A 24-year-old woman presented with cervical lymphadenopathy and a mediastinal mass. Complete blood count showed thrombocytosis (533 K/μL) and no other abnormality. Cervical lymph node biopsy showed sheets of immature mononuclear cells expressing TdT, CD19, CD79a, PAX5, CD3 and lacking MPO (panels A-F; hematoxylin and eosin stain [A], immunostains [B]; 40× objective, total magnification ×400). Flow cytometry showed blasts expressing TdT, cytoplasmic-CD3(strong), CD19(strong), cytoplasmic-CD79a and not expressing cytoplasmic-CD22, CD10, or MPO (panels G-I). Bone marrow showed 30% involvement by the same blast population. Cytogenetics showed gain of 9q, but fluorescence in situ hybridization was negative for BCR-ABL1 and MLL rearrangements. Mutational analysis revealed PHF6 Y105*, NOTCH1 V1576E, NRAS A59D, and TP53 Y236D pathologic mutations. Variants of unknown significance were identified in JAK3, SUZ12, and IL7R. Mutations in FLT3 and DNMT3A were not identified.
This is a case of nonleukemic T/B–mixed phenotype acute leukemia (MPAL) presenting with adenopathy and a mediastinal mass. T/B-MPAL usually presents in young adults as lymphadenopathy, with only rare nonleukemic cases described. This is the second reported case of T/B-MPAL with concurrent inactivating PHF6 and activating NOTCH1 mutations, both mutations which promote T-cell differentiation at the expense of B-cell differentiation. Overall, the genetic aberrations of T/B-MPAL are similar to early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia with common mutations in PHF6 and JAK-STAT pathway genes, however without mutations in FLT3, DNMT3A, WT1, or EZH2.
A 24-year-old woman presented with cervical lymphadenopathy and a mediastinal mass. Complete blood count showed thrombocytosis (533 K/μL) and no other abnormality. Cervical lymph node biopsy showed sheets of immature mononuclear cells expressing TdT, CD19, CD79a, PAX5, CD3 and lacking MPO (panels A-F; hematoxylin and eosin stain [A], immunostains [B]; 40× objective, total magnification ×400). Flow cytometry showed blasts expressing TdT, cytoplasmic-CD3(strong), CD19(strong), cytoplasmic-CD79a and not expressing cytoplasmic-CD22, CD10, or MPO (panels G-I). Bone marrow showed 30% involvement by the same blast population. Cytogenetics showed gain of 9q, but fluorescence in situ hybridization was negative for BCR-ABL1 and MLL rearrangements. Mutational analysis revealed PHF6 Y105*, NOTCH1 V1576E, NRAS A59D, and TP53 Y236D pathologic mutations. Variants of unknown significance were identified in JAK3, SUZ12, and IL7R. Mutations in FLT3 and DNMT3A were not identified.
This is a case of nonleukemic T/B–mixed phenotype acute leukemia (MPAL) presenting with adenopathy and a mediastinal mass. T/B-MPAL usually presents in young adults as lymphadenopathy, with only rare nonleukemic cases described. This is the second reported case of T/B-MPAL with concurrent inactivating PHF6 and activating NOTCH1 mutations, both mutations which promote T-cell differentiation at the expense of B-cell differentiation. Overall, the genetic aberrations of T/B-MPAL are similar to early T-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia with common mutations in PHF6 and JAK-STAT pathway genes, however without mutations in FLT3, DNMT3A, WT1, or EZH2.
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![A 24-year-old woman presented with cervical lymphadenopathy and a mediastinal mass. Complete blood count showed thrombocytosis (533 K/μL) and no other abnormality. Cervical lymph node biopsy showed sheets of immature mononuclear cells expressing TdT, CD19, CD79a, PAX5, CD3 and lacking MPO (panels A-F; hematoxylin and eosin stain [A], immunostains [B]; 40× objective, total magnification ×400). Flow cytometry showed blasts expressing TdT, cytoplasmic-CD3(strong), CD19(strong), cytoplasmic-CD79a and not expressing cytoplasmic-CD22, CD10, or MPO (panels G-I). Bone marrow showed 30% involvement by the same blast population. Cytogenetics showed gain of 9q, but fluorescence in situ hybridization was negative for BCR-ABL1 and MLL rearrangements. Mutational analysis revealed PHF6 Y105*, NOTCH1 V1576E, NRAS A59D, and TP53 Y236D pathologic mutations. Variants of unknown significance were identified in JAK3, SUZ12, and IL7R. Mutations in FLT3 and DNMT3A were not identified.](https://ash.silverchair-cdn.com/ash/content_public/journal/blood/138/9/10.1182_blood.2021012538/6/m_bloodbld2021012538f1.png?Expires=1769140580&Signature=Tycm-LQjnw2BGyRHjmF~Nv~3akWCB6it-uPImxwnJeMcy6ePOBONTHOJRDADG3G-QZh6guCMdDc-5V-jHRkPCvhnoDXz8~SH8Gks3Wjtg2nVBpRTrkPCtyPKUFYAGDyPkzbyPB7ER3ig4E6K8hOTXhmg5U9oWpem8CkVegHlUB1bVEq9LJRbHOy6M07MxPeH7y9Kne7T1rG7SM~ozDn5WchMhoVe5~PJ2sVJ~jMSxBV8IxHPbAZAhvoTXSvs2wSF8-A79VWS4f3sLjn~hdJKkEFJ1BFhAsr0hl~LOzQPDI~Jyx1ifMpO8W3xDqQiAC6BAovRZA0Q97DBDqDxfoyO9A__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAIE5G5CRDK6RD3PGA)
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