Hodgkin lymphoma|non-Hodgkin's lymphomas]], comprising about 6% of NHL cases.<ref>[http://www.leukemia-lymphoma.org/attachments/National/br_1172589724.pdf Mantle Cell Lymphoma]</ref> There are only about 15,000 patients presently in the U.S. (The prevalence seems to be somewhat higher in Europe.) While it is difficult to treat and seldom considered cured, investigations into better treatments are actively pursued world-wide. Median survival times were about 3 years, but are now estimated as approaching 6 years for new patients.
{{SK}} Mantle cell B-cell lymphoma, Mantle zone lymphoma, MCL


MCL is a subtype of B-cell lymphoma, due to [[CD5_%28protein%29|CD5]] positive antigen-naive pregerminal center B-cell within the mantle zone that surrounds normal germinal center follicles. MCL cells generally over-express [[Cyclin_D1|cyclin D1]] due to a '''t(11:14)'''<ref>http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/Anomalies/t1114ID2021.html</ref> [[chromosomal translocation]] in the [[DNA]]. The cause is unknown and not genetic. MCL is not communicable. It essentially is an abnormal break and subsequent translocation in a [[gene]] that causes the cells to divide too early before becoming capable of helping to fight diseases. In addition, the cells do not die as they should and therefore accumulate in the lymphoid system, including lymph nodes and the spleen, with non-useful cells eventually rendering the system dysfunctional. MCL affected cells proliferate in a ''nodular'' or ''diffuse'' pattern with two main cytologic variants: ''typical'' or ''blastic''. Typical cases are small to intermediate sized cells with irregular nuclei. Blastic (aka ''blastoid'') variants have intermediate to large sized cells with finely dispersed [[chromatin]] and are more aggressive in nature.<ref>Mantle Cell Lymphoma: An Update for Clinicians [http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/548587_2]</ref>
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma overview|Overview]]==


==Symptoms==
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma historical perspective|Historical Perspective]]==
Typical patients are men. The ratio of males to females affected is about 4:1. At diagnosis, the typical patient is in their 60s and usually presents to the oncologist with advanced disease. About half have either fever, heavy night sweats, unexplained weight loss (over 10%) or some combination. Swelling of lymph nodes and spleen are usually present. Bone marrow, liver and GI tract involvement occurs in a very high percentage.


It is common for a person to have initially noticed "a bump" on the neck or in the armpits or groin.
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma classification|Classification]]==


==Diagnosis==
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma pathophysiology|Pathophysiology]]==


Diagnosis generally requires stained slides of a surgically removed part of a lymph node. Other methods are also commonly used, including cytogenetics and [[fluorescence in situ hybridization]] (FISH). [[Polymerase_chain_reaction|Polymerase chain reaction]] (PCR) and CER3 clonotypic primers are additional methods, but are less often used.
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma causes|Causes]]==


The [[immunophenotype]] profile consists of CD5+ (in about 80%)<ref>Stanford School of Medicine: "Mantle Cell Lymphoma, Differential Diagnosis" [http://surgpathcriteria.stanford.edu/bcell/mantle/differentialdiagnosis.html#t1]</ref>, CD10-/+, CD20+, CD23+/-, CD23-/+ (though plus in rare cases). Generally cyclin D1 is expressed but it may not be required. The workup for Mantle cell lymphoma is similar to the workup for many indolent lymphomas and certain aggressive lymphomas.
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma differential diagnosis|Differentiating Mantle cell lymphoma from other Diseases]]==


Mantle cell lymphoma is a systemic disease with frequent involvement of the bone marrow and gastrointestinal tract (generally showing [[Polyposis|polyposis]] in the lining). There is also a not-uncommon leukemic phase, marked by presence in the blood. For this reason, both the peripheral blood and bone marrow are evaluated for the presence of malignant cells. Chest, abdominal, and pelvic CT scans are routinely performed.
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma epidemiology and demographics|Epidemiology and Demographics]]==


Since mantle cell lymphoma may present a lymphomatous polyposis coli and colon involvement is common, colonoscopy is now considered a routine part of the evaluation. Upper endoscopy and neck CT scan may be helpful in selected cases. In some patients with the blastic variant, lumbar puncture is done to evaluate the spinal fluid for involvement.
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma risk factors|Risk Factors]]==


==Causes==
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma screening|Screening]]==  
Attempts to determine causes of MCL have failed. It is not known what causes the translocation damage to the gene. Exposure to toxins is often mentioned as a possibility. The translocation damage to a gene is required in only one cell for the cancer to begin.


==Prognosis==
==[[Mantle cell lymphoma natural history, complications and prognosis|Natural History, Complications and Prognosis]]==
Prognosis of MCL is problematic and indexes do not work as well due to patients presenting with advanced stage disease. Staging is used but is not very informative, since the malignant B-cells can travel freely though the lymphatic system and therefore most patients are at stage II or IV at diagnosis. Prognosis is not strongly affected by staging in MCL and the concept of metastasis does not really apply.


(The letter A after the Roman numeral indicates that normal external symptoms are not present. The Letter B indicates the symptoms are present and hence they are called “B Symptoms”.)
==Diagnosis==
 
[[Mantle cell lymphoma diagnostic study of choice|Diagnostic study of choice]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma history and symptoms|History and Symptoms]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma physical examination|Physical Examination]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma laboratory findings|Laboratory Findings]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma electrocardiogram|Electrocardiogram]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma x ray|X-Ray Findings]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma echocardiography and ultrasound|Echocardiography and Ultrasound]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma CT scan|CT-Scan Findings]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma MRI|MRI Findings]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma other imaging findings|Other Imaging Findings]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma other diagnostic studies|Other Diagnostic Studies]]
MCL is one of the few NHLs that can cross the boundary into the brain, yet it can be treated in that event.
 
There are a number of prognostic indicators that have been studied. There is not universal agreement on their importance or usefulness in prognosis.


[[Ki-67_(Biology)|Ki-67]] is an indicator of how fast cells mature and is expressed in a range from about 10% to 90%. The lower the percentage, the lower the speed of maturity, and the more indolent the disease. Katzenberger et al Blood 2006;107:3407 graphs survival versus time for subsets of patients with varying Ki-67 indices. He shows median survival times of about one year for 61-90% Ki-67 and nearly 4 years for 5-20% Ki-67 index.
==Treatment==
[[Mantle cell lymphoma medical therapy|Medical Therapy]] |  [[Mantle cell lymphoma surgery|Surgery]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma cost-effectiveness of therapy|Cost-Effectiveness of Therapy]] | [[Mantle cell lymphoma future or investigational therapies|Future or Investigational Therapies]]


MCL cell types can aid in prognosis in a subjective way. Blastic is a larger cell type. Diffuse is spread through the node. Nodular are small groups of collected cells spread through the node. Diffuse and nodular are similar in behavior. Blastic is faster growing and it is harder to get long remissions. Some thought is that given a long time, some non-blastic MCL transforms to blastic. Although survival of most blastic patients is shorter, some data shows that 25% of blastic MCL patients survive to 5 years. That is longer than diffuse type and almost as long as nodular (almost 7 yrs).
==Case Studies==
[[Mantle cell lymphoma case study one|Case #1]]


[[Beta-2 microglobulin]] is another risk factor in MCL used primarily for transplant patients. Values less than 3 have yielded 95% overall survival to 6 yrs for auto SCT where over 3 yields a median of 44 mos overall survival for auto SCT (Khouri 03). This is not yet fully validated.
Testing for high levels of [[Lactate_dehydrogenase|LDH]] in NHL patients is useful because LDH is released when body tissues break down for ''any'' reason. While it cannot be used as a sole means of diagnosing NHL, it is a surrogate for tracking tumor burden in those diagnosed by other means. The normal range is approximately 100-190.
===Key diagnostics for MCL===
*[[CT_Scan|CT Scan]] - Computerized tomography scan yields 3-D images of part or whole body. Gives a large number of slices on X-ray image.
*[[Pet_scan|PET Scan]] - Generally of the whole body, shows a three-dimensional image of where previously injected radioactive glucose is metabolized at a rapid rate. Faster-than-average metabolism shows as a black area and indicates that cancer is likely present. Metabolism of radioactive glucose may give a false positive, particularly if the patient has exercised before the test.
PET scans are much more effective when the information from them is integrated with that from a CT scan to show more precisely where the cancer activity is located and to more accurately measure the size of tumors.
==Treatments==
There are no proven standards of treatment for MCL, and not even consensus among specialists on how to treat it optimally. Many regimens are available and often get good response rates, but patients almost always get disease progression after chemotherapy. Each relapse is typically more difficult to treat, and relapse is generally faster. Fortunately, regimens are available that will treat relapse, and new approaches are under test. Because of the aforementioned factors, many MCL patients enroll in clinical trials to get the latest treatments.
There are four classes of treatments currently in general use: chemotherapy, immune based therapy, radioimmunotherapy and new biologic agents. The phases of treatment are generally: frontline, following diagnosis, consolidation, after frontline response (to prolong remissions), and relapse. Relapse is usually experienced multiple times.
===Chemotherapy===
[[Chemotherapy]] is widely used as frontline treatment, and often is not repeated in relapse due to side effects. Alternate chemotherapy is sometimes used at first relapse. For frontline treatment, [[CHOP]] with [[rituximab]] (Rituxan, Mabthera) is the most common chemotherapy, and often given as outpatient by IV. A stronger chemotherapy with greater side effects (mostly hematologic) is [[HyperCVAD]], often given as in-patient, with rituximab and generally to fitter patients (some of which are over 65). HyperCVAD is becoming popular and showing promising results, especially with rituximab. It can be used on some elderly (over 65) patients, but seems only beneficial when the baseline Beta-2-MG blood test was normal. It is showing better complete remissions (CR) and progression free survival (PFS) than CHOP regimens. Another chemotherapy class is fludarabine monotherapy, sometimes combined with cyclophosphamide and mitoxatrone, usually with rituximab. Cladribine and clofarabine are two other drugs being investigated in MCL. Cytotoxic chemotherapies, including bendamustin, are being studied alone and with similar combinations. A relatively new regimen that uses old drugs is PEP-C, which includes relatively small, daily doses of [[prednisone]], [[etoposide]], [[procarbazine]], and [[cyclophosphamide]], taken orally, has proven effective for relapsed patients [http://www.asco.org/ASCO/Abstracts+&+Virtual+Meeting/Abstracts?&vmview=abst_detail_view&confID=23&abstractID=104642].
Another approach involves using very high doses of chemotherapy, sometimes combined with [[total body irradiation]] (TBI), in an attempt to destroy all evidence of the disease.  The downside to this is the destruction of the patients' entire immune system as well, requiring rescue by transplantation of a new immune system, using either ones' own previously treated and stored stem cells (an autologous stem cell transplant), or those from a matched donor (an allogeneic stem cell transplant).
===Immunotherapy===
[[Immunotherapy|Immune-based therapy]] is dominated now by the oft used and effective [[rituximab]] monoclonal antibody, sold under the trade name  Rituxan (or as Mabthera in Europe and Australia). Some say it is a landmark medicine. It can have good activity against MCL alone but especially in combination with chemotherapies to prolong response duration. Rituximab essentially tags the cancer cells for destruction by the body. There are newer variations on monoclonal antibodies combined with radioactive molecules known as [[Radioimmunotherapy]] (RIT). These include [[Zevalin]] and [[Bexxar]].
===Targeted therapy===
New targeted agents include the proteasome inhibitor [[Velcade]] and mTor inhibitors such as [[Torisel|temsirolimus]].
==References==
<references/>
==External links==
*[http://mantlecelllymphoma.org/ Mantle Cell Lymphoma Consortium]
*[http://www.lymphoma.org/site/pp.asp?c=chKOI6PEImE&b=1574381 Facts on Mantle Cell Lymphoma] by O'Connor and Vose
*[http://www.pinewoodderbyphysics.com/MCLpage/table.htm Data] MCL patient treatment data, in graphs and spreadsheet
*[http://www.asco.org/ASCO/Abstracts+&+Virtual+Meeting/Abstracts?&vmview=abst_detail_view&confID=23&abstractID=104642 Oral combination chemotherapy with Pep-C (C3) for mantle cell lymphoma (MCL): Daily prednisone, etoposide, procarbazine and cyclophosphamide]. ASCO, 2003
===MultiMedia===
*[http://www.clinicalcareoptions.com/Oncology/Treatment%20Updates/Lymphoproliferative%20Malignancies.aspx CME on MCL]  by Andre Goy, MD
*[http://www.leukemia-lymphoma.org/all_page?item_id=65748 archived audiocasts at Leukemia & Lymphoma Society]


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Latest revision as of 21:44, 4 December 2018

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Ali Akram, M.B.B.S.[2] Sowminya Arikapudi, M.B,B.S. [3]

Synonyms and keywords: Mantle cell B-cell lymphoma, Mantle zone lymphoma, MCL

Overview

Historical Perspective

Classification

Pathophysiology

Causes

Differentiating Mantle cell lymphoma from other Diseases

Epidemiology and Demographics

Risk Factors

Screening

Natural History, Complications and Prognosis

Diagnosis

Diagnostic study of choice | History and Symptoms | Physical Examination | Laboratory Findings | Electrocardiogram | X-Ray Findings | Echocardiography and Ultrasound | CT-Scan Findings | MRI Findings | Other Imaging Findings | Other Diagnostic Studies

Treatment

Medical Therapy | Surgery | Cost-Effectiveness of Therapy | Future or Investigational Therapies

Case Studies

Case #1


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