OBJECTIVES MALT lymphoma occurs in various organs and has several characteristic genetic aberrations. Thyroid MALT lymphoma has been reported to include t(3;14)(p14.1;q32)/FOXP1-IGH as a specific genetic aberration, but the number… Click to show full abstract
OBJECTIVES MALT lymphoma occurs in various organs and has several characteristic genetic aberrations. Thyroid MALT lymphoma has been reported to include t(3;14)(p14.1;q32)/FOXP1-IGH as a specific genetic aberration, but the number of studies is limited. METHOD AND RESULTS We examined 86 thyroid lymphoma cases using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) for the detection of t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH in formalin fixed paraffin-embedded tissue (FFPE). Histopathological diagnoses of the analyzed specimen were as follows: thyroid MALT lymphoma (n = 59), DLBCL (n = 23), follicular lymphoma (n = 4), and benign lesions (n = 14) included Hashimoto's thyroiditis (n = 13) and other (n = 1). Of the 100 analyzed cases, thirty-six (36 %) thyroid lymphoma cases were positive for t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH. Thirty-three (55.9 %) of the 59 MALT lymphoma cases were positive for t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH. Three (13.0 %) of the 23 DLBCL cases were positive for t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH. All 4 follicular lymphomas examined were negative for t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH. None of the benign cases was positive for t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH, including Hashimoto's thyroiditis (0/13) and benign tissue (0/1). CONCLUSIONS Our study found that t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH was frequently found in thyroid MALT lymphoma. A detection of t(3;14)/FOXP1-IGH is extremely useful for the differential diagnosis between primary MALT lymphoma of the thyroid and other thyroid disorders.
               
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