(Current Cancer Research) Ian Magrath (Auth.), Erle S. Robertson (Eds.) - Burkitt's Lymphoma-Springer-Verlag New York (2013) PDF
(Current Cancer Research) Ian Magrath (Auth.), Erle S. Robertson (Eds.) - Burkitt's Lymphoma-Springer-Verlag New York (2013) PDF
Series Editor
Wafik El-Deiry
Burkitt’s Lymphoma
Editor
Erle S. Robertson
Department of Microbiology
Perelman School of Medicine
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA, USA
The origins of this project began when I was approached by Beverly Griffin, who
suggested that I put together a volume on Burkitt’s Lymphoma, a problem which is
still as dominant in Equatorial Africa as it was 50 years ago. Burkitt’s lymphoma
was first brought to the spotlight and recognized as a major cancer in the human
population in the late 1950s to early 1960s by Dr. Denis Burkitt, a missionary sur-
geon in Equatorial Africa. The incidence of this disease can vary in different parts
of Equatorial Africa, and is epidemic in proportion in this region of the African
continent. It is quite concerning and disheartening that this treatable disease is still
an epidemic in susceptible African children.
This project aims to bring together a spectrum of ongoing efforts by having a
patient-oriented focus from physicians, to diagnostics and clinical implications of
the disease as mostly seen in the Equatorial African setting. Importantly, the chap-
ters cover the breadth of studies in Burkitt’s lymphoma with some clues for the
potential future of studies that can have therapeutic benefits for patients. A volume
like this has not been previously completed; so this represents a unique text of its
kind.
Additionally, we are grateful for the video documentary on Burkitt’s lymphoma
that is included in this volume as a compendium to the text. The documentary will
give readers a real-life account of the clinicians’ and scientists’ fight against this
deadly cancer, in areas of the world that have less access to first rate medical care.
It is still heart breaking to know that in developed countries, where patients have
access to the best medical care (if detected early), Burkitt’s lymphoma is over 90%
curable. However, in countries where access to good medical care is limited or non-
existent, the survival rate is sometimes less than 50%. More tragic is the fact that the
time period most affected is during early childhood where most of these patients are
from families that are less capable of providing the best medical care. How do we
deal with this devastating disease in this setting when we have the ability to enhance
care and survival of these young patients? Developed countries in the West have a
moral imperative duty to support efforts that substantially minimize and hopefully
eliminate this disease in our world.
v
vi Preface
I’m dedicating this volume, in part, to Dr. Beverly Griffin who has been tireless
in her pursuit to improving global exposure to Burkitt’s lymphoma. She eventually
convinced me that this project should be done, especially with a focus on highlight-
ing the quest of clinicians and researchers in this field which would eventually bring
better access to care and greater visibility to this devastating disease.
I would also like to thank the contributing authors who have provided insights
and suggestions for topics that should be covered and to take time out of their hectic
lives to contribute a chapter. I am grateful to all of them for their tireless pursuit to
find therapies and develop vaccines to treat Burkitt’s lymphoma.
I suspect that Denis Burkitt would be happy that his initial contribution continues
to be pursued, although he may have more immediate questions as to why the avail-
able therapies are not available to the population most at risk. I hope that patients,
physicians, and scientists are able to use the up-to-date information from this vol-
ume, and that it provides a helpful guide to novices including students, residents,
and junior investigators who are now thinking about entering this field hoping that
they may be able to have an impact.
Finally, a special thanks to Rosemary Rochford for her encouragements, Beverly
Griffin for her efforts even during difficult times, and Harald Stein for working with
Lorenzo Leoncini in completing their chapter even after having major difficulties
which minimized his ability to use his hands. This was admirable and shows the
enormous conviction of this group of individuals to one of the world’s most devas-
tating diseases affecting mostly children in Africa.
vii
viii Contents
Ian Magrath
The first description of Burkitt lymphoma (BL) was probably that of Albert Cook,
the first missionary doctor in Uganda. He founded Mengo Hospital and subsequently
Mulago Hospital, initially a center for the treatment of tuberculosis, which eventu-
ally became the University Hospital of Makerere University. Cook reported a child
with a large jaw tumor who came to Mengo Hospital in 1910, and his illustration of
the appearance in his meticulous clinical notes leaves little doubt that this was a
case of BL [1]. In the first half of the twentieth century, a number of European
pathologists working in equatorial Africa noted the high frequency of jaw tumors,
or of lymphomas in children [2–6], but it was Denis Burkitt who provided the first
detailed clinical description of the tumor in 1958 [7] while working at Mulago
Hospital. He recognized a number of different clinical presentations of tumors in
children, including jaw tumors and intraabdominal tumors, that could occur either
alone or together, and it was this that led him to believe that many, if not all these
children, had the same disease, although up until then girls with ovarian tumors
were often diagnosed as having dysgerminomas, while other children were thought
to have retinoblastoma, soft tissue, or even bone sarcomas. However, it should be
remembered that at the time, pathologists also used the term “lymphosarcoma” such
that the title of Burkitt’s first paper, A sarcoma involving the jaws in African chil-
dren, in which a brief description of the histopathology was given by Jack Davis,
then the head of the pathology department at Mulago Hospital, may not have been
as misleading concerning the origin of the tumor cells as would appear to be the
case today.
Gregory O’Conor, an American pathologist working quite separately from Dennis
Burkitt, recognized, with Jack Davis, around the same time as Burkitt’s description that
approximately half the cases in the childhood cancer registry that had been established
I. Magrath (*)
International Network for Cancer Treatment and Research, Brussels, Belgium
Uniformed University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD, USA
e-mail: [email protected]
in the Mulago Hospital Pathology Department some 7 years earlier were lymphomas
[8, 9]. The high frequency of BL observed in Africa, however, was not seen in Europe
and the USA, leading to debate as to whether this disease was unique to Africa—many
believed that it was, leading to the use of the term “African lymphoma”—but in the
mid-1960s, several pathologists described lymphomas in Europe and the USA that
were indistinguishable at a histological level, and also, for the most part, clinically, from
African BL. This was doubtless because of the selection of children with jaw tumors
that resembled those so characteristic of BL in African children, but regardless of this,
these observations established that the tumor was not unique to Africa [10–12].
It was not until 1969 that a group of experts in the pathology of hematological
neoplasms assembled under the auspices of the World Health Organization decided
that the tumor should be defined purely on histological grounds [13]. While seem-
ingly indicating that BL is a single disease, the high incidence in Africa, compared
to the USA and Europe, led to the African variety (also common in Papua New
Guinea) being referred to as “endemic” BL because of its higher incidence in these
two regions. Tumors occurring elsewhere were referred to as “sporadic” although,
unfortunately, these terms are often used in different ways such that they are not
particularly helpful. In 1984 the observation that HIV infection predisposes to BL
[14] led to the inclusion in the subsequently developed World Health Organization
classification of hematological malignancies of a third variety of BL—
immunodeficiency-related BL (see Fig. 1.1). The histological and immunopheno-
typic characteristics of BL are are described in detail in subsequent chapters.
Clinical Characteristics
Perhaps the most characteristic feature of BL in equatorial Africa (and New Guinea) is
the occurrence of jaw tumors (Fig. 1.2) in young children (less than 5 years, and prob-
ably peaking at the age of 3). Why this should be the case is unknown, but the tumors
arise predominantly around and within the developing molar teeth (often involving all
four jaw quadrants, even if this is not always clinically apparent). Early clinical signs
are loose teeth, and the earliest radiological sign is loss of the lamina dura surrounding
the developing molar teeth with adjacent lytic lesions, all of which are readily detected
by oblique X-rays of the jaws. These tumors tend to grow very rapidly, such that the
teeth sometimes appear to be floating on top of the tumor, and although they may be
lost, in some patients they settle quite quickly back into their sockets once treatment is
begun. At this age, the jaw contains bone marrow tissue, and it is remarkable, there-
fore, that although the tumor cells infiltrate the marrow of the jaw, it tends not to spread
to other marrow-bearing bones and diffuse bone marrow involvement is, therefore,
uncommon (less than 10% in most newly diagnosed children). Although orbital
involvement is also common at this age, and it has been suggested that orbital tumors
arise from the maxilla, they are not necessarily associated with clinical jaw tumors and
often do not seriously damage the eye, unless the ophthalmic artery or vein is com-
pressed, or there is direct involvement of the retina—a very rare occurrence.
These characteristic jaw tumors have been described in other countries, even
in Europe (at least, in the 1960s or so), and occur at somewhat higher frequency in
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 3
Fig. 1.1 Cytological appearance of BL showing the fenestrated nuclear chromatin with multiple
nucleoli, and dark blue cytoplasm containing lipid vacuole. BL is a B cell lymphoma (i.e.,. derived
from B cells, which are primarily involved in antibody production). BL expresses surface immuno-
globulin, normally IgM, although sometimes IgG. It expresses other B cell markers such as CD20,
CD22, CD79 and CD10 as well as proteins associated with very rapidly dividing cells – Ki67
(almost 100% of cells are positive). There is an indistinct dividing line between BL and diffuse
large B cell lymphoma, which is reflected in tumors which have a molecular profile (gene expres-
sion pattern) that is intermediate between BL and DLBCL. Some of these intermediate tumors are
probably derived from follicular lymphomas and have a more complex karyotype, occasionally
expressing both the typical BLl MYC/Ig translocations (t8:14) and those found in follicular lym-
phomas, and some DLBCL, i.e., (t14;18). BL also has a typical gene expression pattern, although
once again, intermediate patterns between BL and DLBCL are observed. The BL molecular profile
is associated with a good response to intensive combination chemotherapy in countries where this
can be given – with a higher survival rate than DLBCL, being in the range of 90–95%
some countries, such as Turkey, or Northern Brazil (and of course, New Guinea,
where holoendemic malaria occurs in the river valleys). There is an impression that
they were once more common, but today are vanishingly rare outside equatorial
Africa and New Guinea. The reason for this is unknown. The high frequency of jaw
tumors in young children is not the only difference in the clinical distribution of the
tumor in endemic tumors versus tumors occurring elsewhere. In the former, fre-
quent sites of disease include the salivary glands, ovaries, endocrine glands, and
retroperitoneal structures, especially the kidneys [15]. Intraabdominal disease is the
second most frequent site of involvement in African BL (Fig. 1.2) and the most
frequent in all other world regions. Testicular involvement, extradural tumor caus-
ing cord compression, and malignant pleocytosis of the cerebrospinal fluid and cra-
nial nerve palsies are also seen in a significant fraction of cases, but interestingly,
peripheral lymph node involvement is uncommon as is involvement of the bone
marrow or spleen, although splenomegaly is often present because of holoendemic
malaria. In Dennis Wright’s series of 50 post-mortem cases of BL, the most com-
monly involved organ was the kidney, and he clearly demonstrated the rarity of
significant splenic involvement [16]. It was also possible to demonstrate, at post
4 I. Magrath
Fig. 1.2 The two most common sites of involvement in African BL—the jaw (left) and the abdo-
men (right)
mortem, that cranial nerve involvement was due to infiltration of the nerve by tumor
cells—a situation reminiscent of Marek’s disease in chickens, a diseases caused by
a Herpesvirus. Bowel and mesenteric involvement is frequent (and lymph nodes in
the mesentery adjacent to tumor sites in the bowel, most often the ileum may or not be
invaded by tumor). Presentation with right-sided abdominal pain, suggesting appen-
dicitis, or acute severe abdominal pain resulting from ileo-ileal intussusception
appears to be much more common outside equatorial Africa, although occasional
African cases have been described. Interestingly, involvement of the breast occurs
particularly in pubertal girls or lactating women [17], suggesting that hormonal or
growth factors are involved in creating an appropriate microenvironment in the
breast for BL cells—the microenvironment probably also accounts for the high fre-
quency of jaw tumors, and the differences in this respect between equatorial African
and children elsewhere may well account for the observed differences in the sites of
involvement of BL in different geographical regions. There can be little doubt, how-
ever, that at a global level, the abdomen is the most frequent site of involvement,
sometimes accompanied by varying degrees of ascites, which can be massive, or
involvement of other serous membranes such as the pleura or pericardium. In gen-
eral, BL occurs particularly in areas where mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue is
found and could be considered as a subtype of aggressive MALT lymphoma.
Epidemiology
Early estimates of the incidence of African BL in children (0–14 years) are quite
variable, ranging from a few cases per 100,000 to as high as 18 per 100,000, but
more recent figures suggest that the incidence in equatorial Africa is similar, in
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 5
Fig. 1.3 Incidence of BL in selected countries. Data from the International Agency for Research
on Cancer (1998)
personal visits he and his colleagues had sent out a large number of leaflets showing
pictures of the disease and to ask whether children with large jaw tumors and/or
abdominal masses were frequently seen in that region. What came to be known as
the “long safari” showed the southern limit of the high incidence region in the east-
ern part of Africa to be Lourenço Marques in southern Mozambique. As more infor-
mation became available, it became clear that the “African lymphoma” had a high
frequency in a broad band across equatorial Africa. At first, this was thought to be
an altitude barrier, but later, it became clear that the height above sea level at which
BL occurred became progressively lower as one moved either to the north or south
of the equator, and that what appeared to be an altitude barrier was, in fact, a tem-
perature barrier. Alexander Haddow, working in the Entebbe Virus Research
Institute, also in Uganda, observed that the distribution was very similar to that of
several virus diseases vectored by mosquitoes, such as yellow fever and various
Arbor virus diseases, and it seemed quite likely that BL was caused by a virus vec-
tored by an insect [19, 20]. Similar findings were reported by Booth from New
Guinea, the other region where BL was known to have a high incidence [21].
However, Dalldorf proposed, in 1964, that malaria may well be implicated in the
pathogenesis of the disease, since the distribution of BL corresponded not only to
the distribution of malaria (not greatly different from that of other mosquito-borne
infections) but also to the intensity of malarial infection [22, 23]. Subsequent obser-
vations have confirmed the relationship between the incidence of BL and the inten-
sity of malarial infection
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 7
Malaria and BL
In addition to its ability to cause B-cell hyperplasia, which could, on the basis of
chance alone, increase the risk of a genetic change leading to BL, it is possible—
even probable—that malaria has a direct role in the production of the chromosomal
translocations associated with BL. This results from interactions with Toll-like
receptors, which are part of the adoptive immune system. Toll-like receptors are
expressed on a variety of cell types including monocytes/macrophages and mature B
cells and are activated by T-cell independent, highly conserved antigens, such as
lipopolysaccharide and CpG-enriched DNA that are present in a large number of
microorganisms. The adoptive immune system is linked, via Toll-like receptors, to the
adaptive immune systems, since Toll-like receptors are able to induce activation-
induced cytidine deaminase (AID) in B cells, an enzyme which causes hypervari-
able region mutations and class switch recombination as well as B lymphocyte
activation [29–31]. TLR9 receptors, for example, are expressed at all stages of
8 I. Magrath
B-cell differentiation and ligand binding has been shown to result in the induction
of AID, and in turn, class switching in all such cells regardless of the presence of
VDJ joining. TLR9 agonists include hemozoin, produced by malaria parasites from
hemoglobin, as well as CpG-enriched DNA. They bind to B cells in the course of
acute malaria, leading to B-cell hyperplasia and class switching, regardless of the
stage of differentiation of B cells. It is the ability of AID to cause DNA breaks
between the heavy chain constant regions, an essential component of class switching,
that leads occasionally, via erroneous re-ligation, to the genesis of chromosomal
translocations or other genetic defects [32].
In primary B cells, the expression of the catalytically active form of AID has
been shown to lead to MYC/Ig translocations, similar to those which occur in BL
(see below) within a matter of hours [33]. These translocations are normally pre-
vented by the tumor suppressor genes ATM, p19 (ARF) and p53, consistent with the
ability of these genes to inhibit progression through the cell cycle and to initiate
DNA repair or apoptosis in the presence of DNA damage, although the particular
genes that protect against translocations varies with the translocation partner [34].
The development of translocations involving MYC is also inhibited by the pro-
apoptotic genes PUMA, BIM, and PKCd and enhanced by the anti-apoptotic genes
BCL-XL and BAFF, while FAS-induced apoptosis is involved in the elimination of
cells in which a functional class switch does not result. It is clear that inactivating
abnormalities in protective pathways that normally induce cell cycle arrest and
apoptosis in the presence of inappropriate regulation could lead to the persistence of
chromosomal aberrations, including translocations. In this regard it is interesting
that mutations in p53 are common in BL [35, 36]. There is also direct evidence, in
mice at least, that the occurrence of MYC/IgH translocations similar to those occur-
ring in B cell tumors is dependent on AID [37].
Finally, there is evidence for the induction of RAG1 and RAG2 in peripheral
blood B cells in malaria [38], and although there is no definitive information that
these enzymes, responsible for the normal rearrangement—and rearchitecture, e.g.
in the case of autoreactivity, of the variable region of the immunoglobulin molecule
[39]—are involved in the pathogenesis of BL, they may mediate at least some of
the chromosomal translocations, particularly those occurring in the VDJ region of
the immunoglobulin gene.
In spite of these experimental observations, there is no direct evidence that
malaria is important to the pathogenesis of equatorial African BL. The most
suggestive evidence is the correlation between the incidence of BL and the intensity
of malaria transmission (Table 1.1) [40, 41]. This was first observed not long after
the distribution of BL had been mapped in Uganda [41], and several investigators
have confirmed these findings. Of particular interest in this regard are experiments
of nature—the absence of BL in arid regions within the so-called “lymphoma belt”
running across equatorial Africa, and alterations in the incidence of BL associated
with the control of malarial infection. Thus, in the late 1960s, malaria had been
essentially eradicated from the Zanzibar archipelago off the coast of Tanzania, and
BL too, was noted by Burkitt to be essentially absent. Soon after, the eradication
program was halted (it was felt that total success had been achieved), and BL
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 9
Epstein–Barr Virus
Zebra Protein
6 Nuclear
Rp
Proteins
EBNA-1 Proteins
EBNA-2
EBNA-3a,b,c LMP-1 LMP-
2A LMP-2B
EBNA-LP
Fig. 1.5 Latent and lytic cycles of EBV showing expression of latent genes (six nuclear proteins
and three membrane proteins) and viral non-coding RNAs—2 EBERs and more than 20 microR-
NAs. Viral structural proteins are not present in the latent cycle, but develop once the lytic cycle is
initiated by expression of the Zebra protein, which is necessary and efficient, but is usually accom-
panied by the expression of other proteins such as “R”
It has subsequently become clear that all BL cells nearly always contain multi-
ple EBV genomes [44] and that essentially all cells in culture express latent genes,
i.e. either EBV nuclear antigens (expressed in the cell nucleus) or latent membrane
proteins (expressed in the cell membrane) [45, 46]. EBV latent genes (Fig. 1.5) are
necessary for the persistence of the virus in B cells (and possibly other cell types)
throughout the life of the individual. The primary location of virus persistence is
the memory B cell, and the latent genes can be thought of as ensuring that cells
containing viral genomes are able to survive in situations in which uninfected cells
would not. Normal B cells which do not make high affinity antibody undergo
apoptosis when passing through the germinal center of lymphoid tissue, in order to
hone the immune response, and ensure that only high-affinity antibody producing
cells enter the memory B-cell pool. During this process, a large fraction of normal
B cells undergo apoptosis because only those that make high affinity antibodies to
the antigen that triggered their proliferation (functioning here as cell surface recep-
tors) receive the necessary viability signals, including antigen and CD40 that are
required for them to survive. It seems likely that EBV-infected cells, by virtue of
the functions of their latent genes, can avoid undergoing apoptosis even if they do
not make high affinity antibody, and thus EBV is assured of entering the B-cell
pool, where it can persist in the individual for life. More detailed information
regarding the functions of latent EBV genes and their role in virus persistence
and the causation of a number of diseases has been published in numerous reviews
[28, 46–48].
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 11
possible role for EBV in the genesis of BL, since infectious mononucleosis is nearly
always self-limiting. Miller and others subsequently showed that EBV was able to
transform circulating B lymphocytes and produce continuously growing cell lines
in vitro [54]. This led to the hypothesis that EBV was the causal factor of BL and
was responsible for driving proliferation of the tumor cells, although this hypothesis
was short-lived for a number of reasons. For example, the latent genes induce a
cytotoxic immune response that normally ensures that such an event does not occur.
Moreover, the ubiquity of the virus indicated that other factors must be involved in
the genesis of BL, since clearly, only a very small fraction of infected individuals
develop BL. Further studies also demonstrated that the virus is not transmitted by
insect vectors, and that none of the latent genes expressed in B cells transformed
in vitro, except EBNA1, were expressed in fresh BL cells, although the majority of
cell lines, grown in vitro soon revert to the expression of all six latent viral pro-
teins and three latent membrane protein genes. As information accumulated, it
became clear that the nuclear protein, EBNA1, was responsible for the persistence
of EBV genomes in the form of intranuclear plasmids, and their equal distribution to
daughter cells—thus ensuring the maintenance of the EBV genome in transformed
cells. The expression of EBNA1 in BL suggested that the virus is required for the
maintenance of the neoplastic state (although it could not be excluded that in some
cases of EBV negative BL, the virus could have been lost from the cell after onoco-
genic genetic changes had occurred, thus rendering the presence of virus-derived
molecules superfluous).
In fact, African cases are almost always EBV+ whereas only a small fraction of
cases in Europe and the USA contain EBV, and a significant fraction of EBV cases
are seronegative for EBV, suggesting that the patient had never been infected by
EBV. It also became clear that in addition to EBNA1, in EBV+ BL, small untrans-
lated RNAs including microRNAs from the BART and BHRF1 regions of the
genome and the so-called “EBERs” are also present in tumor cells [55]. Thus, it
seemed probable that EBV, and particularly early (i.e., at a young age) infection
with EBV, predisposes to the development of BL, although it was not clear how. A
much greater understanding of the survival strategy of EBV had been gained in
recent years, however [47], and Thorley-Lawson, in particular, began to consider
the possibility that BL might use its B-cell transforming ability to gain access to
the immune system, then switch off all its protein products in order to avoid detec-
tion and elimination by T cells such that it could persist throughout the life of the
individual “invisible” to the host, or at least, to T cells generated against EBV
latent antigens [28]. Whatever the mechanism of avoiding detection by the immune
system, it may well be relevant to the pathogenesis of BL. Support for this hypoth-
esis was provided by the initial observation that only EBNA1 could be detected in
circulating B cells (it subsequently became clear that some virus containing circu-
lating B cells fail to express any viral antigens), and that EBNA1 is the sole pro-
tein expressed when such cells replicate (this would be essential to ensure the
persistence of the virus in the cell clone). This pattern of latent gene expression
was remarkably similar to that observed in BL, but even EBNA1 is immunogenic,
such that its persistence in BL cells could result in elimination of the tumor.
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 13
Deregulation of MYC
environmental agents such as malaria and possibly HIV, both of which cause B-cell
hyperplasia and interfere with immunity and control of the proliferation of EBV,
thereby increasing the EBV burden, are important in allowing such genetically
damaged cells to persist and may even increase the likelihood of them arising in the
first place. The need to rearrange DNA, through a physiological recombinational
process in order to generate a tightly binding variable immunoglobulin region and
to allow class switching, and the need to prevent apoptosis from occurring during
this process, creates a weak point that is likely to give rise on rare occasions to inap-
propriate recombinations, some of which have the potential to create a neoplastic
cell. The experimental evidence supporting the role of AID in mediating chromo-
somal translocations favors this hypothesis. The details of the pathogenetic events
may still need to be worked out, but there is little doubt that the germinal center, a
location where apoptosis must be particularly carefully balanced against prolifera-
tion, is a critical region for tumorigenesis, precisely because of its importance in the
differentiation of B cells. Passage through the germinal center seems to be critical
to tumorigenesis in BL and probably also to the genesis of other lymphoid neo-
plasms, just as it may be to the establishment of a reservoir for EBV. In this case,
tumorigenesis can be viewed as an aberration of physiological events, the likelihood
of which is increased by the presence of environmental agents such as malaria and
EBV, which exploit them for their own purposes, increasing the risk of an aberrant
recombination, while removing the defense mechanism that should ensure that cells
containing such aberrations (normally a consequence of an abnormal pathophysio-
logical event) are destroyed. Yet the creation of a tumor is not in the best interests of
the microorganism, and in comparison with the numbers of people infected with
these agents, BL is a rare event indeed, demonstrating the degree to which these
parasites have adapted to their human host.
the same way. Investigators in Africa, such as Burkitt in Uganda, Clifford in Kenya
and Ngu in Nigeria, aided by pioneer chemotherapists, including Oettgen and
Burchenal from the Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research in New York, and
Alexander Haddow and David Galton from the Chester Beatty Institute in London
set out to examine the response of Burkitt’s lymphoma to chemotherapy, supported
by drug donations from companies such as Lederle, Asta Werke, Eli Lilly and
Roche, as well as grants and other support from the Sloan-Kettering and Chester
Beatty Institutions, and the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland. While
clinical trials at the time were performed in a rather haphazard manner, and treat-
ment of most cancers resulted, at best, in transient tumor responses, in the case of
BL, tumor regression of significant degree was observed within a matter of days (in
fact, changes in the tumor, e.g., less stretching of the skin overlying jaw tumors
could even be seen within 24 h).
In the course of the early 1960s, most of the available cytotoxic agents were
explored. Although a significant fraction of patients was lost to follow up, the
administration of a rather wide range of drugs in the course of time led to the clear
demonstration that BL was highly chemotherapy-responsive, and Burkitt in Uganda,
Clifford in Kenya and Ngu in Nigeria reported some astonishing apparent cures
with minimal therapy (several years of disease-free survival after only one or two
cycles of therapy) [82–84], although such impressive responses were much more
often seen in patients with localized jaw tumors than extensive tumor, for example,
in the abdomen. Of particular note was the rapidity of response—tumors would
shrink within days, and in the case of jaw tumors, teeth, although sometimes lost,
could even find their way back to the socket from which they had been displaced
by tumor.
Much of the data collected in this first era of the chemotherapy of Burkitt’s lym-
phoma was summarized in a meeting that was sponsored by the International Union
Against Cancer (UICC) (now, the Union for International Cancer Control) that took
place in Kampala, Uganda, in 1966. While diagnosis in the 1960s was not as accu-
rate as today, in equatorial Africa a very high fraction of all lymphomas in children
(over 80%) are BL, and the clinical features, particularly the presence of jaw tumor
(some of the studies were carried out exclusively in patients with jaw tumors) is
generally very distinctive. Thus, there can be little doubt that in the series described
the diagnostic error rate was small.
Over the years, Burkitt collected a series of 88 patients with jaw tumors treated
in Uganda (two relapsed with separate jaw tumors in other jaw quadrants and were
dealt with separately, making a total of 90 jaw tumors). Many of these patients
achieved long-term survival with only one or two doses of drugs [85]. A variety of
doses and sequences of different drugs were used; for example, one and two doses
of cyclophosphamide (60 patients were given 30–40 mg/kg IV, or the same dose
given orally over 3–4 days), several days of methotrexate (17 patients received
1 mg/kg daily for 4–5 days), or one or two doses of vincristine (21 patients received
0.07–0.15 mg/kg). The period between drug doses regardless of the drug was
1–3 weeks. Among these patients, 36 had “total or virtually total tumor regression,”
another 38, “significant but only partial regression” and the remainder “little or no
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 19
response.” Thus 74, or 82%, of the 90 tumors had a clear response. How many of
these patients had disease at other sites in addition to jaw tumor is not clear, although
the jaw tumors were classified as small, moderate or large (grades A, B, or C).
Complete, durable remissions were observed with all three agents and notably, all
10 patients with small tumors achieved complete remission. Since 16 of 40 patients
with moderate tumors and 10 of 40 with large tumors also achieved excellent
responses, this early data suggested a relationship between response and tumor size,
although it was some years before this was verified, perhaps because some of
Burkitt’s patients had undetected tumor outside the jaw. Burkitt also noted that
recurrent disease, whether at the same or different sites, did not occur after 11 months
of remission—now a well-known characteristic of Burkitt lymphoma. Fourteen
patients were known to be alive and well a year after treatment and were probably
cured, but 38 patients were lost to follow up.
Interestingly, only four patients in Burkitt’s series had received more than two
doses of therapy and four had received only a single dose. It was also noted, however,
that of 12 patients who relapsed after an essentially complete response, 6 developed
central nervous system involvement, and many years of empiric approaches to its
prevention were required before the predisposition to relapse in the CNS was over-
come. In spite of this, as was demonstrated later by Ziegler et al. [86], that almost
half of all patients with CNS disease, either at the time of relapse or presentation,
could achieve long-term survival. This clearly indicated that CNS disease per se was
not necessarily, as was believed in western countries, an obstacle to cure [87].
Ngu also noted that disease extent and site influenced the outcome of treatment.
Patients with tumors localized to the facial bones had better responses than those
with visceral or CNS involvement—the beginnings of a formal staging system.
Patients with CNS involvement, not surprisingly, had a particularly poor response to
intravenous cyclophosphamide, although extradural masses were seen to respond.
Another observation made by Ngu was that serum uric acid levels were often raised
in patients with extensive tumors, and sometimes became even more elevated fol-
lowing therapy. He described a patient who died quite probably from acute tumor
lysis (serum uric acid on the day of death was 54 mg per 100 ml), and reported that
this and other complications, such as perforation of the bowel, and in one unusual
case, of the arch of the aorta, may ensue from rapid necrosis of tumor following
therapy [88]. Indeed, in these early series, a significant fraction of patients died
before any chemotherapy could be given—due, no doubt, to very advanced disease
at the time of presentation, a problem that persists to the present day.
Clifford’s observations regarding response to therapy were similar. Among 51
patients 8, 4 treated with cyclophosphamide and 4 with melphalan or orthomer-
phalan, achieved complete continuous remission, 3 for over 2 years, but 9 patients
died from hematological toxicity (7 of these had received methyl hydrazine or man-
nitol myleran) and 5 from other treatment complications. In a later follow-up,
Clifford reported 11 long-term survivors. All had been treated with either cyclo-
phosphamide, or melphalan, sometimes with orthomerphalan in addition [83].
These early results laid the foundation for subsequent studies. Cyclophosphamide,
orthomerphalan, melphalan, methotrexate and vincristine were effective drugs, all
20 I. Magrath
Denis Burkitt left Uganda in 1967, but his work was continued by means of an
agreement between the National Cancer Institute of the USA and the University of
Makerere in Kampala, Uganda, to establish the Uganda Cancer Institute. This led to
more systematic attempts to improve the results of treatment, although interpreta-
tion is difficult in most of these studies because of their small size, limited staging
studies and the fact that patients were almost certainly undertreated, such that recur-
rent disease sensitive to the same or different therapy was extremely frequent.
Nevertheless, these early clinical trials were sufficient to extend the observations
made previously in Uganda, Kenya, and Nigeria, and it is worth pointing out that
even today, few African institutions are able to conduct clinical trials and there is
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 21
limited collection of data of any kind. It is probable that most patients die for lack
of any therapy, while others have inadequate therapy based only on what they can
afford. Supportive care also remains inadequate except in a small number of elite
institutions, usually in the private sector.
A number of randomized trials comparing treatment approaches were conducted in
the 1960s and 1970s. Unfortunately, the numbers of patients randomized in each trial
tended to be very smal, and, coupled to the limitations of the staging system used in
early studies (stage III included patients with a broad range of tumor burdens,
including some with completely resected disease), these studies left much to be
desired. But it must be remembered that these were the early days of clinical trials,
and in spite of their deficiencies, a number of interesting observations were made. An
excellent response to therapy in patients with recurrent disease was often observed,
particularly if the relapse occurred 10 weeks or more after the initiation of therapy (or
the previous relapse) [93]. One patient had six relapses, including CNS recurrence,
before achieving disease-free survival for 4 years. In these circumstances, the only
realistic measure of success was overall survival, which, in spite of the difficulty of
interpreting the studies, appeared to be better in patients who had received multiple
drugs rather than cyclophosphamide alone, and responses were certainly seen to a
combination of drugs including methotrexate, vincristine, and cytarabine (BIKE) in
patients who has failed cyclophosphamide [86]. Of note was the fact that corticoster-
oids were not included in these regimens (which is a standard practice today in most
treatment protocols), although there is one major exception—CODOX-M/IVAC,
which gives similar results to other intensive regimens. Conversely, doxorubicin is
a standard component of childhood B-cell lymphoma regimens, but its value is only
now being tested.
In Ghana, similar results were achieved with either cyclophosphamide alone, or
a drug combination that included vincristine and cytarabine [94]. The latter regi-
men, however, proved rather toxic. Among 103 patients who received cyclophosph-
amide as a single agent (two doses were given initially), 79 (77%) achieved CR.
Two more patients achieved CR after VCR and MTX were added. Among those
who achieved CR, 42 relapsed—very similar results to those obtained in Uganda.
Patients who relapsed were given additional cyclophosphamide; 21 of 40 patients
achieved a second CR following CTX alone, rather more among those who relapsed
late (12 weeks or beyond) than those who relapsed early. These same 40 patients
went on to receive the BIKE regimen designed in Uganda, and 9 achieved long-term
survival.
Subsequently, Nkrumah and Perkins used a simultaneous combination of cyclo-
phosphamide, cytarabine, and vincristine in patients with intraabdominal disease but
without CNS involvement [95]. All patients received a single dose of intrathecal ther-
apy with each course of combination therapy. Nkrumah and Perkins did not perform a
randomized study, but included 42 consecutive patients admitted between April 1973
and September 1975, and compared them with a previous group of 44 patients with
abdominal Burkitt’s lymphoma treated between January 1969 and March 1973, who
received cyclophosphamide alone, given at a dose of 40 mg/kg i.v. at 2–3 weeks’ inter-
vals for a total of 2–4 doses, but no intrathecal therapy. Of the patients treated with
the three-drug systemic combination, 31 completed the 3 cycles of therapy (11 died
22 I. Magrath
Intrathecal Therapy
In addition to the control of systemic disease, the ability to treat CNS disease,
including malignant CSF pleocytosis, which had been reported earlier, was also
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 23
studied in the early studies carried out by the NCI in conjunction with Makerere
University, and it was soon found that excellent responses and even cure could be
obtained with intrathecal MTX and/or cytarabine [99]. Prior to the trials conducted
at the LTC, intrathecal therapy had not been tested (cyclophosphamide had been
injected intrathecally in two patients without, not surprisingly, any benefit!). IT
therapy has become a standard component of all treatment for BL except those with
small volume disease involving the bowel—most of whom present with intussus-
ception or a syndrome indistinguishable from appendicitis.
Overall, these results confirm that a significant fraction of patients with Burkitt’s
lymphoma can be cured, and some by cyclophosphamide alone. However, there is
little doubt, based on information from other world regions - see below - that the
survival rate could be improved by using additional drugs, either per primum (which
has the advantage of reducing the fraction of PRs) or following relapse. In the
Kampala series of 192 patients treated with a variety of regimens between July 1967
and June 1973, which did not include patients treated per primum with COM, 72
(37%) were known to be alive and disease free in 1977–1978 (4–10 years of follow-
up). In a subsequent review extending to July 1977, published in 1980 [98], 109 of
280 patients (39%) were known to be alive and well when last seen. Among patients
treated with COM, 15 of 30 patients also treated without effective CNS prophylaxis
were known to be alive after several years of follow-up (two patients were lost to
follow up), and this figure might well have been higher had effective CNS prophy-
laxis been used. Data from Accra suggested that even a single dose of IT methotrex-
ate delivered with each cycle of systemic combination therapy might prevent most
of the CNS recurrences—in this respect, it may well be the duration of therapy that
was inadequate rather than the number of doses delivered per course of IT therapy.
The questions raised by these data remain today—how effective a regimen would
COM plus intrathecal therapy be, using the same doses as used in the 1970s studies
and how many cycles of therapy are optimal? The relative efficacy of CVA compared
to COM also remains unknown—with improved supportive care results with CVA
may have been much better.
One problem that dogs any attempt to describe the history of the treatment of
Burkitt’s lymphoma outside Africa is the problem of diagnosis. Although a histo-
logical definition of Burkitt’s lymphoma was established by expert hematopatholo-
gists under the auspices of the World Health Organization, in 1967 [103], which at
least eliminated the need for the presence of EBV or the absence of bone marrow
involvement for a diagnosis of BL to be made (which some pathologists insisted
upon), histological definitions in those days were even less reproducible from one
experienced hematopathologist to another than they are in the present. Coupled to
variability in the preparation of histological material determining whether a non-
African non-Hodgkin lymphoma was, indeed, a BL and comparison of the results of
series from different countries could be hazardous. However, in spite of these
difficulties, it was clear soon after the discovery of the disease, that BL occurred not
only at a much lower incidence, but also accounted for a much smaller fraction of
all NHLs in children outside Africa and Papua New Guinea. Moreover, prior to the
growth of the pediatric oncology cooperative groups initially in the USA and
Europe, most data was from single institutions, most of which could muster only
occasional case reports. An exception to this was the National Cancer Institute
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 25
(NCI) of the USA. This institution had not only conducted early studies in Africa
(by seconding clinical investigators) in what might be thought of as the second
period of chemotherapy—the period in which the relative efficacy and optimal
combinations of known active agents was examined—but continued to do so in
what was known for some time as “American BL.” Initially, treatment was very
similar to that used in Africa—cyclophosphamide alone—and some patients did
achieve long-term survival using this approach [104]. In addition, the danger of
hyperkalemia due to renal obstruction from amorphous phosphates (caused by the
tumor lysis syndrome) in patients with a high tumor burden was better defined and
effective management with allopurinol and hyperhydration had been developed
[105–107]. Following the introduction of combination chemotherapy in Uganda,
slight variants of the COM regimen were introduced at the NCI, the methotrexate
being given intrathecally on 2 of the 5 days of each therapy cycle in the US version
and high-dose prednisolone (1,000 mg/m2 daily for 5 days) and high-dose cyclo-
phosphamide (1,600 mg/m2 on days 1 and 2 in place of third cycle of therapy) being
used in the variant regimen known as COMP [108, 109]. These regimens also ini-
tially included whole abdominal radiation, but this appeared to add toxicity without
therapeutic efficacy and was eventually phased out. Although the numbers were
small (a total of 54 patients were treated with COM or COMP), the survival rate was
seemingly better than had been achieved in Africa, although this clearly resulted in
part from the use of a very high-dose regimen including whole body radiation fol-
lowed by autologous bone marrow rescue in patients who relapsed. This was the
first documented use of autologous bone marrow rescue following high-dose therapy
in patients with recurrent malignant disease. It resulted in prolonged survival in
three patients who had developed recurrent disease [110].
Because all childhood non-Hodgkin lymphomas were often treated as acute
lymphoblastic leukemia in Europe and the USA, these observations led to uncer-
tainty as to whether all childhood NHLs should be treated as ALL or as BL, i.e.,
with COM or COMP-type therapies. Indeed, the significance of the by now well
recognized different histological categories of childhood NHL (diagnosed accord-
ing to the favored Rappaport classification scheme in the USA at that time) to the
outcome of therapy was unknown. Accordingly, the Children’s Cancer Study
Group, becoming increasingly more active, conducted a randomized clinical trial in
which all children with NHL (divided into two groups - lymphoblastic and non-
lymphoblastic) were randomized to receive either COMP, a regimen similar to that
used at the NCI, but with a lower dose of corticosteroid and intermediate dose
methotrexate (500 mg/m2), or the LSA2L2 regimen, which had been adapted from
the LSA1 treatment protocol used at Sloan-Kettering Cancer Institute for ALL.
In both study arms, radiation was given to sites of bulky disease [111]. In view of
the more prolonged duration of therapy given for ALL, patients were treated with
18 months of therapy.
While this study was going on, and in view of results achieved using high-dose
methotrexate by Djerassi in relapsed patients with NHL, an NCI study was initiated
in which high-dose methotrexate (2.7 g/m2 given over 42 h) was given on day 10 of
therapy cycles in which cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, and vincristine were given
26 I. Magrath
on day 1, and corticosteroid (at conventional doses) on days 1–5 [112]. In cycle 1 on
day 1 cyclophosphamide was given as a single agent in an attempt to reduce the risk
of tumor lysis syndrome. Initially, this therapy, which was referred to as protocol
NCI 77-04, was not associated with intrathecal therapy, but in view of 4 isolated
relapses in the CSF among the first 13 patients, all subsequent patients were treated
with intensive intrathecal therapy, including both Ara-C and MTX. Again, given the
strong influence of the therapy of ALL, treatment was continued for 15 cycles in all
patients except those with completely resected disease or stage I or II disease, who
received 6 cycles of therapy.
The results of both the CCSG and NCI studies in patients with BL, (initially
combined with large cell lymphomas (B cell or anaplastic) and collectively referred
to as non-lymphoblastic lymphomas in the CCSG study. BL (included in the non-
lymphoblastic group by the CCSG) were similar, being approximately 50–55%
EFS. However, an important finding in the CCSG study was that the ALL-like regi-
men, LSA2L2, was not nearly as effective in the treatment of non-lymphoblastic
lymphoma as the COMP regimen, giving a prolonged EFS rate of only 27%. It was
concluded that a “leukemia-like” therapeutic approach to BL and the lymphomas
lumped together under the rubric of “non-lymphoblastic lymphoma”, which were
predominantly BL was inferior to the approach that had evolved from the treatment
of BL in Africa.
Although at first site the results with COMP and NCI 77-04 appear remarkably
similar to those obtained in Equatorial Africa in the late 1960s and early 1970s, it
should be borne in mind that EFS in African patients was closer to 30%, an addi-
tional 20% of patients achieving long-term survival only after one or more relapses
and treatment with MTX, VCR, and often Ara-C. Patients who relapsed in the USA
generally had a poor prognosis, although a high fraction would respond temporarily
to treatment with ifosfamide, etoposide, and high-dose Ara-C. This regimen (IVAC)
was subsequently incorporated into the highly successful NCI 89-C-41 protocol
(approximately 90% long-term survival) as an alternating regimen with an NCI
77-04-like combination (CODOX-M) for patients other than those with totally
resected or localized disease (low-risk patients) [113, 114]. A total of only four cycles
of therapy were given (two of each, starting with CODOX-M) for the high-risk
patients, and three cycles of CODOX-M for low-risk patients, clearly demonstrating
that longer duration therapy as in 77-04 provided no benefit. CODOX-M/IVAC like
the similarly successful regimens developed around the same time in France (LMB
protocols) [115] and Germany (BFM protocols) [116], that, like CODOX-M/IVAC
were built on a backbone of cyclophosphamide, high-dose methotrexate and vincris-
tine, but with significant variation in dose and schedule and additional drugs for
higher risk patients (especially Cytostar, ifosfamide/mesna and etoposide) increased
survival rates (albeit based on a retrospective comparison) by some 35%.
Of interest is the finding that adults with BL, at least up to the age of 60 years,
had indistinguishable results from those observed in children in both protocols NCI
77-04 and NCI 89-C-41, and it is probable that these protocols are similarly effec-
tive for all ages, although the elderly may have comorbidities that reduce tolerance
to full-dose therapy. Regimens used in adults have adopted the approaches devel-
oped in children and adolescents to good advantage, and intensive protocols of this
1 An Introduction to Burkitt Lymphoma 27
kind appear clearly advantageous to the standard CHOP, and even R-CHOP [117,
118]. Continued evolution of the protocols has taken place in the context of the
pediatric oncology groups, with improvements in triage of patients for different
degrees of intensity—another important step designed to give each patient a maxi-
mum chance of cure with a minimal risk of toxicity and, particularly in the case of
the French protocol, which in the last decade has undergone considerable
simplification while maintaining the same excellent outcome.
One question that is important to answer is the role of rituximab in the treatment
of BL. Most adult patients with BL, however, already receive rituxumab and there
is some evidence to support its added value [119]. In children and young adults,
while it may be possible to examine rituximab in particularly high-risk groups, and
certainly patients who relapse (although these are very few), the only other approach
is to use a phase II window to study efficacy—this has already been done and a posi-
tive result found [119]—or replacing a relatively toxic component of treatment with
rituximab. Rituximab would probably be an excellent drug for low income coun-
tries because of its low toxicity profile, but its cost is likely to be prohibitive for
some time to come.
Summary
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28:3115–3121
Chapter 2
Diagnosis of Burkitt Lymphoma
Clinical Presentation
Fig. 2.1 Reported anatomical sites for Burkitt lymphoma primary presentation or extension,
common and uncommon
Diagnosis
Worldwide there has been growing interest in faster diagnostic methods than provided
by tissue biopsy for obtaining diagnostic material for morphological, immunophe-
notypical, and cytological studies of malignancies [19]. Fine needle aspiration
(FNA) which involves withdrawing cells from tumor masses by inserting a needle
with attached syringe and drawing back to create a vacuum is widely deployed as a
faster method. Early studies from sub-Saharan Africa by Magrath and others [20–22]
all concluded that FNA was a safe, cheap and feasible method for obtaining material
for diagnosis of NHL even though only one study [22] was sufficiently detailed to
allow such a conclusion. Researchers from Malawi and South Africa have estab-
lished that nurses trained in FNA can competently take FNA samples where quality
is as good as that of cytopathologists [21]. This is a good example of task shifting
[23] provided competency based training is implemented and maintained. This
study was carried out in a research setting with diagnostic material being sent abroad
for further ancillary tests not available in Malawi. Whether this approach can be
replicated in other resource constrained settings remains to be seen.
Western literature regarding the diagnosis of BL using FNA yields conflicting
results. FNA is well-established for the rapid and efficient diagnosis of cancer but
use in the primary diagnosis of lymphoma is controversial. Suspicion of lymphoma
on FNA cytology is often followed up by surgical biopsy to allow subgrouping by
immunophenotyping. Use of FNA for diagnosis of recurrent lymphoma is less con-
troversial. Cytopathologists, who endorse FNA, present impressive specificities and
sensitivities [24–26]. Hematopathologists are more oriented to determine the NHL
subgroup as proposed by the WHO 2008 classification which requires the addition
of immunophenotyping in tissue samples to confirm NHL subtype [27]. While this
is an important divide between two groups of medical specialists such issues do not
exist in resource-limited countries where there is often preoccupation with finding
sufficient resources for morphologic examination of tumors [18]. FNA has definite
short-term advantages over surgical biopsy: cheap, safe, quick, and easy to perform
[28, 29]. Relying on FNA aspirants for diagnosis of BL has specific challenges.
Cytomorphology of tumor cells alone is limited by the skill and experience of those
obtaining the aspirant and those interpreting the cytomorphology. Reliability for BL
has not been established in studies specifically designed for this purpose.
Additionally, there may be lost opportunity for future correlative studies requiring
formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue.
No matter whether the tumor sample is collected by FNA, Tru-Cut needle biopsy
or surgical biopsy, once the tumor is in hand, the speed of BL identification can be
augmented by immediate preparation of smears from aspirates or tissue imprints
from tissue biopsies. Cell preparations should be air dried or fixed with 95% alcohol
for cytologic examination and prepared for flow cytometry (FC), if available, to
speed the diagnostic process. Morphology alone is error prone and not sufficient to
2 Diagnosis of Burkitt Lymphoma 39
only polyclonal B cells or normal T cells are identified. Because false negative and
false positive FC evaluations can occur, the two independent tests of FNA smear cyto-
morphology and FC immunophenotyping should be correlated for agreement [31].
The pattern of growth in tissue (Fig. 2.3) is usually diffuse within the tumor mass
but is infiltrating as the BL cells move through adjacent tissues or metastasize and
infiltrate distant tissue sites. If nodal, germinal centers may be involved early in the
process or BL may colonize germinal centers metastatic from adjacent BL. A dis-
tinction between primary and secondary involvement with BL is difficult. BL cells
are intermediate sized (10–25 um), round, and have a visible rim of cytoplasm that
is amphophilic in hematoxylin–eosin-stained preparations. In over fixed tissue,
tumor cells appear “squared off” against each other. This is a fixation artifact and is
not a reliable criterion for diagnosis. Classic BL cell nuclei are round to oval, have
a thick nuclear membrane, course or clumped chromatin, clear parachromatin and
indistinct 3–5 paracentric, basophilic small nucleoli. Mitoses and apoptotic cells are
numerous. Historically, morphologic variants designated as plasmacytoid or pleo-
morphic BL were included. The plasmacytoid BL variant was described as having
eccentric basophilic cytoplasm containing immunoglobulin while the pleomorphic
BL variant had nuclei with large, eosinophilic nucleoli along with binucleate and
multinucleated cell forms. At the time of description of these BL variants, full
descriptions of plasma cell tumors were not sufficient to assure differentiation from
these BL variants.
A “starry-sky pattern” in smears and tissue section is a feature of BL. The percep-
tion of small points of light in a dark blue background occurs in BL because the
Fig. 2.3 Burkitt lymphoma diffuse pattern with grape-like clusters of medium-sized basophilic
cells punctuated by few lightly colored macrophages (H&E stained tissue section)
2 Diagnosis of Burkitt Lymphoma 41
Fig. 2.5 Burkitt lymphoma immunophenotype (IHC) with (a) CD20+, (b) CD10+, (c) BCL6+,
(d) CD38+, (e) MIB-1 (Ki67) >95% and (f) CD44−
antigens PAX5, CD79a, CD19, CD20, CD22; germinal center antigens CD10 and
BCL6, plasma cell antigen CD38 but no T-cell antigens CD3, CD5, CD23, and
absence of antigens CD44, CD138, TdT, cyclin D1, or CD34 specifically found in
confounder lymphomas [37]. Classic BL morphology has been paired with abbrevi-
ated sets of antibodies or progressive algorithmic approaches to antibody use
44 L.W. Ayers and L.K. Tumwine
Confounders
EBV positive [45] but departs from BL by being TdT positive. If leukemic cells are
present in the peripheral blood, acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma, a
significantly more common leukemia, must be excluded before proceeding with a
BL clinical diagnosis.
DLBCL of the germinal center type is CD44 negative, can have a similar BL
immunophenotype with positive CD20, CD10, BCL6 and a high proliferation index
in aggressive forms. Tissue areas may be burkittoid with cell clustering and phago-
cytic macrophages. Myc translocation will usually be negative. However, there are
2 Diagnosis of Burkitt Lymphoma 47
DLBCL with similar BL appearance but with a positive Myc as well as a BCL2 or
BCL6 translocations, called double and triple hit lymphomas. These DLBCL variants
are high grade such as those that arise as relapse from lower grade lymphomas or
arise de novo and may have a proliferation index >90%. In the activated B-cell
DLBCL, the MUM1 positive feature, a positive BCL6 and high proliferation index
may be confused with a MUM1-positive BL with a negative CD10, a positive BCL6
and a high proliferation index. EBV-positive DLBCL may also add to the confound-
ing. Accuracy of separation of classic endemic BL from classic DLBCL when both
are characteristic is good but clear separation throughout the spectrum of BL from gray
zone BL/DLBCL or what has been called B-cell lymphoma, unclassifiable, with
features intermediate between BL and DLBCL (WHO 2008) remains problematic
[46]. The poor clinical response observed with some of the gray zone BL/DLBCL
could occur because some of these tumors are genetic BL and require intensive
chemotherapy for improved survival or because these tumors are simply very
aggressive on their own.
So-called plasmacytoid BL creates a likely confounding with EMP that are EBER
positive or negative, have immunoglobulin in their cytoplasm and characteristically
have multinucleate and binucleate cells [47]. PBL has similar amphophilic, interme-
diate-sized cells but with prominent central nucleoli (immunoblastic) in tissue, are
usually EBER positive and present prominent “starry sky” morphology. Confounding
should be anticipated with smear or tissue morphologic interpretation (Fig. 2.9).
The immunophenotypes and cytogenetics of these tumors differ significantly. CD45
and CD20 are always positive in BL, may be positive or negative in EMP while PBL
is negative for both. All can be MUM-1 positive but CD138 is negative in BL, nega-
tive or weak for PBL and strongly positive for EMP. Myc is positive for both BL and
many PBL but PBL has a complex karyotype and EMP is Myc negative. BL may
uncommonly have a complex karyotype. It is possible that these plasma cell tumors
were reported as BL in past literature using morphology alone, Myc alone or limited
biomarkers to constitute a BL study set. As with other confounders, there is less
difficulty between endemic BL and the confounders than with the BL variants and
their confounders providing there is adequate experience, well-prepared smears and
tissue and immunophenotyping and cytogenetics.
Summary
Treatment of BL is urgent due to the late stage of presentation and very short tumor
doubling time. Patients risk the onset of tumor lysis syndrome even before the
initiation of chemotherapy. An accurate diagnosis of BL requires integration of
clinical, morphologic, immunophenotypic and genetic findings, all time consuming
and medical laboratory resource intensive. A presumptive diagnosis for purposes of
eminent treatment is commonly based on a typical clinical presentation in an at-risk
patient. Because most cases of BL occur in resource constrained medical settings in
equatorial Africa, clinicians may choose to proceed directly to treatment based on
48 L.W. Ayers and L.K. Tumwine
Fig. 2.9 Burkitt lymphoma (BL) confounders with diffuse growth of amphophillic, medium-sized
cells and differential features: (a) BL cells with “squared off” feature, indistinct nucleoli, focal
necrosis and (b) degenerated infiltrating cells with lost of features; (c) extramedullary plasmacy-
toma with amphophillic, medium-sized cells with indistinct nucleoli and (d) another area of this
tumor showing plasma cell morphology including binucleate cells with nonspecific “squared off”
appearance and central nucleoli; (e) plasmablastic lymphoma with diffuse pattern of amphophillic
cells and prominent macrophages associated with “starry-sky” along with (f) cells showing the
prominent PBL central nucleoli
2 Diagnosis of Burkitt Lymphoma 49
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Chapter 3
Burkitt’s Lymphoma: A View from the Bedside
Introduction
E.L. Kawira
Shirati Health Education and Development (SHED) Foundation and EMBLEM Study,
P.O. Box 39, Shirati, Tanzania
e-mail: [email protected]
S.M. Mbulaiteye (*)
Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, 6120 Executive Blvd, Executive Plaza South,
Rm. 7080, Rockville Md, 20852
e-mail: [email protected]
A Doctor’s View
In the African setting, Burkitt’s lymphoma involving the face, head, and abdomen is rela-
tively easy to suspect and diagnose. With medical experience and a high index of suspicion,
a clinical diagnosis can be presumed and the child referred to centers where cytology can
be done and treatment given [5].
When I see, for the first time, a patient newly diagnosed with Burkitt’s lymphoma, I see
that here is a child I can treat and cure in a relatively straightforward manner. The face,
though hugely distorted by tumor, will return to normal. The teeth loosened by tumor will
become solid. The blind eye will see again. The abdomen distended by tumor masses and
fluid will reduce to normal. The gait disturbance or paralysis of lower limbs will disappear,
and the child will walk again. I can actually start feeling a kinship with the Almighty, as
doctors are often accused of doing.
Burkitt’s lymphoma is curable, but in Africa, the tumor frequently is fatal because of
lack of effective treatment [6, 7]. In a child, the cure of an otherwise fatal illness saves many
life years compared to cure of illness in elderly patients. That is true no matter what the
illness. The life of a child is often not counted for much in Africa, especially in settings
where child death from various causes is not that unusual. The acute illnesses of malaria,
pneumonia, and diarrhea account for many more deaths than Burkitt’s lymphoma, just
because they are so much more frequent, and they are cheaper to treat. Not surprisingly,
when resources are scarce, they will be devoted to these other illnesses and not for Burkitt’s
lymphoma, even if it is curable [6–9]. People don’t think in terms of life years saved or lost.
But as a doctor, even so, treating and curing a child with Burkitt’s lymphoma is especially
gratifying and, I know, restores many life-years to that child. It also helps to increase the
confidence of the whole family and clan in modern medical treatment, reduce the belief in
witchcraft and spells as the causes of terrible diseases (Fig. 3.1).
3 Burkitt’s Lymphoma: A View from the Bedside
55
Fig. 3.1 A collection of drawings developed to assist nurses and doctors explain to patients the misconceptions about Burkitt’s lymphoma in East Africa
56 E.L. Kawira and S.M. Mbulaiteye
Fig. 3.2 A collection of drawings developed to assist nurses and doctors in East Africa to explain the process of treating Burkitt’s lymphoma to patients
58 E.L. Kawira and S.M. Mbulaiteye
I gave round one of chemotherapy, and the child was taken away. He was not brought back,
and since his condition had been so poor, I assumed he must have died.
A year later I was astonished when the child was brought to me again- to get his next round
of chemotherapy! The one dose of chemotherapy I had given him had reduced his
abdominal swelling for a year, but it had finally come back.
This time, the family was prepared to have the mother stay with her child for the full 12 weeks.
He finished the full chemotherapy course, and all the palpable tumor went away.
A few months later, his tumor recurred, and he was brought back to me immediately. I
referred him for second line chemotherapy at a large referral hospital. He completed that
treatment, with good response, and is apparently cured.
In many medical settings in Africa, Burkitt’s lymphoma is diagnosed clinically; get-
ting precise diagnosis by histology is frequently not possible, or too costly, or would cause
delay [5]. In the face of such rapid tumor growth, delay can be tragic. Therefore, round one
of the chemotherapy treatment is often given as a clinical trial. The response of the tumor
to this one dose of chemotherapy strengthens the impression of the clinical diagnosis. Since
the Burkitt’s lymphoma tumor is so rapidly growing, the response to chemotherapy is
equally dramatic and appears miraculous. The tumor melts away in a few days, and, depend-
ing on its initial size, there may be no visible or palpable tumor by the time of the next
chemotherapy dose a week later. If this does not happen, the doctor may reconsider the
diagnosis is not Burkitt’s lymphoma.
Is it Burkitt’s lymphoma?
This 7 year old boy was brought by his mother, who gave a vague history of a mass in the
abdomen since age three. However, when she said it had gotten a lot larger in the past
2 months, my index of suspicion of Burkitt’s lymphoma increased.
My physical exam and ultrasound confirmed a painless solid mobile mass in the mid abdo-
men of about 10 × 15 cm size. The mass felt firm to touch. It reminded me of a splene-
cule, and in fact I wasn’t sure there was a spleen in the normal location, above the left
kidney. However, after a questionably positive cytology report, I decided to give a round
of chemotherapy to see if the mass would disappear.
After the chemotherapy, I convinced myself that the mass had become smaller, and gave a
second and third round of chemotherapy. Finally, however, I had to admit that it wasn’t
really going away. I decided it would need to come out surgically.
The boy was not brought back for the scheduled time for surgery. Instead, he reappeared
two years later, the mass still present and a bit larger, but the patient none the worse for
waiting.
Surgical excision by a visiting surgeon revealed…an ectopic spleen!
There can be issues with hospitalization of Burkitt’s lymphoma patients that are differ-
ent than for other children. Most sick children are hospitalized with their mothers, espe-
cially for those under age 2 and still being breast fed, and they share a bed with the mother
in the pediatric ward. But Burkitt’s lymphoma patients are older, and are often brought
initially by the father. In one rural hospital where I worked, if the father ended up staying
overnight with the child during the initial chemotherapy, they were not allowed to stay in
the pediatric ward, but were being put in the large adult male ward. Thus it turned out that
both boy and even girl children were surrounded by sick adult men. I managed to obtain a
private or semiprivate room for medical/social reasons for my Burkitt’s lymphoma patients
being cared for by the father, at no extra cost, but remained impressed by the conflict,
almost always ignored, between the child’s and carer’s sensibilities.
When we do have a setup that can provide food and lodging for the child and a parent
during the three months, it is a great way to build trust with them. Normally they would
never have seen a doctor before, much less have a close relationship over time. In the
village, the doctor’s role would be filled by the neighbors and the local traditional healer.
3 Burkitt’s Lymphoma: A View from the Bedside 59
And naturally, those familiar and trusted and nearby would have been consulted first about
this illness, sometimes causing harmful or fatal delay.
Waiting Too Long
This seven year old boy was carried into my clinic by several adult men. Seeing them
approaching, we steered them directly to a bed. The boy was very ill and in a poor con-
dition. He had been unable to walk for two months, I was told, and the family had been
seeking treatment at a dispensary and also using local herbs.
Now he had severe pressure sores over sacrum and trochanters. He was thin, but had edema
of the face and upper body from superior vena cava syndrome. In the abdomen, I could
palpate hugely enlarged kidneys. One testis was also enlarged.
With such severe and neglected Burkitt’s lymphoma, we really had no chance.
I cleaned the sores, cautiously hydrated, gave antibiotics, and gave round one of chemo-
therapy. I was gratified that the edema reduced and the kidney enlargement reduced.
However, probably overwhelmed by sepsis and biochemical complications from very
advanced disease, he died after about two weeks.
The best I could hope for this patient was that the parents would see our love and concern for
their child, but the odds were stacked against us, and that there was indeed response to our
drugs. Perhaps next time another child from that village will be brought to me sooner.
This case also illustrates the need for specialized pediatric oncology centers [6]. Such cen-
ters would have specialized staff and equipment to care for some of the sickest children.
The complications of advanced cancer, especially in an African child, are myriad. In
addition to sepsis, malnutrition, and common infections, like malaria, there is increased
danger of tumor lysis syndrome when initially treating children who, like this patient,
have delayed coming to medical attention and therefore have a large tumor burden.
If the treatment goes well, in a facility based setting, then I think there could be good
opportunity to enrich the child’s life, not to mention the parents, since most of the time the
child is feeling well after the initial chemotherapy. If we could have videos, television,
books, games, play materials available, this would be ideal. But so far, we are doing well if
we manage to treat the illness well, and that of course has first priority. I do see children
inventing their own games and amusements when, as usual, left to their own devices.
A Parent’s View
“This illness, Burkitt’s lymphoma, is VERY different from any other disease I have known
to occur in my children. I am familiar with malaria, cold, pneumonia, and diarrhea. Those
illnesses I expect to occur, even frequently, in all children. With the right treatment, the
child gets better within a week or less.
Then, along came something else entirely. It caused disfigurement of my child’s face
that even the neighbors could see from a distance. It did not go away by itself, like a cold
does, but continued and got worse”, (Fig. 3.1).
“We went with her to a drug shop, and they said she had a tooth problem. In fact her
teeth were loose in the swelling area, and one had fallen out just like that. They gave us
treatment, but it didn’t help.” (note - for Burkitt’s lymphoma in the mouth, often there has
been delay because the problem is suspected to be a dental infection. With chemotherapy,
the teeth firm up, and do not need extraction, though unfortunately they are often extracted
prior to presentation to the doctor).
“We then suspected witchcraft could be responsible (Fig. 3.1). We took our child to a
traditional healer to find out who was causing this illness. But our child just got worse, and
60 E.L. Kawira and S.M. Mbulaiteye
we got no answers.” (note - for illness that is severe or persistent, the thought of witchcraft
is normally somewhere in the parent’s mind).
Finally we heard that this illness is treated in a place farther away (Fig. 3.1). It took us
some time to collect enough money to make the journey. By that time our child was really
very sick, and we were losing hope.
A scourge for the poor?
In front of a group of visiting medical students from the U.S., a child was brought into the
exam room who had the most distorted face I [EK] had ever seen. This is saying a lot,
as I have seen and treated Burkitt’s lymphoma for years.
The mother’s tale was one of delay due to being a poor widow and the lack of travel money.
Being from across the nearby border with Kenya, she had been advised to take the child
to a major western Kenyan city, but did not have the money. Finally, someone advised
her to come to my clinic, a shorter journey for her, and she had managed to scrape
together the funds. Meanwhile, however, the tumor had grown frighteningly large. I was
sure the child could no longer eat normally, or even breathe comfortably.
The child sat placidly and posed for photos, and agreed for smiley face stickers to be stuck
onto her forehead and forearms. I cautioned the students not to show her the photos of
how she looked. The mother, a good looking woman herself, sighed as she looked at
Jacinta and said, “She used to be beautiful”.
“She will be beautiful again”, I told the mother.
The medical students, except for one, left the next day. The one who stayed longer docu-
mented for the others, by daily photos, the return of Jacinta’s face to normal over the fol-
lowing week.
“Finally our child was seen by a doctor; we were told she has a cancer. The doctor told us
the cancer was not just in her face, but in her abdomen. We had only seen the swelling in
her face. We didn’t think her abdomen was any bigger than usual in children.” (note -
abdominal tumors can grow large unrecognized, as the natural lordosis plus worms or, in
some areas, schistosomiasis, with hepatosplenomegaly, cause many village children to have
protuberant abdomens).
We were dismayed when we were told that the treatment takes three months. (This is not
as long as treatment for TB, that takes six months, but most of them have never known a
child on TB treatment, much less one on HIV treatment for life….so dealing with this long
treatment is a new experience and a significant burden.)
We were told that the treatment would make our child have nausea, maybe vomit much
(Fig. 3.2), for a few days. But what we saw- the swollen face went away-was like magic!
Our child was able to eat again, and even started getting up, walking around, playing, being
interested in life.
Difficult choices
By the time this child was brought to me, she had been to several other western and tradi-
tional medicine facilities without help. She had become thin, with stick limbs and a
wizened face, but with a hugely swollen abdomen. She was also very pale from severe
anemia. My exam revealed the palpably enlarged kidneys, most likely due to Burkitt’s
lymphoma.
She responded well to chemotherapy, and became a happy playful child around the hostel
where she stayed with her mother.
Later the mother revealed to us, “We thought she would die”.
“It looked like our child was well, and yet they said more treatment was needed. It was hard
to see why, when our child now looked okay. We were supposed to bring the child every
fortnight for treatment, but it wasn’t easy to travel so much. It was costly, and we were
barely feeding our other children. We wanted to do what the doctors said, but many times
3 Burkitt’s Lymphoma: A View from the Bedside 61
we just couldn’t manage. Once we missed a treatment because one of our older children
died and we had to bury him. We told the doctors why we missed, but they said we should
have found someone to bring our child anyway.” (note - treating an apparently well child
with toxic drugs is counter – intuitive to the parents, and needs careful explanation before
and during chemotherapy, to encourage and support parents).
“Once our child got fever at home between the chemotherapy treatments, so we took her
to the local dispensary and they treated her for malaria. But when we told her cancer doctors
later, they said we should have been brought her to them. They said her fever could be more
serious than for other children without cancer, because her drugs for Burkitt’s lymphoma
weaken her immune system. But to us she looks just the same, and it looked like the usual
malaria our other children get.” (note - understanding of suppressed immunity during che-
motherapy is also counter-intuitive, and parents can delay returning when a Burkitt’s lym-
phoma child becomes sick at home if being treated as an outpatient. Children who survive
Burkitt’s lymphoma remain at risk of death from malaria).
“One good thing is that we don’t have to pay for the treatment drugs, even though we
still have to find money for all that travel back and forth. We were told that the drugs are
very expensive, I don’t know how expensive.” (note - in some settings the cost of drugs is
supported by donors. The actual cost would often be more than a village family’s annual
income several times over, if they had to pay it.)
“We usually get help from our clan when something like this comes along. The clan is
used to contributing money when someone dies, or when someone wants to get married.
But for illness in a child, they don’t usually help out. And the doctors said we needed the
treatment right away. We couldn’t wait to collect money from people. So far, we are manag-
ing to take her for most of the treatments. We remember how sick she was, and how she got
better so quickly, so we want to do what the doctors say, even if to us it doesn’t always make
sense and it is hard for us”.
“I don’t feel like playing or going to school. I just want to stay in bed. It is hard to walk
around. And I don’t want to eat because my mouth hurts when I try.” (note - when parents
bring a sick child to the doctor they often carry them but don’t mention the fact. The doctor,
if seeing the child in a bed, may not realize that the child is unable to walk. A child may
actually have stopped walking due to being paralyzed from tumor, rather than just being
unable or unwilling to walk around due to general debilitation and wasting. I always ask if
the child can walk normally.)
Life is not fun any more!
A concerned father brought his 10 year old daughter to my clinic. Though they happened to
live very close by, he said he had carried her on the back of his bicycle. She was too
weak to walk for the past few days, he said. There had been a heated family discussion
about whether to take her to the traditional healer or bring her to me (Fig. 3.1), but for-
tunately they decided on me.
My exam revealed that the child could stand unsteadily, and was able to walk slowly, with
a wide based stagger, for very short distance. There was no other definite finding, except
that a dipstick showed blood in the urine.
Further diagnostics not being possible, and suspecting Burkitt’s lymphoma in our setting, I
started chemotherapy on her. Within a week she was walking normally again, and the
blood disappeared from her urine. She completed the twelve week chemotherapy course
without any further problems.
62 E.L. Kawira and S.M. Mbulaiteye
“I heard my parents saying that I used to be beautiful, but now I’m ugly. I feel like I have
let them down, but I don’t know why.” (note - children are often oblivious to facial
disfigurement, even gross disfigurement, because there are no mirrors in the village, but of
course they are exquisitely aware of comments).
“People think maybe I can’t see any more, but I can still see ok.” (note - child, and often
parents, are oblivious of loss of eyesight in one eye, or don’t consider it an emergency, since
the child can still see from the unaffected eye).
Light disappeared from my life!
A tall, dignified older woman walked into my consultation room and announced,
“My grandson can’t see for the past three days”.
Looking up, I saw, trailing behind her and groping the walls for guidance, a boy of about
six years of age. Further history revealed that he had a swelling abdomen for about two
months, plus early swelling in one eye.
On physical exam I noted large fungating tumors on both sides of the palate, and a large
abdominal mass. I suspected Burkitt’s lymphoma and made a clinical diagnosis. I also
thought the loss of sight was related to Burkitt’s lymphoma. To save this child’s eyesight,
I prepared the child for chemotherapy and begun administering it within 24 hours.
After one day, the grandmother remarked, “He can see a little bit”.
After two days the grandmother told me, “He can see a lot now”.
After three days, the grandmother informed me, “He can see normally again”!
I wondered later what would have happened if this young boy had had Burkitt’s lymphoma
in only one eye, instead of both, and hadn’t gone totally blind. Likely there would have
been a much longer delay in bringing him for treatment.
A few months later, when he had finished his course of chemotherapy and was doing well,
and seeing well, his father presented me with a chicken as a gift. I don’t always eat gift
chickens myself, but I made an exception of this one.
“I don’t feel THAT bad. Not like malaria, when my head hurts and my body hurts and I feel
hot. And I’m not coughing or having diarrhea. I just don’t feel ok.” (note - this sub-acute
nature of the illness also contributes to lag time until presentation).
“I haven’t gone to school for a while. I might go next year if I get better.” (with a persistent
illness like Burkitt’s lymphoma, most children by the time of presentation have left school.
This is not a big issue to parents or children, and they simply resume the following year,
repeating the missed year. Children get delayed or interrupted schooling for many reasons
other than Burkitt’s lymphoma, so it is not the issue that it would usually be in western
countries, where schooling is even carried on in inpatient wards when the child is able).
“I heard my parents saying they think I might die.” (note again - children overhear
comments).
I was scared when my parents took me on a long journey to the hospital. I never rode in
a bus before, but that was fun. We went fast. I had only been carried on a bicycle before. At
the hospital I saw a white person, and I got really afraid. My friend at home told me that
white people will eat you. When they tried to make me lie down on a table, I fought as hard
as I could. Even my dad tried to hold me down. They finally decided to let me go. I’m glad
I fought so hard. I was afraid all the rest of the day, and I stayed as far away from that white
person as I could.
I was Happy
I had just diagnosed this 6 year old child as having Burkitt’s lymphoma. I had recently
moved to my own clinic, so I was still giving intrathecal methotrexate myself, not having
yet taught my nurse how to do it.
Happy was NOT happy, when we tried to position her for the intrathecal injection. In fact,
she started screaming and writhing. When even her father jumped into the fray and tried
to help hold her down without success, I soon saw that it was a losing battle.
3 Burkitt’s Lymphoma: A View from the Bedside 63
A Nurse’s View
“Families who bring children with Burkitt’s lymphoma need a lot of counseling. They are
confused and bewildered by the disease. Many have heard of cancer and assume it means
death. To be told that their child has cancer is a big blow, and I have to spend enough time
reassuring them that this cancer is treatable and curable. They really want to trust what I
say. But the thing that makes them really trust me is when they see the response to the first
chemotherapy treatment.
I like that I can go ahead and treat this serious illness by myself, once the doctor has
calculated the dosages of the drugs. Starting an intravenous line, giving intravenous fluids
and drugs, observing for need of drugs for nausea- these are all routine nursing procedures,
and they aren’t very scary for the child or the parents. The thing that seems scarier, though,
is giving the intrathecal drug. If I see that a child is very intimidated even by starting an
intravenous, then I alert the doctor and we give the intrathecal drug under ketamine anes-
thetic. But if I see that a child is old enough, and mature enough, to cooperate well, then we
just give intrathecal without anesthesia. Most children are younger, however, and do better
when they don’t know or remember what happened. They just wake up a bit later like after
a nap, and get up and go to play as before.
The doctor taught me how to give the intrathecal injection, and it didn’t take long to
learn. Now I just give it myself. We just need to make sure that the child doesn’t eat or drink
anything if they need the anesthetic first”.
They are children, again
These two Burkitt’s lymphoma patients presented about the same time, and were undergo-
ing chemotherapy together. They also got into mischief together. One was the 6 year old
boy who came blind in both eyes, and now was able to see who was the ringleader and
a 5 year old boy David, who was the devoted follower.
One day we noticed that the middle of David’s back was covered with a patch of blistered
and rashy skin.
I finally figured out that the two boys had been playing doctor. One boy, the “doctor”, had
“washed” the other’s back in preparation for intrathecal injection.
64 E.L. Kawira and S.M. Mbulaiteye
It appeared they had used some kind of irritating poison ivy type of leaf that caused his skin
to break out. This causes us to delay the intrathecal chemotherapy for the “patient” boy
by a few weeks while it healed.
Giving the three iv drugs, iv fluids, plus the intrathecal drug takes several hours of time, but
we only need to do it all once every two weeks. On alternate weeks they just get the intrath-
ecal drug, and that doesn’t take long. They don’t need iv fluid for that. So we just make out
a schedule and plan to set aside the needed time, and that makes it go smoothly. Even if we
have more than one patient on treatment, we can treat them all the same day of the week for
the follow-up treatments.
We do warn the family about side effects of the drugs, especially nausea (Fig. 3.2). For
that, we routinely give an antiemetic drug along with the chemotherapy drugs to try to pre-
vent that symptom. Once in a while a child gets sores in the mouth, and we just give them
liquid pain medication and wait it out. Rarely severe and fatal complications can occur.
Even in sickness, they teach us
This five year old child presented with classic Burkitt’s lymphoma swelling of the right
orbit and left mandible. She responded well to chemotherapy, and had already finished
five of the six courses. Her mother, aunt, and older sibling had been taking turns staying
with her.
Suddenly, over the course of a few days, she developed blistering of small areas, then large
sheets, of skin. A visiting nursing student who had worked in a burn unit in the US told
us it looked like TENS (toxic epidermal necrolysis syndrome). I had to look it up in my
books, as I had never seen such a condition before.
I am sure that was the right diagnosis, and it could have been related to the chemotherapy
or to the underlying tumor, out of the many possible causes listed.
Sadly, she died within three days, in spite of our attempts to treat what in the US would have
been intensive care, referral burn unit level treatment with a guarded prognosis.
Of course children usually lose their hair, but that is not a big deal here. So many younger
children have their heads routinely shaved anyway, that people are used to seeing all or most
children bald. But it does bother some of the older girl patients. Sometimes they do have hair
to start with, and then they see it falling out. Usually they just ask me to shave off the rest, and
they are happy when I assure them that it will grow back later. Most of the patients are still
primary school age, and primary schools require girl students to have short hair anyway,
I guess so they don’t waste a lot of time braiding each other’s hair instead of studying.
I am usually the one who needs to help the family discuss things related to the treatment
support. The first major issue is who can be available to stay with the child. Sometimes
they try to leave an older child as the companion, but we don’t usually allow that, especially
when that child ought to be in school. For mothers, the issue is usually that they have other
children at home to care for. But with our extended family system being the norm, some-
times the mother can be able to stay during treatment with her Burkitt’s lymphoma child if
a co-wife or sister- in- law or grandmother is there at home to take care of her other chil-
dren. If a younger child is still breast-feeding, we sometimes find that the mother has
brought it to the ward to stay with her and the Burkitt’s lymphoma child patient (Fig. 3.3).
We try to discourage that also, because of increased risk of childhood infections being
passed around…on the other had we do support prolonged breast feeding…so sometimes
we just let them all stay, if there is no other better way.
The main thing that makes Burkitt’s lymphoma patients special for me as a nurse is that
I really get to know the patient and the family well, because we are together for such a long
time. I get to know their family problems and relationship issues. They really need emo-
tional support more than other families, because of the long treatment required. I have to
encourage them to stick with it, to get a good outcome. They really thank me, later. And if
they have grown to like and trust me and the other staff, they are happier to make the effort
to come for the follow-up visits even if the child is doing fine.
3 Burkitt’s Lymphoma: A View from the Bedside 65
Fig. 3.3 A child with Burkitt’s lymphoma helping to care for her younger sibling. Please note
familial Burkitt’s lymphoma can occur, but it is rare (Photo taken by SMM)
References
1. Burkitt D (1958) A sarcoma involving the jaws in African children. Br J Surg 46:218–223
2. Ziegler JL (1981) Burkitt’s lymphoma. N Engl J Med 305:735–745
3. van den Bosch CA (2004) Is endemic Burkitt’s lymphoma an alliance between three infections
and a tumour promoter? Lancet Oncol 5:738–746
4. Ogwang MD, Bhatia K, Biggar RJ, Mbulaiteye SM (2008) Incidence and geographic distribution
of endemic Burkitt lymphoma in northern Uganda revisited. Int J Cancer 123:2658–2663
5. Ogwang MD, Zhao W, Ayers LW, Mbulaiteye SM (2011) Accuracy of burkitt lymphoma
diagnosis in constrained pathology settings: importance to epidemiology. Arch Pathol Lab
Med 135:445–450
6. Mbulaiteye SM, Talisuna AO, Ogwang MD, McKenzie FE, Ziegler JL, Parkin DM (2010)
African Burkitt’s lymphoma could collaboration with HIV-1 and malaria programmes reduce
the high mortality rate. Lancet 375:1661–1663
7. Molyneux E (2003) Post-conference thoughts from Malawi. Lancet 362:2117
8. Israels T, Chirambo C, Caron H, de Kraker J, Molyneux E, Reis R (2008) The guardians’
perspective on paediatric cancer treatment in Malawi and factors affecting adherence. Pediatr
Blood Cancer 51:639–642
9. Hesseling PB, Broadhead R, Molyneux E et al (2003) Malawi pilot study of Burkitt lymphoma
treatment. Med Pediatr Oncol 41:532–540
Chapter 4
Clinical Implications of Burkitt Lymphoma
Introduction
Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) can cause significant morbidity and mortality at
presentation, during therapy, and at relapse in patients with Burkitt lymphoma. This
clinical syndrome results from massive tumor cell lysis, followed by release of intra-
cellular potassium, phosphate, and nucleic acids into the circulation [2–4].
Hyperphosphatemia from release of intracellular phosphate also causes secondary
hypocalcemia due to precipitation of serum calcium into calcium phosphate crystals.
While TLS in most malignancies occurs after initiating cytotoxic therapy, TLS can
develop spontaneously prior to any therapy in patients with Burkitt lymphoma [4–6].
of these laboratory studies, occurring within 3 days before or 7 days after chemo-
therapy. Clinical TLS is defined as laboratory TLS with at least one of the following
clinical findings: cardiac arrhythmia, hypotension, heart failure, neuromuscular irri-
tability, seizure, renal insufficiency documented by increased creatinine level, or
oligouria. Not all patients with laboratory TLS develop clinical TLS. Sudden death
in a patient with laboratory TLS also defines clinical TLS.
There are limited data on the incidence of TLS in patients with Burkitt lym-
phoma, especially in adult patients. Most studies combine patients with B-cell acute
lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and Burkitt lymphoma together for the purpose of
reporting TLS. Moreover, the incidence is affected by management at the time of
presentation. It has been estimated that prior to the availability of urate oxidase
agents, about 15–25% of pediatric patients with Burkitt lymphoma developed clini-
cal TLS [17–20]. Data from B-cell ALL and Burkitt lymphoma pediatric patients
who were treated on a multicenter international trial in both Europe and the USA
were analyzed for the need of hemodialysis due to TLS [18]. Patients in Europe had
significantly lower need for dialysis when compared to the USA. This was thought
to be due to the availability of urate oxidase agents approved for prevention and
management of TLS in Europe which were not approved in the USA at that time
[18]. Comparison of outcomes between periods before and after the introduction
of urate oxidase agents shows that these agents can reduce incidence of TLS and
anuria [20].
Management of TLS can be divided into two parts: prophylactic measures in
patients at risk of developing TLS and treatment of established TLS. The scope of
this chapter does not allow for providing detailed management algorithms, but we
will review the main concepts and interventions.
The major goal for Burkitt lymphoma patients at risk for TLS or with established
TLS (spontaneous or therapy-induced) is preservation of renal function since the
kidneys are essential for excretion of potassium, uric acid and phosphate. Aggressive
hydration with intravenous fluid, maintenance of adequate urine output, and use of
agents to reduce the level of uric acid are effective interventions for prevention and
treatment of TLS. Urinary alkalinization remains controversial in the management
of patients at high risk for TLS. This treatment may offer benefit for patients with
metabolic acidosis by increasing the solubility of uric acid and reducing urate neph-
ropathy [21]. However, urinary alkalization is not recommended for patients with
hyperphosphatemia since it decreases calcium phosphate solubility.
Traditionally, allopurinol has been used to reduce the level of uric acid. It is usu-
ally administered orally, but an intravenous formulation is now available. Allopurinol
inhibits xanthine oxidase, the enzyme responsible for the conversion of hypoxan-
thine to xanthine as well as xanthine to uric acid (Fig. 4.1) [22]. Allopurinol is metab-
olized to oxypurinol which is also an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase. While it prevents
formation of new uric acid, existing uric acid must still be excreted by the kidneys.
Rasburicase is an intravenous recombinant urate oxidase enzyme, which has
been approved for the treatment of hyperuricemia associated with TLS in the USA
since 2009. A nonrecombinant form has been used in Europe for many years.
Rasburicase converts uric acid to allantoin, an inactive, soluble metabolite [23].
70 J. Svoboda and S.J. Schuster
CELL LYSIS
DNA BREAKDOWN
PURINE RELEASE
HYPOXANTHINE ALLOPURINOL
RASBURICASE
ALLANTOIN
Fig. 4.1 Purine metabolism. Different mechanisms of action by allopurinol versus rasburicase in
reducing uric acid levels. Allopurinol acts by inhibiting the endogenous enzyme xanthine oxidase,
thereby preventing formation of new uric acid. Rasburicase is a recombinant form of urate oxidase
and promotes conversion of uric acid to allantoin which is then excreted by kidneys. Adapted from
Goldman SC et al. [30]
Rasburicase is highly effective in reducing serum uric acid; levels usually decrease
within 4 h of initial administration [23]. While the Food and Drug Administration
recommends dosing rasburicase at 0.2 mg/kg once daily for up to 5 days, several
other alternative dosing schedules have been suggested, including a single dose of
3–7.5 mg [24–28]. Of note, rasburicase causes degradation of uric acid in vitro if
blood samples are left at room temperature before performing the assay. Therefore,
care must be taken to place blood samples on ice to avoid spuriously low serum uric
acid concentrations and missing hyperuricemia in the setting of TLS.
A phase III trial comparing rasburicase versus allopurinol in 280 adults with
hematological malignancies included patients with Burkitt lymphoma or B-cell
ALL [29]. The patients were randomized into three treatment groups: allopurinol
alone; combination rasburicase and allopurinol; and rasburicase alone. In patients
with hyperuricemia or at high risk for TLS, rasburicase provided more rapid control
of plasma uric acid than allopurinol (4 h for rasburicase alone or rasburicase with
allopurinol versus 27 h for allopurinol alone). Rasburicase was well tolerated as a
single agent and in sequential combination with allopurinol [29]. A randomized trial
4 Clinical Implications of Burkitt Lymphoma 71
before the resin is passed from the body. However, in patients who have GI involvement
by Burkitt lymphoma with associated symptoms such as constipation or impending
obstruction sodium polystyrene sulfonate must be used with caution. This agent has
been associated with intestinal necrosis in patients with intestinal disease or recent
surgery, especially when administered in sorbitol [35]. Transient decrease in the
serum potassium level can also be rapidly achieved by administration of insulin
(with concurrent glucose) which promotes potassium uptake into skeletal muscle by
stimulating the activity of the Na+-K+ pump [36, 37]. Beta-2 adrenergic agonists
can also drive potassium into cells and may be effective in the management of
hyperkalemia [36, 38]. Calcium salts (gluconate or chloride) can be used to tempo-
rarily antagonize the effect of hyperkalemia on the myocardium, but this effect is
short-lived [39].
Ultimately, hemodialysis may be necessary in patients with active TLS failing
more conservative measures, although the need for hemodialysis decreased
significantly since the introduction of rasburicase. While there are no specific
guidelines or cutoff values, clinical experience suggests that oligouria and symp-
tomatic hypocalcemia may be appropriate triggers for initiating hemodialysis.
Hemodialysis removes excess serum potassium and phosphate, which in turn
improves serum calcium levels. Correcting hypocalcemia with supplemental cal-
cium is limited by calcium-phosphate crystallization while phosphate levels are
high. Persistent or progressive electrolyte abnormalities may also be an indication
for dialysis. Continuous hemofiltration has also been used in this setting and might
have potential benefits in reducing phosphate when compared to intermittent
hemodialysis [40].
TLS remains a major concern when managing patients with Burkitt lymphoma.
Current guidelines consider any patient with advanced Burkitt lymphoma to be at
high risk for development of TLS [34]. Aggressive prevention and early recognition
of TLS are essential for successful outcomes for patients with Burkitt lymphoma.
Patients with Burkitt lymphoma may develop emergent issues due to mechanical
obstruction or compression of vital structures by rapidly enlarging lymph nodes or
extranodal masses of malignant lymphocytes. Frequent obstructive and compressive
complications of Burkitt lymphoma are discussed below.
Superior vena cava (SVC) syndrome occurs in Burkitt lymphoma patients due to
extrinsic compression of the SVC by a large tumor or obstruction of the SVC by
thrombosis [41]. Most patients with SVC syndrome present with edema of the face,
4 Clinical Implications of Burkitt Lymphoma 73
neck, and upper extremities which can be associated with superficial venous dilation
in these areas. Some patients may also develop hoarseness and dysphagia [42, 43].
At times, syncope, headache, or mental status change can also occur [43]. A large
mass in the superior mediastinum may compress the airway and cause pulmonary
symptoms such as cough and dyspnea. This is more common in pediatric patients,
since their airway is smaller and the cartilaginous rings of the trachea are more
compliant [42].
The diagnosis of SVC syndrome is usually confirmed by radiologic imaging,
most often CT scan, revealing a large mediastinal mass with associated anatomic
complications. Additional studies, such as ultrasound, may be helpful in detecting
associated venous thrombosis. Management of SVC syndrome in patients with
Burkitt lymphoma depends on the clinical scenario and whether a diagnostic tissue
biopsy has been obtained. In the most severe cases, patients may require emergent
interventions prior to obtaining tissue for diagnosis. However, emergent treatment
of a symptomatic mediastinal mass prior to tissue biopsy may result in lower diag-
nostic yield. In a group of 19 patients emergently irradiated for a symptomatic
mediastinal mass, only 11 patients were able to have a pathological diagnosis estab-
lished by later biopsy [44]. Steroids can also reduce compression of vital structures
by the mass, but may cause tumor necrosis and thus interfere with the quality of the
biopsy specimen.
Supportive measures, such as supplemental oxygen and optimal positioning to
limit compression of mediastinal structures by the mass, can be effective. If venous
thrombosis is detected, anticoagulation is usually started unless there is a contrain-
dication, such as concurrent GI bleeding. Endovascular stenting of SVC has been
shown to be an effective way to treat SVC syndrome in epithelial malignancies,
such as lung cancer [45]. However, stenting is not usually necessary in Burkitt lym-
phoma since most patients usually respond to steroids, radiation, or systemic
chemotherapy,
Abdominal Emergencies
Fig. 4.2 Abdominal presentation of sporadic Burkitt lymphoma. Computed tomography (CT)
image from a 24 year old patient who developed progressive abdominal distention, emesis, and
pain. Her CT scan revealed a large, necrotic retroperitoneal soft tissue mass (see arrow) encasing
the aorta and major branches with extension to the root of the mesentery and small bowel. Cytology
from the peritoneal fluid was consistent with involvement by Burkitt lymphoma
ileus from vinca alkaloid chemotherapy such as vincristine, or from opioids used for
pain, as well as pseudo-obstruction related to metabolic derangements.
The diagnosis of an acute abdomen is based on clinical and radiographic findings.
The clinical features of obstruction include abdominal pain, distention, and emesis.
Imaging usually identifies air-fluid levels or free air when perforation is present.
Barium enemas, which are often used for diagnosis and treatment of intussuscep-
tion in children without lymphoma, should be avoided in patients receiving chemo-
therapy due to the increased risk of rupturing thinned gut mucosa.
Management of abdominal emergencies in Burkitt lymphoma patients is generally
coordinated with the surgical team. Surgery may be indicated for complete bowel
obstruction, but partial small bowel obstruction may be managed conservatively
using decompression with nasogastric suction and bowel rest. Bowel perforation
and hemorrhage usually require emergent surgical repair. Severe constipation due to
decreased gut motility in Burkitt lymphoma patients with GI involvement may
require adjustment of treatment strategies, e.g., eliminating or reducing vinca alkaloids
from the treatment.
While the most common cause of renal failure in Burkitt lymphoma is TLS, urinary
tract obstruction and/or mechanical compression of renal vascular structures by bulky
lymph nodes can also result in renal emergencies [47]. In some cases, direct tumor
infiltration of kidneys without obstruction may also affect renal function [48, 49].
Obstructive nephropathy is diagnosed by imaging studies that reveal hydroneph-
rosis in a patient with decreased urinary output and elevated serum creatinine. The
4 Clinical Implications of Burkitt Lymphoma 75
Patients with Burkitt lymphoma may develop pleural or pericardial effusions that
can cause cardiopulmonary emergencies. At diagnosis, effusions in patients with
Burkitt lymphoma are usually the result of involvement of serosal surfaces by lym-
phoma; during therapy, secondary processes such as infection or volume overload
may present as effusions. Patients usually present with respiratory distress or
cough. The diagnosis is based on imaging such as chest X-ray or CT scan.
Echocardiography is used to assess pericardial effusion. Cardiac tamponade may
occur in Burkitt lymphoma patients who have severe compression of cardiac chambers
by pericardial effusion resulting in significant decrease in cardiac output [50].
Symptomatic patients are usually managed by pericardiocentesis or thoracentesis
which may be both therapeutic and diagnostic [51].
Neurological Emergencies
Patients with Burkitt lymphoma may develop neurological complications due to the
direct involvement of the central nervous system (CNS) by lymphoma or from
secondary effects of electrolyte imbalance and hematologic derangements. There
have also been several cases of primary CNS Burkitt lymphoma reported in the
literature [52, 53]. Immunosuppression may be associated with higher risk of men-
ingeal infections in these patients [54].
Symptoms that should alert clinicians to involvement of the CNS by Burkitt
lymphoma may range from subtle mental status change, vomiting, or headache to
obvious cranial nerve deficits, seizures, or, in extreme cases, coma. Diagnosis of
CNS involvement by Burkitt lymphoma is based on imaging, such as contrast-
enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and analysis of cerebrospinal fluid
(CSF) obtained by lumbar puncture. Brain biopsy may rarely be necessary for diag-
nosis. Occasionally, one must accept the presence of cranial nerve palsy with nega-
tive imaging and CSF examination in a patient with known Burkitt lymphoma as
evidence of CNS involvement. Of note, all patients with Burkitt lymphoma, even
those without clinical suspicion for CNS involvement, should undergo lumbar
puncture at diagnosis to obtain CSF for cytology and receive prophylactic chemo-
therapy aimed at the CNS as part of initial therapy.
76 J. Svoboda and S.J. Schuster
While TLS causes hypocalcemia in Burkitt lymphoma, high levels of calcitriol and
osteolytic lesions may cause hypercalcemia in some patients [59, 60]. Symptoms
associated with hypercalcemia depend on the severity of the abnormality. Mild
hypercalcemia is usually asymptomatic, but patients with moderate and severe ele-
vation of calcium levels can develop polyuria, constipation, confusion, and lethargy.
Cardiac arrhythmias may also be associated with severe hypercalcemia.
Hypercalcemia in Burkitt lymphoma patients is usually managed acutely with
aggressive hydration, steroids, and bisphosphonates; ultimately, treatment of the
lymphoma will correct this metabolic complication.
Hyponatremia due to the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hor-
mone (SIADH) can also cause a spectrum of symptoms depending on the degree of
the abnormality and the acuteness of change in the serum sodium level. Patients
may present with subtle symptoms, such as malaise and nausea; severe hypona-
tremia may cause seizures or coma. Any CNS process including involvement by
Burkitt lymphoma, infection, or hemorrhage can cause enhanced production of the
antidiuretic hormone (ADH). Pulmonary disease due to lymphoma or infection can
also result in SIADH. Some of the drugs used for treatment of Burkitt lymphoma,
such as vincristine and cyclophosphamide, have been associated with SIADH and
may rarely complicate Burkitt lymphoma therapy [61].
The management of SIADH depends on etiology; free water restriction and treat-
ment of the underlying cause remain the mainstays of therapy. The use of salt tablets,
ADH antagonists, and diuretics can also be effective in certain clinical settings [62].
4 Clinical Implications of Burkitt Lymphoma 77
Hematological Complications
Conclusion
Acknowledgements The authors thank Amanda Gordon, MSN and Elise Chong, MSIII for
assistance in preparation of this manuscript.
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Chapter 5
Definition of Burkitt Lymphoma
Definition
Endemic BL (eBL) occurs in the malaria belt of equatorial Africa and in Papua New
Guinea. In endemic regions there is a correlation between the geographical occur-
rence and some climatic factors (rainfall, altitude, etc.), which corresponds to the
geographical distribution of endemic malaria, vectors of certain arboviruses such as
Chikungunya Virus (CHIKV), and EBV-activating plants such as Euphorbia tiru-
calli [1, 7–9]. BL represents the most common childhood malignancy in these areas,
L. Leoncini
Department of Human Pathology and Oncology, Anatomic Pathology Section,
University of Siena, Via delleScotte 6, 53100 Siena, Italy
e-mail: [email protected]
H. Stein (*)
Pathodiagnostik Berlin, Komturstr. 58-62, 12099 Berlin, Germany
e-mail: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
more commonly in adults than in children. Waldeyer’s ring and mediastinal involve-
ment are rare. A leukemic phase can be observed in patients with bulky disease, but
only rare cases present purely as acute leukemia [1], with bone marrow involvement
and circulating B-blasts resembling Burkitt cells [10, 15].
Immunodeficiency-associated BL (ID-BL) is primarily seen in association with
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, often occurring as the initial mani-
festation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) [16]. EBV is identified
in 25–40% of cases [16]. In some cases, tumors may arise in immunocompetent
patients, when the CD4 count is still high, thus suggesting that HIV itself may have
an oncogenic role [17].
BL is seen less often in other immunodeficiency states. In immunodeficiency-
associated BL, nodal localization is frequent, as is bone marrow involvement [16, 18].
Morphology
Fig. 5.2 A starry-sky pattern is present, due to numerous benign macrophages [Hematoxylin and
Eosin, Original Magnification (O.M.): 20×]
in size those of the admixed starry-sky histiocytes. However, some cases of BL may
show greater nuclear pleomorphism, despite clinical, immunophenotypical, and
molecular characteristics all pointing to typical BL. In these cases the nucleoli may
be more prominent and fewer in number. In other cases, the tumor cells exhibit
plasmocytoid differentiation with eccentric basophilic cytoplasm and often a single
central nucleolus. Such cases can be observed in children but are more common in
immunodeficiency states [16]. These morphological features are in line with gene
expression profile studies suggesting that the morphological spectrum of BL is
broader than previously expected [21]. Undoubtedly, borderline cases between BL,
diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), and “double-hit” lymphoma do exist.
These might be better designated as “high-grade B cell lymphoma, unclassifiable”
and additional data, such as growth fraction and molecular abnormalities, should be
reported for prognostic information and to facilitate the choice of treatment.
Immunophenotype
Tumor cells express membrane IgM with light chain restriction and B-cell-associated
antigens CD19, CD20, CD22, and CD79a [19]. The neoplastic cells are negative
for CD23, CD44, CD138, cyclinD1, and TdT [22, 23]. BCL2 is characteristically
negative, although it may be expressed in some cases and its expression does not
5 Definition of Burkitt Lymphoma 85
Genetics
BL was the first lymphoma for which a recurrent chromosomal aberration was
detected. The molecular hallmark of BL is, in fact, a translocation of MYC at band
q24, from chromosome 8 to the Immunoglobulin (Ig) heavy chain region on chro-
mosome 14 [t(8;14)] at band q32 or, less commonly, to light chain loci on 2p12
[t(2;8)] or 22q11[t(8;22)]. The molecular breakpoint within the MYC locus at 8q24
depends on the translocation partners and shows considerable inter-individual varia-
tion. In the case of classic t(8;14), the breakpoints in 8q24 typically lie within the
centromeric (5¢) part of the MYC locus. These have been classified according to the
position of the chromosomal breakpoints in relation to the MYC gene transloca-
tions, with breakpoints in the first (5¢) exon or intron of MYC being designated as
class I, those with breakpoints immediately upstream of the gene designated as class
II, and those with distant breakpoints as class III. In sporadic and immunodeficiency-
associated BL, class I (and II) translocations are predominant, whereas in endemic
African cases, class III translocations with breakpoints dispersed over several hun-
dred kilo bases upstream of the gene are most frequent. The t(8;14) leads to activa-
tion of MYC on the der(14) chromosome, containing the intact coding region of the
gene. The deregulation of MYC plays a decisive role in lymphomagenesis, by driv-
ing the cells through the cell cycle [24, 25]. The breakpoints in the IGH locus at
14q32 usually occur 5¢ of the intron enhancer in a joining (J) or diversity (D) seg-
ment in endemic BL and 3¢ of the intron enhancer in the switch mu region in spo-
radic and HIV-associated BL, suggesting that these translocations occur during an
aberrant VDJ or class switch recombination process, respectively. There is also evi-
dence that Burkitt translocation might be the result of a misdirected somatic muta-
tion. Somatic and, in part, ongoing VH mutations have been observed in several
cases of BL [26]. Similarly, mutations of the MYC gene are very frequent, presum-
ably owing to somatic hypermutation driven by the immunoglobulin sequences jux-
taposed to the MYC locus on the derivative chromosome 14. Mutations in MYC may
further enhance its tumorigenicity and some of these mutations lead to decreased
86 L. Leoncini and H. Stein
expression of BIM, which binds and inactivates BCL-2 [27]. Enigmatically, in nor-
mal cells MYC activation leads to two counteracting effects, i.e. induction of prolif-
eration and apoptosis, but genetic and epigenetic alterations other than MYC have
been reported in BL. These include P53 point mutation and P16INK4a gene silenc-
ing by promoter methylation [28]. Other genetic alterations occurring in a subset of
BL, including P73, BAX, RBL2, BCL6, and A20 may promote cell growth and/or
antagonize apoptosis [13, 29, 30]. In recent years, global genetic analyses, includ-
ing conventional karyotyping, comparative genomic hybridization, and array-based
comparative genomic hybridization, have described secondary genomic alterations
in BL. One of the larger studies using CGH described gains of 12q, 22q, Xq, and
losses of 13q as the most frequent alterations in BL. Moreover, abnormalities in 1q and
7q were associated with an inferior outcome [31].
Two pivotal studies, aimed at unraveling the differences between various lymphoma
entities, have revealed the existence of BL cases with comparable GEP to the
classical profiles, but lacking the typical translocation [21, 33]. These cases were
88 L. Leoncini and H. Stein
negative for MYC translocation by FISH analysis using both split and fusion probes
for t(8;14), as well as using IgH and IgL split probes. There is increasing evidence
that about 10% of classical BL cases lack an identifiable MYC rearrangement. The
current WHO classification states that the diagnosis of this subset of BL must be
confirmed by typical morphology, immunophenotyping and clinical features. In
other words, these cases must be typical in all other aspects for a diagnosis of BL to
be made. Although none of the techniques currently used to diagnose genetic
changes can unambiguously rule out all MYC translocations [44], it can be postu-
lated that alternative molecular mechanisms, possibly resulting in MYC deregula-
tion, also exist.
Quantitative Reverse Transcriptase-Polymerase Chain Reaction (qRT-PCR) has
been used to identify two miRNAs, hsa-miR-34b and hsa-miR-9*, which are differ-
entially expressed between MYC translocation-positive and negative BL cases
[45, 46]. In particular, a strong down-regulation of both miRNAs was only reported
in MYC-translocation-negative BLs, due to epigenetic events. This finding suggests
that a dysregulated expression of miRNAs may represent one of the mechanisms
leading to MYC over-expression in BL cases lacking a MYC translocation, through
either a direct or indirect mechanism. In addition, it may be argued that MYC itself
also induces a specific miRNA pattern that, in turn, might be responsible for differ-
ential gene expression, and for functional alterations in tumor cells. A miRNA
microarray strategy has recently been developed in order to gain an overview of the
differences between the miRNA expression profile of MYC translocation-positive
and negative BL cases [46]. Using this approach, a clear-cut microRNA signature has
been identified, which distinguishes between MYC translocation-positive and nega-
tive BLs. Of note, these miRNAs control relevant biological processes, such as
angiogenesis, apoptosis, and cell proliferation, according to Gene Ontology catego-
ries. Furthermore, the impact of miRNA deregulation on the gene expression pattern
identified genes, which are more likely to be regulated by the selected miRNA.
The identification of miRNAs, which are specifically altered in BL cases lacking
MYC translocation, may represent a model for understanding the MYC regulatory
network not only in BL but also in other human cancers. In fact, their deregulation
may represent a valid alternative molecular mechanism leading to MYC over-
expression in the absence of genetic alteration.
can be used to identify some of the distinguishing features of cases with the
molecular signature of BL [36]. IGH, IGL, MYC, BCL2, and BCL6 rearrangement
can be detected by FISH in paraffin sections, while down-regulation of class I HLA
and CD44 and up-regulation of germinal center markers can be detected by immuno-
histochemistry [36]. In conclusion, no single parameter, such as morphology, genetic
analysis, or immunophenotyping, can be used as a gold standard for the diagnosis of
BL, but a combination of diagnostic techniques is necessary. The combined applica-
tion of genomics and immunophenotyping, in conjunction with consensus reviewed
histology and clinical features, appear to constitute a reliable approach that enables a
reproducible and clinically meaning full characterization of BL [19].
Most endemic BL and a large portion of other BL occur in locations in which the
necessary infrastructures and technical expertise are not currently available, and may
not be available in the near future. This aspect makes it pertinent to construct a diag-
nostic algorithm that would facilitate reliable diagnosis of BL using less resources.
Such a systematic approach is also relevant in the setting of developed countries, as
none of the parameters currently used in diagnostic evaluation can clearly distinguish
between BL, DLBCL/BL, and DLBCL on an individual basis.
A feasible scoring system has recently been proposed for the differential diagno-
sis between BL and non-BL. This scoring system [20] was applied to 252 cases and
was based on morphology, immunohistochemistry, and fluorescent in situ hybrid-
ization (FISH), employed in three phases: phase 1 (morphology with CD10 and
BCL2 immunostainings), phase 2 (CD38, CD44, and Ki-67 immunostainings) and
phase 3 (FISH on paraffin sections for MYC, BCL2, BCL6, and immunoglobulin
family genes). Using this algorithm, a specific diagnosis of BL or non-BL was
determined in 82, 92, and 95% cases in phase 1, 2, and 3, respectively (Fig. 5.3).
CLASSIC MORPHOLOGY
BCL2 protein negative
CD10 and BCL6 protein positive
Yes
Diagnosis of BL 82%
No
Ki-67> 95%
CD38 protein positive
CD44 protein negative
Yes
Diagnosis of BL 92%
No
FISH
Fig. 5.3 Using the algorithm MYC-IG fusion positive
proposed by Naresh et al. BCL2/BCL6-break negative
[20] a specific diagnosis of Yes
Diagnosis of BL 98%
BL or non-BL was No
determined in 82, 92, and
95% cases in phase 1, 2, and 3 No BL
90 L. Leoncini and H. Stein
Fig. 5.4 A monoclonal antibody against the adipophilin is able to specifically recognize cytoplasmic
vacuoles in typical BL (a); on the other hand, in non-BL adipophilin shows a weak positivity in
few cells (b) (a–b: Adipophilin stain, OM: 10×)
involved in lipid metabolism in BL. One of these genes (ADPF) encodes for a protein,
known as adipophilin (adipocyte differentiation-related protein), which is a member
of the PAT (perilipin, adipophilin, and TIP47) family of proteins and is mainly
involved in fatty acid transport and in preserving the cellular content of triacylglyc-
erols. A monoclonal antibody against the adipophilin is able to specifically recog-
nize the cytoplasmic vacuoles of BL by immunohistochemistry and was tested on a
large series of aggressive B-cell lymphomas (Fig. 5.4). The preliminary results sug-
gest adipophilin as a novel marker that maybe useful for the diagnosis of BL in
histological sections, especially in challenging cases, such as DLBCL/BL [49].
Acknowledgement The authors would like to thank Maria Raffaella Ambrosio, Cristiana Bellan,
Giulia De Falco, Stefano Lazzi and Anna Onnis, Department of Human Pathology and Oncology,
University of Siena, for their contribution.
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3. Harris NL, Jaffe ES, Stein H et al (1994) A revised European-American classification of lymphoid
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aetiological factors. Pathol Annu 6:337–363
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6. Wright DH (1997) What is Burkitt’s lymphoma? J Pathol 182:125–127
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11. Mbulaiteye SM, Anderson WF, Ferlay J et al (2012) Pediatric, elderly, and emerging adult-
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14. Levine PH, Kamaraju LS, Connelly RR et al (1982) The American Burkitt’s Lymphoma
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(including Burkitt’s) lymphomas and lymphoblastic lymphomas in children and young adults.
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92 L. Leoncini and H. Stein
36. Harris NL, Horning SJ (2006) Burkitt’s lymphoma – the message from microarrays. N Engl J
Med 354:2495–2498
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Genet 5:522–531
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39. Calin GA, Sevignani C, Dumitru CD et al (2004) Human microRNA genes are frequently
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16:861–865
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lymphoma share a homogenous micro RNA profile distinct from diffuse large B-cell lym-
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44. Jaffe ES, Harris NL, Vardiman JW et al (2011) Hematopathology. Elsevier, London
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Chapter 6
Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma
Brief History
Doctors working in West, East and Central Africa at the turn of the nineteenth
century described an unusual but fairly common jaw tumour in children [1–5].
It was in 1957 that Denis Burkitt, an Irish surgeon at Mulago Hospital in Uganda
published a report of a series of children with rapidly growing jaw tumours that he
thought were round cell sarcoma [1], but in 1960 O’Connor, a pathologist confirmed
that the tumours were of lymphoma lineage [2]. In 1964 Epstein, Achong and Barr,
three virologists, identified viral particles in the tumour cells; and the virus became
known as the Epstein Barr virus (EBV) [3]. Burkitt and two physician colleagues
from Uganda then toured the hospitals of Eastern and Central Africa to map the
geographical extent of the tumour [4, 5]. They found hospital records of children
with similar tumours from all the malarial areas of the countries that they visited
and proposed that malaria and this tumour (now called Burkitt’s tumour) were
linked in some way.
E. Molyneux (*)
Paediatric Department, College of Medicine, Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital,
Box 360, Blantyre, Malawi, C.Africa
e-mail: [email protected]
T. Israels
VU University Medical Center, Department of Pediatric Oncology,
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
e-mail: [email protected]
T. Walwyn
Princess Margaret Hospital for Children, Perth, Western Australia
e-mail: [email protected]
Epidemiology
Endemic BL (eBL) is found in areas of equatorial Africa, Brazil and Papua New
Guinea where malaria is holo-endemic and EBV infections are acquired in early
childhood [4–10]. In Africa this means that eBL is found in hot, wet areas of the
continent, 15° on either side of the equator where the rainfall is >50 mm per annum
[1]. This area is known as the Burkitt Belt and matches the epidemiological map of
malaria (Fig. 6.1). The annual incidence of eBL in the high-risk areas of Africa
is estimated at 40–50 per million children under 18 years of age per year [11].
It accounts for half of all the malignancies and 90% of the lymphomas diagnosed in
children [11]. The disease is more common in boys than in girls, with various reports
of being twice as common in rural boys but with less gender difference in urban
areas such as Nairobi where the ratio of boys to girls with eBL was reported as 1.2:1
[12, 13]. This is in contrast to resource-rich settings where the gender disparity is
more marked with about 80% of BL occurring in boys [14]. The peak age of presen-
tation is at about 6 years [13, 15]. In Kenya over a 10-year period from 1988 to
1997, the age of presentation was around 3 years of age in 5.6%, 6 years in 19.5%
and 17 years in 13.6% of cases. Four percent of the 1,005 cases of eBL were in
adults [15]. There is a smaller peak in presentation in early adolescence when the
sex difference is less marked and abdominal tumours predominate [16]. In Malawi
the mean age at presentation was 7.1 ± 2.9 years, ranging from 1 to 17 years. The
majority of children were boys (62.4% ± 2.2%) [12]. Almost all the children with
eBL come from poor rural communities [11].
Fig. 6.1 The (endemic) Burkitt lymphoma belt of Africa and the map of endemic malaria
6 Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 97
Cofactors
The important interactions of malaria, EBV, and eBL are covered in chapters. Other
cofactors have been raised as possible causative agents in the development of eBL.
The impact of HIV infection on the development of eBL is unclear. HIV-infected
children may present with eBL in less usual sites (e.g., bone, scalp) but initial reports
from Uganda claiming that there was an association between HIV and eBL were not
confirmed in Côte d’Ivoire, where none of the 78 HIV infected patients had eBL,
[17–19] nor in Zambia where no increase in the number of eBL cases was seen after
the HIV pandemic emerged [20].
Preliminary data from Malawi suggested an increased risk of BL but updated
analyses found no significant association. Twenty of 263 (7%) children with eBL
were HIV infected with an odds ratio (OR) for developing eBL of 2.2 [(95% CI
0.8−6.4); p = 0.13] [21]. Few HIV-positive children with eBL have been reported,
and so the role of HIV (if any) in the aetiology of eBL remains uncertain.
Arboviruses and schistosomiasis have both been suggested as causative cofactors
of eBL, but the evidence is not convincing [10].
The plants Euphorbia tirucalli and Jatropha caveas are common in areas where
eBL occurs. The dipterene esters found in their milky sap can activate latent EBV
and induce rearrangements of chromosomes in about 10% of EBV-infected B cells
exposed to them [22, 23]. Euphorbia sap is used in religious ceremonies, weddings
and at some twin births in the Lake Victoria Basin. It is also used by children as a
sticky “glue” when they make toys [22]. Fishermen, in the same area, use the sap as
a fish poison [24].
Sickle cell trait protects against malaria and eBL [23]. Sickle cell disease is more
common in West than East Africa that may account partially for the higher rates of
eBL in the eastern part of the African continent.
Cytology
eBL is a highly aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL). Its cells are
monomorphic, medium in size and have a high proliferation rate. The cells contain
coarse chromatin and prominent basophilic nucleoli though atypical variants may
show more nuclear pleomorphism. In tissue sections the cells appear to be moulded
and the cytoplasm is deeply basophilic with squared off cytoplasmic margins.
A “starry sky” appearance is due to scattered tingible body-laden macrophages that
contain apoptotic tumour cells.
98 E. Molyneux et al.
Chromosomal Rearrangements
Clinical Presentation
The classical and best known presentation of eBL is a rapidly growing jaw tumour.
The history is therefore short—usually 3–4 weeks. In Malawi median duration of
symptoms was 1 month ranging from 1 week to 36 months (personal communica-
tion EMM). In Ghana, Owuru et al. found 48% of children presented with facial
tumour; in Kenya it was 52% and in Malawi 63% [12, 15, 16].
The mass is painless and inside the mouth, the gum is swollen and teeth are dis-
placed at the site of the tumour. Facial tumours may affect the maxillary areas,
mandibles or be retro-orbital, pushing the eye forward and causing proptosis
(Figs. 6.2 and 6.3). Abdominal masses, often multiple, also are common (Fig. 6.3).
In Kenya 25% of 1,005 children over the periods 1988–1992 and 1993–1997 pre-
sented with abdominal masses and 14% presented with both facial and abdominal
tumours. The presentations in Ghana were similar; 23% were abdominal and 16%
were of face and abdomen [15, 16]. Central nervous system (CNS) involvement
occurs, even at diagnosis; in Malawi CNS involvement was found in 15% of cases,
in Kenya BL cells were found in cerebro-spinal fluid (CSF) in 18% of 1,005 cases
but the diagnosis was only suspected clinically in 6% [12, 28].
The Kenyan study also reported that CNS presentation tended to occur in older
children (11–15 years) compared to jaw masses that peaked in presentation at
6 years of age [28]. Paraplegia may be caused by direct cord involvement or pres-
sure from a tumour mass lying outside the dura. Figure 6.4 shows an MRI scan of a
boy with paraplegia due to eBL. eBL is multifocal and so the tumours often present
at several sites simultaneously. Table 6.1 shows the most common sites and Table 6.2
6 Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 99
Fig. 6.2 Patient presenting with Burkitt lymphoma of the jaw, peri-orbital area and abdomen.
Ultrasound scans of the abdominal masses
the presenting signs and symptoms in children with eBL in Blantyre Malawi. Other
centres also report that most children present with advanced disease [12, 15, 16].
Often the children are malnourished and may have other co-infections [12, 29].
Many children in the communities where these children live are chronically under-
nourished. In sub-Saharan Africa 42% of all children less than 5 years of age are
100 E. Molyneux et al.
Table 6.1 Location of Tumour location Present [N, (%)] Absent [N, (%)]
tumour(s)a for endemic
Burkitt’s Lymphoma patients Face 306 (63.3) 177 (36.7)
at QECH 2000–2009 Abdomen 303 (62.7) 180 (37.3)
(n = 475) Orbital 148 (30.6) 335 (69.4)
Limb 14 (2.9) 469 (97.1)
Bony 8 (1.7) 475 (98.3)
a
Patients could have more than one tumour location
stunted (the result of chronic poor nutrition) and 9% are wasted [30] (Table 6.3).
Many children with eBL have acute malnutrition adding to their underlying chronic
under-nutrition. Israels et al. [29] found that 69% of children with eBL were acutely
malnourished at admission. In a study reported by Hesseling et al. from Malawi a
third of children had a co-infection of one or more of malaria, schistosomiasis or
hookworm [12].
6 Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 101
Table 6.2 Common Symptom Present [N, (%)] Absent [N, (%)]
presenting signs of endemic
Burkitt’s lymphoma in Malawi CSF infiltrated 35 (10.3) 305 (89.7)
BM infiltrated 21 (6.3) 314 (93.7)
Lower limb weakness 19 (3.9) 463 (96.1)
Paraplegia 46 (9.5) 436 (90.5)
Urinary incontinence 36 (7.4) 446 (92.6)
Stool incontinence 31 (6.4) 451 (93.6)
Malnutrition 223 (46.3) 259 (53.7)
Lymphadenopathy 183 (37.9) 300 (62.1)
Hepatomegaly 113 (23.4) 369 (76.6)
Splenomegaly 209 (43.4) 273 (56.6)
Abdominal distension 151 (31.3) 331 (68.7)
Pedal oedema 81 (16.8) 401 (83.2)
Ascites 40 (8.3) 442 (91.7)
Weight loss 83 (17.2) 399 (82.8)
Symptoms at presentation in endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma
patients at QECH, 2000–2009 (n = 475)
Table 6.3 Some comparative demographic data of selected countries in sub-Saharan Africa,
North Africa, and Latin America
Malawi Senegal Tanzania Ghana S. Africa Morocco Brazil
Socioeconomic and demographic indicators
Population (millions)a 13.6 12.1 39.5 23.0 48.3 30.9 189.3
Population < 15 years (millions)a 6.4 5.8 17.6 8.9 14.0 8.9 53.0
Gross national income per 170 750 350 520 5,390 1,900 4,730
capita (US$)b
Total per capita expenditure on 64 72 N.A. N.A. 869 N.A. 765
health (US$)c
Per capita govt expenditure on 14 12 N.A. N.A. 437 N.A. 164
health (US$)c
Under 5 mortality rate (1990)b 221 149 161 120 60 89 57
Under 5 mortality rate/1,000 120 116 118 120 69 37 20
(2006)b
Under 5 mortality rank (2006)b 32 35 34 32 55 78 113
Life expectancy (years)b 47 53 52 59 50 71 72
Nutrition
Children <5 years, % stuntedb 46 16 38 22 251 18 111
Children <5 years, % wastedb 3 8 3 5 31 9 21
HIV
HIV prevalence rate (age 14.1 0.9 6.5 2.3 18.8 0.1 0.5
15–40 year) (2005)b
No. of HIV-infected children 91 5 110 25 240
(×1,000)b
Health
Access to clean water (%)b 73 76 62 75 88 81 90
a
US Census Bureau, International Data Base. http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idb/ [3]
b
UNICEF, The State of the World’s Children 2008: child survival. http://www.unicef.org/publica-
tions [2]
c
World Health Organization. National Health Accounts. http://www.who.int/nha/en/ [4]
102 E. Molyneux et al.
Differential Diagnosis
A careful history and examination will help in making the diagnosis of eBL espe-
cially with a classical jaw mass on presentation. Retro-orbital tumours could be,
amongst others, rhabdomyosarcoma or non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL). When the
eye is already destroyed it is important to elicit where the mass started (in the eye as
a white spot or outside the orbit) and the length of history. Retinoblastomas present
usually at an earlier age than eBL but advanced retinoblastoma and peri-orbital eBL
have been mistaken for each other. Abdominal masses are often very large and mul-
tiple. They may arise within any organ or from the retro-peritoneum. Renal involve-
ment is not uncommon and must sometimes be differentiated from a Wilm’s tumour.
Bone infiltration with eBL does occur and can be mistaken radiologically for a
primary bone cancer such as osteosarcoma or chronic osteomyelitis (Fig. 6.5).
Investigations
In many places where eBL is common the ability to undertake diagnostic tests is
limited. It is important to confirm the diagnosis and fine needle aspiration (FNA) is
easy to do and has a characteristic morphological appearance (Fig. 6.6). Of 475
cases of eBL that presented to QECH from January 2000 to August 2009, 83.8%
Fig. 6.6 Burkitt’s lymphoma: H&E stain. Classic Burkitt’s lymphoma showing starry sky appearance
Staging
Table 6.4 The St Jude Staging system for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in children
Stage I A single tumor (extranodal) or anatomic area (nodal) excluding the mediastinum or
abdomen
Stage II A single tumor (extranodal) with regional node involvement
Two or more nodal areas on the same side of the diaphragm
Two single (extranodal) tumors ± regional node involvement on the same side of the
diaphragm
A primary gastrointestinal tract tumor ± mesenteric lymph node involvement that is
grossly completely resected
Stage III Two single extranodal tumors on both sides of the diaphragm
Two or more nodal areas on both sides of the diaphragm
All primary intrathoracic tumors
All extensive primary unresectable intra-abdominal disease
All primary paraspinal or epidural tumors (CNS and CSF not involved)
Stage IV Any of the above with initial CNS or bone marrow involvement
Note: Elective surgery for presumed abdominal BL is not recommended and abdominal tumours
are classified as stage III disease
6 Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 105
isolated facial tumours, through to multiple facial tumour masses and disseminated
disease to CNS or bone marrow disease [41]. This system was modified further by
Nkrumah et al. in Ghana, during work supported, again, by the NCI. They more
clearly separated intra-abdominal disease from other non-facial sites [42]. Following
additional clinical observations in which it was found that the resection of limited
extent abdominal disease (of the ileo-caecal area) conferred a survival benefit, the
NCI staging system in its full form was reached [43]. In 1980, Murphy proposed the
staging system for non-Hodgkin Lymphoma that remains in use today [44]. Staging is
different from the treatment group assignment used by LMB and Berlin-Frankfurt-
Munster (BFM) protocols.
Treatment
Chemotherapy
Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL) was one of the first tumours to be found to be curable
with chemotherapy alone [47]. At a time when BL and most other neoplasms were
almost universally fatal, the prospect of long-term cure was tantalising and resulted in
the testing of multiple single cytotoxic agents together with various combinations
(Table 6.5) [13].
The agents that emerged at that time as being of particular use were cyclophos-
phamide (CPM), methotrexate (MTX) and vincristine (VCR). At the same time
there was concern, in conjunction with the discovery of the link with Epstein–Barr
Virus (EBV), that bolstering the host immune response could be an important ave-
nue for therapy. The immune suppression induced by cytotoxic therapies was
thought to be of concern for the same reason [38]. Approaches that were tested
include scarification with the attenuated mycobacterium tuberculosis vaccination
Bacille-Calmette-Guerin (BCG) [48]. Although various immunologically based
avenues continue to attract research attention, their places in the treatment of eBL in
resource-poor settings are minimal at present. The place of other non-chemothera-
peutic modalities such as radiotherapy and surgery waxed and eventually waned
over the following years. Of these, surgery alone has survived, though limited to
106 E. Molyneux et al.
Table 6.5 History of the treatments with single cytotoxic agents for endemic
Burkitt’s lymphoma
Druga No. of patients CR CR + PR % RR
Cyclophosphamide 163 43 132 81
Orthomerphalan 14 ? 14 100
Chlorambucil 12 3 10 83
Nitrogen mustard 61 10 44 72
Melphalan 26 8 16 61
Procarbazine 6 0 0 0
BCNU 5 0 4 80
Vincristine 21 10 17 81
Vinblastine 2 0 0 0
Methotrexate 45 11 26 58
6-Mercaptopurine 3 0 0 0
Cystosine arabinoside 3 2 2 100
Epipodophyllotoxin 3 2 2 100
Actinomysin D 4 1 4 100
CR complete response; PR partial response; RR response rate; BCNU, carmustine
a
Variety of doses and regimens were used [13].
well to the countries where total health expenditure per capita is <USD 50 per year.
This in turn leads to greater barriers to research. Only more recent multi-centre
studies (e.g. ongoing work of the International Network for Cancer Treatment and
Research, INCTR) have patient numbers comparable to those enrolled in the LMB
or BFM trials.
At a basic level the chemotherapy for eBL in the most resource-poor settings
has not changed significantly since the 1960s. In 1967 after his earlier papers had
described disease responses, Denis Burkitt published a paper describing long-term
remissions using one or two 30–40 mg/kg body weight doses of cyclophosphamide
(CPM) [47]. In 1970 Ziegler published a study of 57 patients comparing a single
40 mg/kg dose of CPM given 6 times, every 2–3 weeks with an event-free survival
(EFS) of 42% and 17% treatment-related mortality (TRM) in the 21 patients receiv-
ing the multi-dose regimen [41]. In 2009, Hesseling et al. published their 28-day
regimen of four doses of CPM; the first dose given intravenously followed by oral
dosing, combined with intrathecal methotrexate (MTX) and hydrocortisone as both
CNS treatment and prophylaxis (Fig. 6.8) [12]. This prospective single-centre study
of 40 patients achieved a projected 1 year EFS of 47% and TRM of 5% in conjunc-
tion with rigorous and pragmatic supportive care guidelines. Unfortunately this
“basic minimum” approach does not treat stage IV disease adequately (13% EFS).
Attempts to replicate these results in multi-centre settings have been carried out by
the French–African Pediatric Oncology Group GFAOP). Traoré et al. performed an
international multi-centre trial in Burkino Faso, Cameroon, Cote D’Ivoire, Mali,
Madagascar and Senegal. Over a 3-year period (April 2005 to March 2008) there
6 Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 109
were 257 consecutive patients with eBL registered in the central trial database.
After excluding patients with advanced disease (patients with CNS or bone marrow
disease, equivalent to LMB Group C disease), HIV and poor clinical condition, they
recruited 178 subjects. Their chemotherapy was stratified by St Jude stage at pre-
sentation and response at 21 days. Stage I/II patients received 3 weekly 1.2 g/m2
CPM doses (equivalent to 40 mg/kg) with concomitant intrathecal MTX/hydrocor-
tisone (HC), and Stage III/IV patients showing a complete response (CR) at 21 days
were given a further three doses together with intrathecal MTX/HC. After this CR
was observed in 83 of 176 evaluable patients (47%), and EFS was 33% at 18 months
with a TRM of 7% for CPM monotherapy. The authors commented that in compari-
son with the Hesseling Malawi results their approach was hampered by advanced
disease and a lower standard of supportive care [51].
There have been many studies performed to investigate the augmentation of a
basic CPM backbone with other agents in the African setting. The most commonly
used additional agents are vincristine (VCR) and methotrexate (MTX). The major-
ity of the earlier studies were hampered by the inherent difficulties of conducting
useful studies in situations where consistency of recruitment, treatment, supportive
care and follow-up are very difficult. There are now a number of studies aimed at
addressing this issue [52]. An example is a multicentre prospective study set in
Cameroon, using a pragmatic response and stage-based regimen that builds on the
backbone of the Hesseling et al. [12] Malawi 28-day first-line and subsequent
relapse protocols (Fig. 6.9). In this approach, after the initial “core” courses of che-
motherapy, children with known advanced disease (St Jude stage III or IV) or
incomplete response on either clinical examination or abdominal ultrasound receive
either additional CPM or additional agents (VCR and 1 G/m2 MTX). In another
multi-centre African study, INCTR are investigating a risk stratified 3 or 6 cycles of
COM (cyclophosphamide, vincristine and methotrexate) as a first-line regimen with
intrathecal cytotoxics followed by a secondline regimen of 4 cycles of ifosfamide,
etoposide and cytosine arabinoside for children with incomplete responses or
relapse within 3 months of completion of first-line therapy. The progression to inte-
gration of first-line and relapse strategies in a more seamless way is common to both
110 E. Molyneux et al.
these studies and the French African Cooperative Group (GFAOP) work. The
approach used in the Traoré et al. study was to proceed to second-line chemotherapy
if there was not a complete response at 21 days (1 week earlier than in the Hesseling
Cameroon study). This consisted of two courses of COPM (CPM 1.5 g/m2 over
3 days, vincristine, prednisone and 3 G/m2 HD MTX with intrathecal MTX/HC)
followed by two courses of CYM (low-dose cytarabine arabinoside, 3 G/m2 HD
MTX and further intrathecal MTX/HC and cytarabine arabinoside). Including the
initial CPM monotherapy, Traoré et al. were able to demonstrate an overall survival
(OS) of 50.5% with a total TRM of 14%. In the context of countries where the total
health expenditure per capita is under 30 US dollars per year, the average cost of
treatment per patient, in this protocol, of 685 US dollars is problematic.
6 Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 111
consider. The experience of the treating unit, together with factors discussed in the
supportive care section of this chapter, and local patient factors such as malnutrition
all play their part [58].
Supportive Care
Adequate and timely supportive care, even if not as intense as in high income coun-
tries, is essential. This should include measures to prevent and manage tumour lysis
syndrome (hyper-hydration, allopurinol and rarely frusemide). It is essential to be
able to manage malaria, fevers, oral candidiasis and herpetic ulceration. Anti-emetics,
for example metoclopramide, are needed to prevent nausea. Blood must be available
for transfusion and analgesia of varying strengths. A protocol for the rapid institu-
tion of antibiotics for fever is vital. A “fever guideline” needs to empower nurses to
initiate therapy without having to wait for a clinician. The choice of antibiotics
should be informed by local bacterial patterns of antimicrobial resistance.
Central lines are rarely used in sub-Saharan Africa. They are expensive, require
operative placement and need meticulous, aseptic handling. This means that chil-
dren have frequent venous sampling for full blood counts, and when febrile, for
blood cultures. Finger pricks are carried out to make thick blood films to look for
malarial parasitaemia. It is not surprising if children are traumatised by frequent
blood sampling and intra-thecal injections. It is important to do these as frequently
as necessary but not unnecessarily. The fact that central lines are not in place also
means that the causative agents of bacteraemia tend to be similar to those found in
other community-acquired infections and not the line-induced non-pathogens of
well resourced settings.
Oral tumours can be ulcerated on presentation and may have superimposed
secondary infections. The infection causes pain and an offensive smell. Liquid met-
ronidazole (or powder from crushed metronidazole tablets) swilled around the
mouth reduces the pain, controls the infection and as chemotherapy is given and the
tumour regresses, the problem resolves.
Nutritional support can be a major need. Malnourished children have reduced
immunity, increased risk of infection and increased risk of surgical complications
and mortality [59]. Malnutrition is also associated with more severe chemotherapy-
related neutropenia [29, 60] (Table 6.7). Hospital food is often inadequate and par-
ents are far from home. Children may be anorexic because of the disease or the
drugs and oral sores make swallowing painful. Many mothers fear naso-gastric
tubes (as a sign of poor prognosis) and will not allow their children to have one
inserted making it necessary to rely on high calorie oral foods. One such food is a
peanut based, high density, ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) with added
micronutrients. It has a calorific value of 540 kcal per 100 g which means that a
small quantity can provide good nutritional support, essential in the anorexic child.
Furthermore it tastes good and children like it [61].
6 Endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 113
Pain control is vital. The WHO ladder for pain management guides therapy [62].
Oral morphine is cheap and should be available to the children who need it.
Unfortunately, availability of morphine in low-income countries is still often a
problem, due to several reasons such as import regulations and inappropriate fear of
addiction. Not all children will be cured and many will benefit from palliative care.
Members of the palliative care team should be part of the core clinical team for
cancer care. In our units we do ward rounds together and the palliative care team has
the time to counsel families, to give pain control, to assist with transport home or
communicate with distant relatives. They take part in the care of many of the children
who will eventually do well, but at critical times in the hospital stay they may have
needed, for example, extra time, pain control, mouth care or bladder training.
There is urgent need to treat retro-orbital masses as increasing pressure on and
distortion of the retinal vessels may lead to blindness, orbital ischaemia and loss of
the eye.
Monitoring Treatment
Children require high fluid intake immediately prior to and during the time they
receive chemotherapy. This is especially important when there is a large tumour
load. Careful monitoring of fluid input and urine output is required. Body tempera-
ture should be checked at least twice a day.
Full blood counts and differentials need to be done regularly. At a minimum
they should be done before each cycle of treatment and the absolute neutrophil
count should be greater than 500 cells × 106/mm3 for chemotherapy to be given.
The haemoglobin level, neutrophil count and platelet count may all fall and require
chemotherapy to be delayed or show the need for a blood transfusion. Ideally liver
function tests and urea and electrolytes should also be monitored regularly, though
this may not be possible in some centres.
Daily physical examination should be carried out looking for signs of pallor,
infection, oral mucositis or bleeding. Evidence of peripheral neuropathy is uncommon
with the use of vincristine but constipation and jaw pain are common complaints
when it is given.
Some children may develop diarrhoea or typhlitis requiring appropriate rehydra-
tion and antibiotics. Others may have nausea and vomiting and will need fluids and
114 E. Molyneux et al.
Complications
Burkitt’s lymphoma tumours are very chemo-sensitive which means that with che-
motherapy large tumours will rapidly get smaller producing large quantities of cell
debris and waste products that are excreted through the kidneys. If hydration is
inadequate and renal protection is not provided with a drug such as allopurinol,
there is the risk of acute tumour lysis syndrome. In this syndrome the kidneys are
damaged by high uric acid and phosphate loads; urine output is reduced and renal
failure ensues. Intracellular potassium is released in to the blood with cell destruc-
tion and if serum potassium levels rise rapidly, ventricular fibrillation and cardiac
arrest can occur with a sudden unexpected death shortly after starting chemother-
apy. The prevention of tumour lysis syndrome in BL in resource-rich settings has
been much improved with the availability of uric oxidase. Unfortunately the cost is
prohibitive to its use in resource-poor settings.
Leucopenia makes a child vulnerable to infection and any fever must be identified
and treated early. Mucositis is painful and makes feeding difficult. It also exposes
the child to invasive infections. Anaemia and/or thrombocytopenia, if severe, will
require blood transfusion and platelet transfusions if they are available. Children
should sleep under bed nets on the ward and be kept well away from the children
admitted with infections.
Outcomes
and to receive cotrimoxazole prophylaxis for the first 4–8 weeks at home. Children
with eBL are usually followed up for 1 year post treatment. If they remain disease
free during this time period they are considered cured.
Relapse
The frequency of relapse will depend on the stage of presentation and the intensity
of first-line treatment given. There are some tumours that do not respond to treat-
ment or respond very little, and this is probably due to genetic factors that are not
evident clinically. In the 178 patients given CPM monotherapy by Traoré et al., 83
achieved complete remission and of these, 23 relapsed (28%). Relapses principally
occur within 6–12 months after diagnosis, as illustrated by the event-free survival
curves found by Hesseling et al. (Fig. 6.10). Once the eBL patient is over a year
beyond diagnosis and start of treatment, risk of relapse is less than 5%, as illustrated
when children were still in complete remission a year after treatment in a study with
long-term follow up reported from Ghana [63]. Relapses occur at the original site or
not infrequently in the central nervous system, especially if CNS prophylaxis is
suboptimal. In resource-rich countries, the treatment options for relapsed disease
are restricted to high-dose myeloablative chemotherapy followed by allo- or auto-
graft. Where CPM monotherapy or similar first-line chemotherapy has been used,
there are various possible approaches using further CPM together with additional
Lengthy hospital stays are not conducive to happiness unless efforts are made to
prevent children and parents getting bored and homesick. A play lady is a very
important addition to the caring team. She can play with the children, help them
with reading, writing, puzzles or drawing. She distracts them from discomfort or
the anticipation of painful procedures. She can often talk with and listen to the
older, (adolescent) child who is finding the whole business of illness, hospital stay,
treatment and loss of self-control difficult and distressing.
School work for the older children keeps them up to date with their peers at
school back at home and occupies the children. Limited and supervised television
viewing is appreciated by both the children and their parents.
We have found that giving the guardians a small amount of money to go and buy
some foodstuffs to cook together over the weekends is enjoyed, builds a community
spirit, makes a change from the monotonous hospital diet and helps pass the time.
Future Directions
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Chapter 7
Non-endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma
Introduction
There were, for about three decades and until the association and characterization of
HIV/AIDS malignancies, two categories of Burkitt’s lymphoma: endemic and non-
endemic. The latter was described soon after the former. However, these two share
many characteristics but vary in proportions and extent of the major defining fea-
tures. Indeed the initial characteristics of the non-endemic Burkitt’s lymphoma were
epidemiological and could have fitted as a subclass of the Burkitt’s disease due to
exhibiting only proportions of the initially described entity.
Historical Perspective
There are clues that what is known to us today as BL was described as early as the
turn of the twentieth century. In 1904, Sir Albert Cook described lesions of malignant
tumors. While in Mengo Hospital in Uganda, he saw a little Mohammandan child
with large malignant tumor.
The child’s clinical description and the drawings are said to be still available in
his clinical records, which are contained in case records of Mengo Hospital.
Early African carvings suggest that a tumor of similar descriptions had been
present in the equatorial Africa for a long time. In Nigeria, case of round cell tumor
in the jaw, orbit, and ovary was described in 1934.
In Lorenza Marquez, plaster models of patients who obviously had BL also sug-
gested the existence of the tumor in Mozambique sometime long before Denis
Burkitt’s description of lymphomatous lesions, which may have been BL. Several
reports emanating from Ghana, Rwanda, Burundi, Cameroon, and other countries of
the present central Africa States suggest the existence of BL decades prior to the initial
description by Burkitt’s. In 1948 Davis made remarks on the undue frequency of the
tumor of reticuloendothelial system in Uganda. In 1953, lymphosarcoma of the ovary
in young girls was described by Capponi, while Thjis in 1957 drew attention to the
prevalence of neoplasma of the reticuloendothelial system in the Congo, now
Democratic Republic of Congo. In the same year Burkitt’s first, now historic descrip-
tion, defined the tumor as a round cell sarcoma recognizable by certain features and
he stressed the high frequency of the tumor in children, but also pointed out that simi-
lar tumors were found in the abdominal viscera. After Burkitt’s publication, numerous
reports appeared in other parts of the world describing similar lymphomatous growths
that were henceforth referred to as Burkitt’s tumor. These culminated in the descrip-
tion in the two well-described types. It is not quite clear whether some of these early
descriptions were all typical Burkitt’s as it has now emerged that the distinctions
purely on geographical and clinical parameters are not absolute. Indeed intermediate
forms are described in some tropical countries and Brazil’s series attest to this group.
Purists would therefore use the terms African and American types for endemic and
non-endemic BL, respectively, to avoid the gray area of possible intermediate type.
Current Concepts
Geo-Demographic Features
within the tropical latitudes that has features intermediate types of BL distribution.
Comparatively, BL is rare in the temperate regions. In Europe, North and South
America and Oceanic Age Standardized Rates (ASRs) in most populations are less
than 1 per million in many countries. In the USA, malignant lymphoma accounts for
only 10% of pediatric malignancies, being third in relative frequency after acute
leukemia and brain tumors with BL comprising approximately 1–2% of all children
tumors, and about one-fifth of childhood non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. The rate among
US whites is approximately 2 per million, while that of the blacks is at 1.1 per mil-
lion and accounts for only between 2.9 and 9.3% of all childhood cancers in coun-
tries of North America. American series vary also according to the investigating
teams. Data from the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) study of
the National cancer institute show an overall annual incidence of 1.4 per million
among white male and 0.4 per million among white female between.
Other temperate countries also document nearly similarly low rates. In the con-
tinent of Asia, the levels are low and vary from country to country. For example in
Japan, reported by Aya Hanai Isaburo Fujimoto on the age group 0–14, the ASR
was 0.07 and with Crude Incidence (CI) of 0.07, while that of Seoul Korea Cancer
Registry CI of 10. Kuwait Cancer registry, CI of 7.3, Philippines, Manila and Rizal
Cancer registry CI was 0.3 and Singapore Cancer registry reported no BL.
Nonetheless European experience with BL varies from one country to another.
Danish Cancer registry estimates CI of 2.3. Finland cancer registry reported no BL
till after 2000. Since then case reports show that 4–5 cases of Burkitt’s lymphoma
tumor are registered annually. While the national registry of childhood tumors, for
England and Wales approximates CI of 0.5 and their counterpart in the United
Kingdom Scotland had a CI of 0.4. The temperate regions in the in the Southern
Hemisphere; Australian pediatric cancer registry documented CI of 1.8.
Age
Gender
The sporadic BL has an overall ratio of male to female of 3.5:1 but vary from one
region to another. The USA, it is more common in male than in female children.
Seoul Korea Cancer Registry documents M: F of 1:3 European experience with BL
also showed some variations. Danish Cancer registry recorded M: F 1.6:1. While
124 M.W. Otieno
the national registry of childhood tumors, for England and Wales M: F 3:2. Data
from the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) study of the National
Cancer Institute show an overall annual of 1.4 per million among white male and
0.4 per million among white female between 1973 and 1981. In the Southern
Hemisphere, Australian pediatric cancer registry shows M: F of 3:2. In Japan,
reported by Aya Hanai Isaburo Fujimoto on the age group 0–14, M: F of 2:1.
Chromosomal
Cytology
Histology
The features are characterized by monomorphic neoplastic lymphoid cell with inter-
spersed histiocytes creating the typical starry sky appearance pattern. The lym-
phoma consists of a monomorphic infiltrate of the lymph node by medium-sized
7 Non-endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 125
cells showing round nuclei with several nucleoli and basophilic cytoplasm.
Numerous benign macrophages confer a histologic pattern referred to a starry sky.
Involvement of the peripheral blood and bone marrow may occur.
Immunology
The cell markers are of B-cell characteristics. The malignant cells express surface
immunoglobulins M (lgM) almost always in association with either the kappa or the
lambda light chains. Also these cells express HLA-DR antigens and frequently
express CALLA antigens and do not contain TdT a marker for T-cells.
Viral Linkage
The etiology of BL remains speculative but it is one of those malignancies for which
the etiologic hypothesis has been focused on an infective agent based on its geo-
graphical pattern. The EBV determinants tend to be negative in the sporadic or
American population with BL. Biopsy specimens from NEBL contain the EBV
genome in only 15–20% of the cases. Other features noted are that only one-third or
less of the American BL had an association with EBV, and 20% apparently had
never even been infected with EBV. Ziegler 1981 had reported similar data earlier
from non-endemic cases. Overall, the reported risk factors for BL in the industrial-
ized countries may be quite different. Perhaps, the more recent observation on the
occurrence of BL in conjunction with infection of which about 35–40% was also
EBV positive.
Differences observed between ethnic groups in Singapore where the Chinese
appeared to have a delayed infection rate compared to the Indians. A report from
Brazil shows intermediate EBV markers between the regions of endemic and spo-
radic forms. Thus the proportion of cases of BL associated with EBV is lower in
areas of low and intermediate incidence of the lymphoma and the subtypes of the
virus involved may differ.
Clinical Manifestations
It is notable that due to the initial anatomic sites involved the sporadic BL is a highly
aggressive disease with a propensity to invade the bone marrow and CNS, with a
reported incidence of 30–38% and 13–17% of cases, respectively. Lymph nodes
involvement is more common among adults than children. The jaw is infrequently
involved in sporadic Burkitt’s and the abdomen is the most common site, particu-
larly the terminal ileum, cecum, and intra-abdominal lymph nodes. However, other
126 M.W. Otieno
anatomical sites namely the ovary, kidney, pancreas, liver, omentum, Waldeyer’s
ring, and breast are often involved. Breast involvement is observed almost exclu-
sively in girls at the onset of puberty and in lactating women.
One-third of the patients have B symptoms at presentation, unexplained fever
higher than 38 °C in the prior month, weight loss greater than 10% in the past
6 months, and recurrent drenching night in the prior month. Patients with abnormal
diseases usually present with abdominal mass or pain, bowel obstruction, gastroin-
testinal bleeding, or a syndrome mimicking acute abdomen and constituting onco-
logic emergency.
The presentation is with abdominal swelling, often in the area of the ileocecal
valve. About 90% of American children with Burkitt’s lymphoma have abdominal
tumors. Others may develop tumors in the testes, ovaries, skin, nasal sinuses, or
lymph nodes. In adults, Burkitt’s lymphoma frequently produces a bulky abdomen
and may involve the liver, spleen, and bone marrow. Terminal BL disease often pres-
ents with bone marrow involvement. Other commonly encountered anatomic sites
are liver, retroperitoneal nodes, and ultimately stomach and intestines and the only
exceptionally involved sites are lymph nodes. Infrequent sites of involvement are
bone, breasts, thyroid, parotid, and skin. Head and neck manifestations of Burkitt’s
lymphoma in less than a quarter of the reported cases and usually present as cervical
adenopathy. Usual this subset with lymphoma of the head and neck presents with
extranodal disease of the soft tissues or bone of the face.
The primary sites and other involved anatomical tissues generate the presenting
features. This type of BL often affects the bowel and the lymph nodes in abdomen,
causing symptoms such as pain, feeling sick, and diarrhea. It can sometimes cause
intestinal obstruction and may in some cases be the initial presentation. Lymph
nodes in the chest or throat can cause obstruction in these site, while different signs
and symptoms depends on the part of the body involved by the BL. It may involve
the bone marrow, spleen, and liver. Sometimes it may have already spread to the
brain and spinal cord. BL often affects the bowel and the lymph nodes in the abdo-
men, causing symptoms such as pain, feeling sick, and diarrhea. BL can cause dif-
ferent symptoms depending on where else in the body it has spread. It may involve
the bone marrow, spleen, and liver. Sometimes it may have already spread to the
brain and spinal cord manifesting with central nervous signs and symptoms. It
should be borne in mind that BL often presents as an emergency associated with
abdomen obstruction, rupture of the viscera, peritonitis, central nervous system,
brain, and spinal cord sudden affections, and rarely urinary tract acute obstructions.
Most of these will also manifest with symptoms, known as B symptoms, include
sweating at night, unexplained high temperatures, and weight loss.
7 Non-endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 127
Extensive involvement of the stomach may cause pain, vomiting on eating, and
complicate with hematemesis. Two of these demonstrated abnormalities of CT
examination manifested by either thickening of the gastric wall or thickening of the
gastric folds, but the lesions are less well shown than the upper gastrointestinal
series. Posterior mediastinal extension along the esophagus can exhibit with both
abdominal and chest symptoms. Diffuse involvement of the upper abdomen mani-
fest by obstructive symptoms in the paraesophageal region and partially obscured
concomitant pleural effusion.
Tumor masses involving the pelvis may cause pain and mass effects on the tis-
sues of rectum and urinary system.
Intra-abdominal tumors complicate with ascites, obstruction, infection, and may
mimick a variety of diseases.
Ascites
Ascites is present on about 24%. Peritoneal tap in many instances has malignant BL
cells. The ascites are generally mild to moderate in extent. Radiological examina-
tion usually required to define the location of small amounts of ascites particularly
in the pararectal fossae. In larger ascetic collections tumor may be obscured. Massive
ascites render discrimination of intra-abdominal masses extremely difficult, but
such a quantity of ascites fluid. Usually ascites is associated with abnormal pelvis
masses in most cases and concomitant pleural effusion is present in over 70% of
such cases. Also a combination of ascites fluid and disseminated peritoneal neo-
plasm is found in most of the cases
Retroperitoneal
Liver
Site Percentage
Abdomen 25.4
CNS 11.4
Jaw 11.4
Breast 20.2
Lymph nodes 11.4
Miscellaneous 20.2
100
Miscellaneous sites include: skeletal system, bone, thyroid gland, and oral pharyngeal
Spleen
Of the tissues of the reticuloendothelial system spleen is rarely involved with 14%
of patients having splenomegaly. In normal-sized spleen a focal lesion similar to
lesion visualized in the liver is present.
Renal
Involvement of the kidneys is frequent and the enlargement when present represents
BL involvement of the kidneys. In most cases the kidneys are mildly enlarged. Some
of the cases in addition have unilateral primary renal involvement with perirenal
extension. Encasement of the ipsilateral ureter by massive retroperitoneal neoplasm
can lead to hydronephrosis.
Cases with massive tumor quickly lead to nephropathy. In most cases there is
clinical evidence of elevated serum uric acid levels and decreased creatinine
clearance.
Chest
Occasionally patients have mediastinal masses. The anterior mediastinal mass with
a right cervical mass. A posterior mediastinal mass was an upward extension of a
diffusely infiltrating upper abdominal mass and was manifested by widening of the
posterior mediastinum. Pleural effusions are noted in some cases and these are asso-
ciated with ascites. No pleural or parenchymal masses, or hilar adenopathy is
observed to accompany these chest changes.
7 Non-endemic Burkitt’s Lymphoma 129
Miscellaneous
Bone lesion involving the right posterior iliac bone, the lower limb particularly the
tibia, and the humerus is observed in about 4% of cases. Massive inguinal adenopathy
and extending into the soft tissue of the thigh evolve rapidly in these cases.
There is apparent association between age and anatomic primary sites of the disease,
although the feature is not as remarkable in non-endemic BL. The salient features are
that stage A predominates in the early years 3–7. While from 8 to 15 years of age
there is visible decrease in the stage A proportions. At 14 years the least is stage A
with 11 %. In all age groups stage B is the least. Stage C appears to be increasing in
proportion from age 5 years and 9 years and a rise again with a peak at I2 years fol-
lowed by a slight decline and a rise. Stage D clearly shows a rising trend with advanc-
ing years. Starting with 20% at age 3 followed by 33% at 4 years, 39% at 10, peaks
at 14 with 55% after the age of 16 years the predominant stages are C and D.
When all sites are considered at an initial evaluation and use of sensitive meth-
ods to detect involvement there are 38 sites and site combinations. Overall, in 63%
are single sites consisting of any of the abdomen, maxilla, breast, mandibles, thy-
roid, oral pharyngeal, or skeletal involvement. In 37% of instances, more than ana-
tomic site will be found involved. However, in adult cases there is no demonstrable
actual single or isolated mandible, maxilla, skeletal, or miscellaneous sites as in
those less than 16.
In adults the proportions of all involved sites, the order are abdomen, breast,
miscellaneous and lymph nodes 11.4%, breast 20.2%, miscellaneous and lymph
nodes 9.1%, in all there are seven sites involved compared to those in less than
16 years old. Furthermore in this age group the proportion distribution from lymph
node enlargement is noted. Also observed are comparatively high CNS 11.4% pro-
portions. Although BL in adults tend to present with more and diffuse site involve-
ment, the breast has only occasionally been detected; however, cervical lymph node
involvement is infrequent.
Staging
Stage I: The lymphoma is either limited to one group of lymph nodes either above or
below the diaphragm, or is in an organ or part of the body other than the lymph nodes.
Stage II: The lymphoma is either in two or more lymph node groups on the same
side of the diaphragm, or is in only one organ or site other than the lymph nodes but
also involves surrounding lymph nodes.
Stage III: The lymphoma is present in groups of lymph nodes on both sides of the dia-
phragm. It may involve an organ or site outside the lymph nodes, the spleen, or both.
Stage IV: The lymphoma is disseminated with more organs outside the lymph nodes
involved. There may or may not be involvement of lymph nodes that are remote
from the affected organs.
In all the NEBL is a severe disease, affects older children and the adult popula-
tions. There are usually few or no stage A and B. The dominant stages are D and C.
Indeed, the duration to presentation is shorter in stages C and D. The stages A and
B tend to be detected at much earlier time due to conspicuousity of the sites.
It is fair to foresee more information coming about sporadic Burkitt’s lymphoma
and final finding of signatures that will obviate the descriptions in terms of largely
geographical and clinical basis.
References
1. Blum KA, Lozanski G, Byrd JC (2004) Adult Burkitt leukemia and lymphoma. Blood
104:3009–3020
2. Kanbar AH (2012) Burkitt lymphoma and Burkitt-like lymphoma. http://emedicine.medscape.
com/article/1447602-overview
3. Cuneo A, Castoldi GL (2001) Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL). Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol
Haematol. http://AtlasGeneticsOncology.org/Anomalies/BurkittID2077.html
4. Swerdlow SH, Campo E, Harris NL et al (eds) (2008) WHO classification of tumors of
hematopoietic and lymphoma tissues, 4th edn. World Health Organization, Lyon
5. Kemeny MM, Magrath IT, Brennan MF (1982) The role of surgery in the management of
American Burkitt’s lymphoma and its treatment. Ann Surg 196(1):82–86
6. Burkitts D (1958) A sarcoma involving the jaws in African children. Br J Surg 46:218
7. Berarad CW, O’Connor GT, Thomas LB et al (1969) Histopathological definition of Burkitt’s
tumour. Bull World Health Organ 40(4):601–607
8. William RH, Pike MW, Smith PG, Day NE et al (1978) Space-time clustering of Burkitts
Lymphoma in the West Nile District of Uganda: 1961–1975. Br J Cancer 37:109–118
9. Levine PH, Cho BR, Connelly RR et al (1975) The American Burkitt’s lymphoma registry: a
progress report. Ann Intern Med 83:31–36
10. Wang MB, Strasnick B, Zimmerman MC (1992) Extranodal American Burkitt’s lymphoma of
the head and neck. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 118:193–199
11. Crawshaw J, Sohaib SA, Wotherspoon A, Shepherd JH (2007) Primary non-Hodgkin’s lym-
phoma of the ovaries: imaging findings. Br J Radiol 90:155–158
12. Lister J, Miklos JA, Swerdlow SH, Bahler DW (1996) A clonally distinct recurrence of
Burkitt’s lymphoma at 15 years. Blood 88(4):1407–1410
Chapter 8
AIDS-Associated Burkitt’s Lymphoma
Introduction
Peter M. Mwamba and Scot C. Remick were supported in part by NIH grant nos.: D43
CA153707.
P.M. Mwamba
Haematology and Blood Transfusion, Department of Human Pathology,
University of Nairobi College of Health Sciences, Nairobi, Kenya
e-mail: [email protected]
S.C. Remick (*)
Laurence and Jean DeLynn Chair of Oncology, Mary Babb Randolph Cancer Center,
West Virginia University, School of Medicine, Morgantown, WV, USA
e-mail: [email protected]
Epidemiology
Present estimates are that nearly 4% of AIDS patients in the USA have cancer and
compared to the general population, HIV-infected individuals have a 77-fold
increased risk of developing non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma [9]. Despite a decline in
incidence over the years, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma is now the most common malig-
nancy diagnosed and most common cause of cancer mortality in HIV-infected indi-
viduals in the USA [9, 10]. Recent estimates in the USA also confirm that 5.5% of
diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and 19.4% of BL cases occurred among persons with
AIDS [11]. These lymphomas appear to be more common in males than in females,
regardless of antiretroviral use, and there now appears to be a trimodal age-specific
incidence pattern for BL in the USA, with the middle-age peak largely composed of
cases with AIDS [9, 12]. After the widespread implementation of highly active anti-
retroviral therapy (HAART)/combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) [more con-
temporaneous terminology], the risk of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma decreased
initially, especially in the western world, and has essentially remained stable since
[13–15]. While distribution and access to cART in AIDS epicenters of the world
such as sub-Saharan Africa is improving, the overall impact of such therapy on the
incidence of AIDS-associated lymphoma including BL is less apparent. Until cART
is widely disseminated and routinely available in sub-Saharan Africa, AIDS-related
lymphoma and BL and other intermediate to high-grade lymphomas in particular
remain significant causes of morbidity and mortality in this region of the world as well.
Burkitt’s lymphoma historically has been a rare tumor in the industrialized world.
It is presently highly associated with AIDS, and among HIV-infected patients is on
the order of 100-fold or higher incidence than in patients without HIV infection [9,
16, 17]. For the most part there is consistent epidemiologic data from prospective
cohort and retrospective studies in the USA and Europe that the overall incidence of
AIDS-related BL has either remained stable or declined from the pre-HAART to
current HAART (cART) therapeutic eras [18–23]. In the large international collab-
orative study reported in 2000 on HIV infection and cancer [across three conti-
nents—United States, Europe, and Australia (notably Africa excluded) comprising
nearly 48,000 HIV-infected cases and 2,702 tumors] there was no evidence that the
incidence of BL had changed over time, though admittedly the number of BL cases
8 AIDS-Associated Burkitt’s Lymphoma 133
was small [18]. In the EuroSIDA cohort, small retrospective German and Los
Angeles, California studies the incidence of BL was reported to have decreased over
time [19–22]. A single 2001 study in France, however, reported a trend (not statisti-
cally significant, p = 0.17) of increased proportion of AIDS-associated BL cases
from 17.7% in the pre-HAART to 26.8% in the HAART era [23].
In Uganda there is considerable published data from the Kampala Cancer Registry,
which is the most mature tumor registry on the African continent. In 1989–1991, a
decade after the onset of the AIDS epidemic, Kaposi’s sarcoma was the most com-
mon cancer in men, the second most frequent in women, and there was a 40-fold
increase in children [24, 25]. By the mid-to-late 1990s the incidence of non-Hodg-
kin’s lymphoma had risen and it was recognized that HIV infection was significantly
associated with increased risk of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma with an OR of 6.2 (95%
CI 1.9–19.9) [26, 27]. Through 2002 the Uganda AIDS-Cancer Registry Match study
reported that the increased risk of AIDS-defining neoplasms Kaposi’s sarcoma,
non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and cervical cancer remained high in HIV-infected cases
[28]. Hodgkin’s disease, an EBV-associated disease, was also noted for the first time
to be seen in increased incidence in patients with underlying HIV infection [29].
By 2006, while the incidence of Kaposi’s sarcoma declined in men, remained rela-
tively constant in women, and rates of pediatric disease declined by a third, and the
burden of AIDS-associated cancers, especially non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (precise
histopathological characterization and specifically BL was not published) and cer-
vical cancer, remained high [29]. A period prevalence study conducted in Nairobi,
Kenya between1992 and 1996 clearly identified a threefold increase in the incidence
of adult BL that was attributable to HIV infection [30].
Pathogenesis
(especially interleukin-6 and interleukin-10); altered bcl-6, p53, and c-myc oncogene
expression and coexisting viral infection(s) have all been implicated in the patho-
genesis of lymphoma in this setting as well [32–40]. A proposed molecular and
histogenic model of AIDS lymphoma pathogenesis identifies four major pathways
[32]. In the first, BL is characterized by mild immunodeficiency, germinal center-
derived B-cells, multiple genetic lesions, and a highly proliferative tumor. Large
cell (centroblasts) and immunoblastic (immunoblasts) lymphoma, associated with
intermediate immunodeficiency, are comprised of post-germinal center B-cells,
which can be distinguished on the basis of bcl-6 expression (large cell) and LMP-1
expression (immunoblastic). Primary CNS lymphoma can be considered a variant
of immunoblastic lymphoma with severe immunodeficiency and ubiquitous asso-
ciation with EBV infection. Lastly, a fourth pathway is AIDS-associated primary
effusion lymphoma, caused by KSHV infection and frequently associated with EBV
infection as well.
subtypes of BL [42]. There is evidence that the frequency of the c-myc translocation
from chromosome 8 onto regulatory elements of immunoglobulin genes is increased
in asymptomatic HIV-infected individuals compared to those who are not infected
[43]. It has also been demonstrated that activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID),
an enzyme essential for antibody diversity in B cells, is markedly elevated in periph-
eral blood mononuclear cells of HIV-infected individuals who went on to develop
non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma compared to HIV-seronegative controls, with the highest
levels seen in BL cases [44–46]. While increased c-myc translocation as well as AID
over-expression appear to be demonstrably increased in HIV-infected individuals,
the precise molecular events contributing to these cellular changes are unknown.
Pathologic Features
With respect to morphology, the WHO Classification describes classic BL and two
variants: Burkitt’s lymphoma with plasmacytoid differentiation and atypical
Burkitt’s/Burkitt-like lymphoma [1]. Classic BL is found in cases of endemic BL
136 P.M. Mwamba and S.C. Remick
and most cases of sporadic BL affecting children but in only a minority of adults
with sporadic and immunodeficiency-associated BL. Neoplastic cells are uniform
and medium-sized (their nuclei are no larger than the nuclei of admixed histiocytes),
with round nuclei and several or multiple small basophilic nucleoli with moderately
abundant cytoplasm. The classic “starry sky” pattern is derived from macrophages
engulfing highly proliferative tumor cells. Burkitt’s lymphoma with plasmacytoid
differentiation and atypical BL both tend to have greater nuclear pleomorphism
than classic BL, and both tend to have a smaller number of more prominent nucleoli.
The plasmacytoid variant is highly associated with AIDS, makes up 20% of cases
of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and in addition has monotypic cytoplasmic immuno-
globulin. Atypical BL is further characterized by the translocation t(8;14)(q24;q32)
or one of its variants, or rearrangement of the c-myc gene. Burkitt’s lymphoma,
regardless of subtype, typically expresses monotypic surface IgM; pan-B-cell anti-
gens, including CD19, CD20, CD22, and CD79a; and co-expresses CD10, bcl-6,
CD43, and p53, but not CD5, CD23, bcl-2, CD138, or TdT [39, 40]. The sine qua
non is a proliferative fraction (e.g., Ki67) of essentially >95–100%; accordingly,
the doubling time of the tumor is very short, between 24 and 48 h. Rare cases have
been reported that lack surface immunoglobulin, including some occurring in
allograft recipients [49, 59]. The immunophenotype suggests germinal center origin
for this lymphoma. Chapter 2 provides additional details about the diagnosis and
pathology of BL.
Clinical Manifestations
It was recognized early into the AIDS epidemic that the clinical course of AIDS-
related non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma was much more aggressive than patients without
HIV infection. In general, AIDS-related non-Hodgkin lymphoma is characterized
by higher grade (40–60%), extranodal disease (80%), advanced clinical stage
(60–70%) often presenting with B symptoms (i.e., unexplained fever, night sweats,
and weight loss in excess of 10% of normal body weight); and shortened survival
(median 7–8 months) when compared with lymphomas in HIV-seronegative or
indeterminate patients [8, 60]. At the time of clinical presentation prior to the
cARV era, the median CD4 lymphocyte count was 100/mL. In the cARV era,
patients are less immune suppressed with median CD4 lymphocyte counts ranging
between 150 and 200/mL and higher. It is not uncommon for patients with AIDS-
related BL to present with signs and symptoms of tumor lysis syndrome. In addi-
tion, the incidence of leptomeningeal involvement at the time of diagnosis of
AIDS-related non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma and over the course of disease appears to
be declining as well. This could be attributable to the altered natural history of
underlying HIV infection in the cARV era and perhaps less predominance of high-
grade histologies (off-set by increase in intermediate-grade large-cell lymphoma).
Though high-grade histology, especially BL, and lymphomas that harbor EBV,
8 AIDS-Associated Burkitt’s Lymphoma 137
with bone marrow or disease involvement that impinges on or near the CNS such
as paranasal sinuses and paraspinal masses are more likely to have leptomeningeal
involvement [8, 60–62]. There remains a clear male predominance in AIDS lym-
phoma in the USA but in other regions of the world most affected by the epidemic
such as sub-Saharan Africa, there is nearly an equal distribution of cases in men
and women. This is reflective of the predominant heterosexual transmission of HIV
infection in developing countries.
Therapeutic Approach
Endemic BL was one of the first malignancies shown to be curable with cytotoxic
chemotherapy [68–71]. Sporadic and immunodeficiency-associated BL do not share
endemic BL’s exquisite sensitivity to chemotherapy, so that historically the progno-
sis has been poor, particularly among adults. Short-duration, high-intensity chemo-
therapy, sometimes combined with CNS prophylaxis, yielded excellent survival in
children: patients with localized disease have a >90% 5-year survival rate [72] and
children with widespread disease (including leukemic presentation) may achieve a
>90% complete response rate (CR), with an event-free survival rate at 4 years of
65% in patients with leukemic presentation, and 79% for those presenting with
stage IV lymphoma reported in one series [73]. When similar aggressive chemo-
therapeutic regimens have been administered to adults, good outcomes have been
achieved, with CR rates of 65–100% and overall survival (OS) rates of 50–70%
[74]. The institution of the CODOX-M/IVAC regimen (Magrath protocol)—two
cycles of CODOX-M (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, high-dose
methotrexate, and intrathecal therapy) alternating with IVAC (ifosfamide with
mesna, etoposide, high-dose cytarabine, and intrathecal therapy)—for high-risk
disease, and for those with low-risk disease (e.g., one extranodal site or completely
resected abdominal disease with normal LDH), three cycles of CODOX-M, repre-
sented a major step forward in the treatment of BL. Children and adults treated with
this regimen had similar outcomes; the EFS rate at 2 years was 92% for the group
as a whole [74]. The Dana-Farber Cancer Institute has treated patients with a
modified Magrath regimen, aimed at decreasing toxicity while maintaining good out-
come [75]. In this modification, the schedule of fractionated cyclophosphamide was
altered and the vincristine dose was capped, but the dose of doxorubicin was escalated.
In this cohort, there were no treatment-related deaths, one instance of severe mucositis,
and no severe neurotoxicity. The 2-year event-free survival rate was 64% for all
patients, 100% for low-risk patients, and 60% for high-risk patients [75]. Rituximab, a
monoclonal anti-CD20 antibody, may improve outcome; a study of a small series from
the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center used rituximab in conjunction with hyper-CVAD
(hyperfractionated cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, and dexamethasone),
with CNS prophylaxis, and achieved a CR rate of 89%; most patients had advanced-
stage disease, and some were HIV-infected [76]. This backdrop provides the context
for the evolution of treatment for AIDS-associated BL.
At the outset of the AIDS epidemic it was readily apparent that patients did not
tolerate more aggressive or dose-intensive systemic therapy despite presenting with
high-grade tumors including AIDS-associated BL and more advanced stage of dis-
ease when compared to HIV-seronegative or indeterminate cases of non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma; all patients were generally treated in a similar manner regardless of
histologic subtype; and prognosis was most dependent on the degree of immuno-
suppression with patients having demonstrably poorer outcomes with CD4+ lym-
phocyte counts <100/mL [8, 60, 77–79]. Thus, initial approaches incorporated
dose-modified chemotherapeutic strategies, which over the first 15 years of the
8 AIDS-Associated Burkitt’s Lymphoma 141
epidemic proved equally efficacious and markedly less toxic, especially with dimin-
ished myelotoxicity [80, 81]. It was also recognized that infusional versus bolus
chemotherapy strategies (e.g., CDE—cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and etopo-
side or EPOCH—etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and doxo-
rubicin) yielded better CR rates and survival outcomes [50, 82]. What is also
intriguing by the published experience with infusional EPOCH regimen was the
strategy of suspension of antiretroviral therapy over the course of chemotherapy to
avoid increased risk of drug–drug interactions, potential for increased toxicity, and
to enhance overall patient compliance [50]. The chemotherapy was also dose-
adjusted on the basis of CD4 lymphocyte count in an attempt to individualize ther-
apy. While this strategy (to suspend antiretroviral therapy) did not result in adverse
clinical outcome (i.e., HIV-1 viral load and CD4 lymphocyte counts returned to
baseline by 3 and 12 months, respectively), it should be carefully considered and
requires larger, multi-center clinical trial(s) to firmly establish this approach. The
role of rituximab has also been established in HIV-infected patients with CD20+
B-cell lymphomas despite initial observations (the addition of rituximab to stan-
dard-dose CHOP led to increased infectious complications and deaths attributable
to sepsis) reported by the NCI-sponsored AIDS Malignancy Consortium (AMC 010
study) [83]. Confirmatory studies conducted by the AMC and others have proven
the safety of adding rituximab to cytotoxic chemotherapy regimens for AIDS-
related non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, including cases of BL and BL-like subtypes
(reviewed in [60, 84]). Only recently, however, it has been recognized that in the
cART era indeed outcomes are different between subtypes of AIDS lymphoma (see
Fig. 8.3) and that patients with higher grade tumors, and BL in particular, do much
worse and need to be treated with more aggressive systemic chemotherapy regi-
mens [22]. It is no longer appropriate to treat all cases of AIDS-related lymphoma
as constituting a single disease entity and into “one therapeutic basket” but rather
lymphoma-specific features, especially tumor grade and likely other molecular
markers in the not too distant future (e.g., CD20 and IRF4/MUM1-positive immu-
nohistochemistry) need to guide the selection of chemotherapeutic regimens. In the not
too distant future viral therapeutic targets will likely emerge in the clinic as well.
Recent reports of aggressive chemotherapy regimens specifically for AIDS-
associated BL are now appearing [85, 86]. The French LMB86 protocol [which is a
complex poly-drug cytotoxic chemotherapy containing regimen incorporating: (1) a
cytoreductive phase with COP immediately followed by; (2) induction with two
courses of COPDAM with doxorubicin and high-dose methotrexate; (3) consolida-
tion phase with two courses of high-dose cytarabine and etoposide; and finally, (4)
a maintenance phase with four courses of reduced dosages of the prior drugs]
reported a 70% CR rate, median overall survival duration of 14.2 months, and
2-year disease-free and overall survival rates of 67.8 and 47.1%, respectively [85].
There were 7 (11%) treatment-related deaths, all patients experienced severe myelo-
toxicity, and 11 patients relapsed out of the 63 patients treated between November
1992 and January 2006. Low CD4+ lymphocyte counts and ECOG performance
status of >2 were poor prognostic factors. Patients with 0 or 1 factor had a 60%
2-year survival rate, which contrasted with the 12% of patients who survived
142 P.M. Mwamba and S.C. Remick
Fig. 8.3 First published report, albeit a retrospective study, of AIDS-related non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma that demonstrated different survival outcomes among patients with intermediate grade
(DLCL) and high-grade (BL) histology: (a) survival of all patients and (b) survival of patients
treated with curative intent by pathologic type in the cART era; BL Burkitt’s lymphoma and DLCL
diffuse large-cell lymphoma [22]
2 years with both adverse prognostic factors [85]. The AMC recently reported its
preliminary observations in 33 patients recruited from September 2006 to July 2010
incorporating further modifications of the Magrath regimen (R-CODOX-M/IVAC)
for AIDS-associated BL [86]. In this study there was an acceptable safety and toxic-
ity profile [39% of patients had grade 3 or 4 myelotoxicity, 61% had any grade 3 or
4 toxicity, there were 6 (18%) treatment-related deaths]; a 81.7% 1-year survival
rate with a median survival duration of 35 months. The group also reported improved
outcomes in patients whose tumors where IRF4/MUM1-positive, which is indicative
of a post-germinal center activated B-cell negative by immunohistochemistry [86].
The rationale for several treatment modifications to the Magrath regimen specifically
considered for AIDS-associated BL included: inclusion of rituximab for BL as a
CD20+ lymphoma with high likelihood of improved efficacy without added toxic-
ity; institution of infusion schedules of ifosfamide and etoposide rather than bolus
administration given mounting evidence of improved outcomes with this strategy
especially highly proliferative tumors and in HIV-infected patients; lessening toxicity
8 AIDS-Associated Burkitt’s Lymphoma 143
by reducing the dose of methotrexate (from total dose of 5,520 to 3,000 mg/m2)
while maintaining CNS penetration and during the CODOX-M portion of the regimen
from day 10 (time of anticipated nadir) to day 15; and reducing neurotoxicity, which
is especially troublesome to HIV-infected patients due to underlying HIV neuropa-
thy or polypharmacy, by establishing a fixed ceiling dose of vincristine to a maxi-
mum of 2 mg. While comparative trials of BL chemotherapy regimens for patients
with and without HIV infection have not been reported, the AMC experience appears
to be less myelotoxic with improved overall survival duration. Further follow-up of
this encouraging report are awaited.
world from less myelotoxic dose-modified strategies at the outset of the epidemic
to more dose intense therapeutic regimens greatly afforded by improvements in
antiretroviral therapy, better tolerance to cytotoxic chemotherapy, and incorporation
of the CD20+ directed monoclonal antibody rituximab into front-line regimens.
In the setting of widely accessible cART, it is imperative that the therapeutic
approach be tailored to the subtype of lymphoma (e.g., BL and other high-grade
subtypes versus diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and other intermediate-grade sub-
types) rather than approaching AIDS-related lymphoma as a single disease entity.
There is also less reliance on the prognostic impact of level of CD4+ lymphocyte
counts at diagnosis in the current cART era. Identifying new agents, optimizing
treatment within the context of cART, and determining biologic and virologic cor-
relates of disease pathogenesis and of response to therapy in patients with AIDS-
associated BL remain research priorities.
In sub-Saharan Africa and other developing countries, which bear the greatest
burden of AIDS-associated BL, challenges still abound and concerted efforts need
to be made to improve care in this setting. Clinical research should be prioritized so
as to determine the best way to manage this disease by improving diagnostic capa-
bility and identifying pragmatic and better risk-adapted approaches for treatment
and patient care. At the same time there are unprecedented opportunities for trans-
lational research to interrogate viral oncogenic pathways given the inherent increased
rates of co-infection with viral pathogens such as HIV, EBV, and KSHV among others
so unique in this part of the world. This may yield innovative viral-targeted thera-
peutic strategies and new insights into prevention efforts of AIDS-associated and
other viral tumors in this setting altogether.
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Laura Pasqualucci
Introduction
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) represents the most common type of
B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (B-NHL) in the adult, comprising 30–40% of all
new diagnoses and including cases that arise de novo as well as cases that result
from the clinical evolution of more indolent B-NHL types (most commonly, follicu-
lar lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia) [1, 2]. While remarkable advances
have been made over the past decade in our ability to diagnose and treat this disease,
DLBCL remains an important clinical problem, with at least one-third of patients
not being cured by currently available therapeutic approaches, including combina-
tion immuno-chemotherapy [3]. Such incomplete success is explained in part by the
heterogeneity of these tumors, which can be appreciated from a morphologic, phe-
notypic, genetic, and clinical standpoint. Indeed, gene expression profile studies
along with more recent genomic analyses have revealed the existence of several
molecularly distinct DLBCL subtypes that reflect either the origin from B cells at
various stages of differentiation or the coordinated expression of comprehensive
transcriptional signatures. The identified subgroups not only differ in the expression
of specific gene signatures, but also seem to rely on separate oncogenic mecha-
nisms. Moreover, distinct phenotypic subtypes have been associated with different
overall survival rates. Collectively, these observations provided a molecular frame-
work for the development of rationally targeted therapeutic approaches. This chapter
will focus on the molecular pathogenesis of the most common subtypes of DLBCL,
with emphasis on the mechanisms of genetic lesion and on the nature of the involved
genes/pathways in relationship with the normal biology of lymphocytes.
L. Pasqualucci (*)
Institute for Cancer Genetics, Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center,
Columbia University, 1130 St. Nicholas Avenue, New York 10032, NY, USA
Department of Pathology and Cell Biology, Columbia University, New York 10032, NY, USA
e-mail: [email protected]
Analogous to most other B-NHLs, DLBCL derives from the malignant transformation
of mature B cells that have experienced the germinal center (GC) reaction and have
undergone unique DNA modification events in order to produce highly efficient
neutralizing antibodies. Thus, a fundamental concept for the understanding of the
pathogenesis of DLBCL is the relationship between these tumors and the GC.
Memory
B cell
Centroblast Centrocyte
BCL6
Naive
B cell
Germinal Center
Plasma cell
Fig. 9.1 The germinal center reaction and its master regulator BCL6. The figure shows a schematic
representation of the germinal center reaction. Germinal centers form following antigenic stimula-
tion of a naïve B-cell in the context of T-cell dependent responses, and can be schematically
divided into a dark zone populated by proliferating centroblasts, and a light zone composed of
smaller centrocytes. These two stages of B-cell differentiation are characterized by distinct bio-
logical programs that are largely governed by BCL6 (only representative targets shown). In prolif-
erating centroblasts, BCL6 prevents premature response to signals that may cause exit from the
GC before these cells have completed the remodeling of their Ig genes in order to produce high-
affinity antibodies. BCL6 expression is subsequently downregulated in the light zone by a number
of signals, including BCR cross-linking and engagement of CD40 by CD40L, thus restoring cel-
lular programs that are required to proceed through terminal B-cell differentiation
on CD4+ T-cells (Fig. 9.1). These signaling cascades result in the downregulation of
BCL6 expression, thereby allowing the restoration of DNA damage responses, as
well as activation and differentiation capabilities, such that B cells can be selected
for survival and differentiation into memory cells and plasma cells [4, 21]. In the
GC, CCs also undergo class-switch recombination (CSR), a DNA remodeling event
that confers distinct effector functions to the antibodies [22]. Both SHM and CSR
represent B-cell-specific functions that modify the genome of these cells via mecha-
nisms involving single- or double-strand breaks and depend on the activity of acti-
vation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) [23–25], a DNA editing enzyme with
important roles in the generation of genetic alterations associated with mature
B-NHL.
This schematic description, which only partially reflects the complex dynamics
of the GC reaction, is nonetheless useful to focus on two concepts that are key to the
understanding of DLBCL pathogenesis, and B-NHL in general. First, the most fre-
quent oncogenic events in DLBCL—namely chromosomal translocations and aber-
rant somatic hypermutation (ASHM)—result from mistakes in the AID-dependent
machinery that normally diversifies the Ig genes during B lymphocytes differentiation,
154 L. Pasqualucci
further supporting the GC origin of these tumors. Second, the definition of two
distinct phases during GC development reflects stages of B-cell differentiation that
can at least in part be recognized in the phenotype of the two major molecular
subtypes of DLBCL.
Over the past decade, the development of gene expression profile technologies has
allowed the identification of multiple phenotypic subgroups of DLBCL, which
appear to derive from B cells arrested at various stages of differentiation. At least
three phenotypically well-characterized DLBCL subtypes have been recognized to
date, based on similarities to their putative cell of origin: germinal center B-cell-like
(GCB) DLBCL, activated B-cell-like (ABC) DLBCL, and primary mediastinal
large B-cell lymphoma (PMBCL) [26–29]. An additional 15–30% of cases present
signatures that are intermediate between the above categories and are thus termed
unclassified [27].
GCB-DLBCLs are postulated to derive from a proliferating CB, as their expres-
sion profile is enriched in genes that are specific for GC B cells, e.g., BCL6 and
CD10 [26], while lacking post-GC differentiation markers (Fig. 9.2). These tumors
carry highly mutated Ig genes showing evidence of ongoing SHM [30], and express
surface IgG in most cases, as an evidence of successful CSR [26].
The ABC-DLBCL subgroup displays a transcriptional signature that shares
significant similarities to the one induced in BCR-activated peripheral blood B cells
and in a small subset of plasmablastic B cells located in the GC light zone, and
presumably poised to exit the GC [26] (Fig. 9.2). These cells have downregulated
the GC-specific program and express genes (e.g., IRF4) that are necessary for ter-
minal B-cell differentiation; however, they are precluded from exiting the GC due
to genetic lesions that disrupt this pathway, namely PRDM1 loss or BCL6 translo-
cations (see next section) [31–34]. ABC-DLBCLs are also characterized by consti-
tutive activation of the NF-kB, BCR, and JAK/STAT signaling pathways [35].
Consistent with their derivation from a post-GC cell where the SHM machinery has
been turned off, ABC-DLBCLs do not show ongoing SHM [36]. Interestingly, these
tumors only rarely show evidence of legitimate CSR, a finding attributed to abnor-
malities in the regulation of this process [30, 37].
The third subtype of DLBCL, PMBCL, is postulated to arise from thymic medul-
lary B cells [28, 29] and has been recently recognized as a separate clinicopathologi-
cal entity in both the REAL and World Health Organization classifications [2]
(Fig. 9.2). This disease, which typically involves the mediastinum and is most com-
monly observed in young female adults, shares significant histological, molecular,
and clinical features with nodular sclerosis Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) [38], including
the presence of an immune/inflammatory cell infiltrate with a distinctive cytokine
profile, the decreased expression of BCR signaling pathway components, and the
constitutive NF-kB activation [28, 29, 38].
9 Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma 155
Memory
Centroblast Centrocyte B cell
Plasmablast
Thymic
Naive B cell
B cell Plasma cell
Germinal Center
Fig. 9.2 Postulated cellular origin of major DLBCL subtypes. Schematic cartoon of the germinal
center reaction, and its relationship with major DLBCL subtypes. GCB-DLBCLs express pheno-
typic similarities with proliferating centroblasts, while ABC-DLBCLs are related to a plasmablas-
tic B cell. PMBCL is postulated to arise from a post-GC B cells in the thymic medulla. The most
common genetic lesions that are associated with specific molecular subtypes (or shared by multi-
ple subtypes) are indicated below. Abbreviations: Tx, translocation; BSE1, binding site in exon 1
Of note, several studies have shown that stratification according to gene expression
profiles has prognostic value, and patients diagnosed with GCB-DLBCL display a
better overall survival compared to ABC-DLBCL [39]. This prognostic advantage
was also observed after the integration of the drug rituximab into standard combi-
nation therapies for DLBCL, although controversial findings have been reported in
different studies [36, 40]. The distinction in GCB- and ABC-DLBCL has therefore
not been officially incorporated into the WHO classification of lymphoid malig-
nancies, mostly because it requires the use of sophisticated tools that are not rou-
tinely available in every diagnostic lab, and because it is imperfectly replicated by
immunophenotyping or morphology [41, 42].
While the similarity to different stages of B-cell differentiation represents an
important aspect in the phenotypic characterization of DLBCL, gene expression
profile analyses also allowed the identification of three discrete subsets that reflect
the coordinated expression of comprehensive consensus signatures defined by genes
involved in oxidative phosphorylation, B-cell receptor/proliferation, and tumor
microenvironment/host inflammatory response [43].
156 L. Pasqualucci
Classification of DLBCL
In addition to the “DLBCL, not otherwise specified” discussed here, updated 2008
WHO Classification of Tumours of Haematopoietic and Lymphoid tissues recog-
nizes as separate categories a number of DLBCL subtypes and other “lymphomas
of large B cells”, as well as “borderline cases”. The latter category, once termed
“grey zone lymphomas” include those cases with overlapping morphologic and
immunophenotypic features between DLBCL and classical Hodgkin lymphoma
and between BL and DLBCL with MYC translocations or “double-hit” MYC and
BCL2 translocations [2]. These rare tumors may resemble BL in their gene expres-
sion profile but exhibit atypical features, including a very aggressive clinical course
that requires intensive chemotherapeutic regimens [44, 45]. Since this category
likely comprises a biologically heterogeneous group of diseases, additional genetic
and clinical characterization will be necessary for an improved understanding of its
pathogenesis.
Chromosomal Translocations
In addition to the TP53 gene, possibly the most common target of genetic lesions in
human cancer [78], several genes have been recently identified as targets of biallelic
or monoallelic loss in DLBCL. Analogous to other tumors, the mechanisms respon-
sible for inactivation of tumor suppressor genes in DLBCL entail point mutation of
one allele with genetic deletion or mutation of the second allele. Two such genes lie
on the long arm of chromosome 6, a region long known to be deleted in a large
percentage of aggressive lymphomas, and generally associated with poor prognosis
[79, 80]: the PRDM1/BLIMP1 gene on chromosomal region 6q21, which is bialleli-
cally inactivated in ~25% of ABC-DLBCL cases [31, 32, 34], and the TNFAIP3
gene on chromosome 6q23, which encodes for the negative NF-kB regulator A20
and is commonly lost in both ABC-DLBCL and PMBCL (besides a few other lym-
phoma types) [75, 81–83]. More recently, monoallelic inactivating mutations and
deletions of the acetyltransferase genes CREBBP and EP300 have been reported in
a significant proportion of DLBCL and FL, suggesting a role as haploinsufficient
tumor suppressors [84]. Furthermore, one or both alleles of the MLL2 gene, encod-
ing for a histone trimethyltransferase, are targeted by disruptive mutations in over
30% of DLBCL [84, 85]. Other tumor suppressor genes that are homozygously
deleted in a discrete fraction of DLBCL include CDKN2A and CDKN2B [86] and
the immune regulatory genes B2M and CD58 [85], while loss of PTEN is observed
in rare cases [86].
9 Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma 159
Recent genome-wide efforts have led to a better definition of the multitude of genes
and pathways that are disrupted by genetic lesions in DLBCL. Consistent with the
phenotypic heterogeneity of this neoplasm, the catalogue of structural alterations
that have been identified to date is remarkably diverse, including alterations that are
common to all DLBCL subgroups, as well as lesions that are preferentially or exclu-
sively associated with individual DLBCL categories (Fig. 9.2). These observations
revealed the involvement of distinct oncogenic pathways that in turn may influence
treatment outcome. The following section will focus on well-characterized genetic
lesions as related to the three main subtypes of DLBCL, defined by cell of origin.
Recent studies have revealed the presence of mutations and/or deletions inactivating
the acetyltransferase genes CREBBP and, less frequently, EP300 in nearly 40% of
all DLBCL cases, with some preference for the GCB-DLBCL subtype [92].
CREBBP and EP300 encode for ubiquitously expressed transcriptional activators
Table 9.1 Most common genetic lesions in DLBCL
Functional Gene function/mechanism of
Genetic lesion Frequency consequences transformation
Shared lesions
MLL2 mutations 32% Loss of function H3K4 methyltransferase/epigenetic
reprogramming
CREBBP/EP300 22–40% Loss of function Epigenetic reprogramming; impaired
mutations/ p53 activation and BCL6
deletions inactivation
BCL6 translocations 25–40% Transcriptional Enhanced proliferation; impaired
deregulation DNA damage responses, block in
differentiation
B2M mutations/ 29% Loss of function Reduced tumor cell immunogenicity;
deletions downregulation of HLA class I
CD58 mutations/ 21% Loss of function Reduced tumor cell immunogenicity
deletions
GCB-DLBCL
BCL2 translocations 30–40% Transcriptional Enhanced resistance to apoptosis
deregulation
MYC translocations 10% Transcriptional Enhanced proliferation and growth,
deregulation DNA replication
EZH2 mutations 22% Gain of function H3K27 methyltransferase/epigenetic
reprogramming
BCL6 mutations in 20% Loss of BCL6 Enhanced proliferation; impaired
BSE1 autoregulation DNA damage responses, block in
differentiation
MEF2B mutations 8% Unclear
ABC-DLBCL
BCL2 amplification 30% Increased gene dosage Enhanced resistance to apoptosis
PRDM1 mutations/ 25% Loss of function Block in terminal B-cell
deletions differentiation
MYD88 mutations 29% Gain of function Constitutive activation of NF-kB and
JAK-STAT signaling
TNFAIP3 mutations/ 20% Loss of function Constitutive activation of NF-kB
deletions signaling due to loss of negative
regulation
CD79B/CD79A 20% Gain of function Constitutive activation of NF-kB and
mutations BCR signaling
CARD11 mutations 9% Gain of function Constitutive activation of NF-kB
signaling
PMBCL
REL amplification 75% Increased gene dosage Constitutive activation of NF-kB
signaling
JAK2 amplification 63% Increased gene dosage Activation of JAK-STAT pathway
JMJD2C 63% Increased gene dosage Histone modification/Epigenetic
amplification reprogramming
PDL1, PDL2 63% Increased gene dosage T-cell exhaustion; Reduced tumor
amplification cell immunogenicity
SOCS1 mutations/ 45% Enhanced JAK2 signaling due to
deletions impaired JAK2 degradation
STAT6 mutations 36% Unclear Activation of JAK-STAT pathway?
CIITA translocations 38% Overexpression of Reduced tumor cell immunogenicity;
fusion protein downregulation of HLA class II
GCB germinal center B-cell-like, ABC activated B-cell-like, PMBCL primary mediastinal B-cell
lymphoma, BSE1 BCL6 binding sites in exon 1
9 Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma 161
that modify lysine residues on numerous histone and non-histone proteins, and
are thus involved in multiple signaling and developmental pathways. In most
DLBCLs, these lesions are heterozygous and are associated with the expression of
the residual normal allele, thus suggesting a role as haploinsufficient tumor suppressor
genes. Indeed, a dose-dependent effect of CREBBP expression has been docu-
mented by the observation that a rare genetic disease known as Rubinstein-Taybi syn-
drome is due to CREBBP and, more rarely, EP300 haploinsufficiency. While the
functional consequences of these alterations are likely to be broad, CREBBP mutations
were shown to impair the ability of this enzyme to acetylate the known substrates
BCL6 [93] and p53 [94, 95], leading to constitutive activation of the oncoprotein
and to decreased p53 tumor suppressor function [92]. Since the balance between the
activities of these two genes is critical for the regulation of DNA damage responses
during Ig gene remodeling processes in the GC [13, 14], one consequence of BCL6
activity overriding p53 would be an increased tolerance for DNA damage in the
context of impaired apoptotic and cell cycle arrest responses. Given the broad
involvement of histone acetyltransferases in gene transcriptional regulation, addi-
tional studies will be required to dissect the entire set of cellular targets/pathways
that are critically affected by acetyltransferases reduction in lymphoma. Importantly,
the identification of mutations in CREBBP and EP300 may have direct therapeutic
implications in view of current attempts to use histone deacetylase inhibitors as
anticancer drugs.
The most commonly mutated gene that emerged from recent unbiased genome
sequencing efforts in DLBCL is the mixed-lineage leukemia 2 (MLL2) gene [84, 85].
MLL2 encodes for a histone H3K4 methyltransferase involved in the control of gene
transcription via PolII-dependent activation of target genes. In approximately 32% of
DLBCL cases (as well as in almost 89% of FL cases), either one or both MLL2
alleles are targeted by somatic mutations, introducing stop codons, out-of-frame
insertions/deletions, and alterations at consensus splice sites [84, 85]. These variants are
predicted to generate truncated proteins that lack the entire C-terminal cluster of
conserved domains (including the SET domain) or significant portions of it, thus
abrogating its enzymatic activity. Missense mutations, the significance of which is
still unknown, have also been reported in a smaller proportion of cases. While the
precise mechanism of transformation imposed by MLL2 mutations has not been
investigated yet, the multitude of genes that are normally influenced by its methyl-
transferase activity suggest a multifaceted role for MLL2 inactivation in DLBCL.
locus, mostly biallelic, occur in ~29% of cases [85]. These lesions abrogate the
expression of b2-microglobulin, a polypeptide found in association with the major
histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I on the surface of nearly all nucleated
cells, and required for the proper recognition by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL)
[96]. In an additional 45% of cases, the B2M protein is either not expressed or aber-
rantly localized, suggesting the involvement of alternative genetic or epigenetic
mechanisms of inactivation [97]. Since the assembly of the class I human leukocyte
antigen complex (HLA-I) plays an essential role in antitumor immunosurveillance,
these lesions are thought to facilitate lymphomagenesis by allowing the escape of
the cancer cell from immune recognition by CTLs. Homozygous deletions and trun-
cating mutations are also commonly detected in the CD58 gene [85], a member of
the immunoglobulin superfamily that functions as the ligand of the CD2 receptor,
present on T cells and most natural killer (NK) cells, and participates in their adhe-
sion and activation [98]. Notably, loss of B2M/HLA-I and CD58 expression is often
concurrent in the same DLBCL cases [97], suggesting that these two lesions have
been selected for their ability to interfere with the interaction between tumor cells
and the microenvironment, thus allowing the combined escape from CTL- and
NK-mediated immunosurveillance mechanisms.
ASHM
Over half of all DLBCL patients present evidence for an aberrant activity of the
SHM mechanism, irrespective of their subgroup classification [66]. The number
and identity of the genes that accumulate mutations in their coding and non-coding
regions due to this mechanism varies in different cases and is still largely undefined.
However, preferential targeting of individual genes has been observed in the two
main DLBCL subtypes, with mutations of MYC and BCL2 being found almost
exclusively in GCB-DLBCL, and mutations of PIM1 showing significantly higher
frequencies in ABC-DLBCL. ASHM may therefore contribute to the heterogeneity
of DLBCL via the alteration of different cellular pathways in different cases.
under the control of potent regulatory elements from the Ig locus. BCL2 expression
is also detected in a large fraction of DLBCL cases lacking BCL2 translocations, as
the results of several mechanisms including deregulation of Miz1, ASHM of the
BCL2 promoter sequences, and mutations in the BCL2 coding sequence [21].
Increased levels of BCL2 provide a survival advantage to the tumor cells and have
been associated with an inferior outcome in DLBCL [99].
Consistent with their derivation from a GC B-cell, up to 75% of all DLBCLs harbor
mutations in the BCL6 5¢ sequences [63, 107, 108], which reflect the physiologic
activity of the SHM mechanism operating in GC B-cells [63, 64, 67]. However, a
distinctive set of mutations have been observed only in GCB-DLBCL, suggesting a
specific role in the pathogenesis of these tumors [89, 109, 110]. These mutations
affect two BCL6 binding sites within the first non-coding exon of the gene and dis-
rupt an autoregulatory circuit through which the BCL6 protein controls its own
expression levels, leading to its transcriptional deregulation [109, 110]. In a smaller
fraction of cases, mutations interfere with IRF4 mediated downregulation of BCL6,
suggesting that the overall fraction of cases carrying BCL6 abnormalities may be
even higher. Further efforts will be necessary to characterize the full extent of muta-
tions deregulating BCL6 expression in DLBCL.
164 L. Pasqualucci
Other Lesions
Mutations and deletions of the TP53 tumor suppressor gene are predominantly
restricted to DLBCL cases derived from the transformation of FL and chronic lym-
phocytic leukemia [111–113], and are therefore commonly associated with chromo-
somal translocations of BCL2 and with a GCB-DLBCL phenotype [113]. In
approximately 9% of DLBCLs, missense mutations target the Myocyte Enhancer
Factor 2B (MEF2B) gene [84, 85], which encodes for a member of the MADS/
MEF2 family of DNA binding proteins and is thought to cooperate with histone
modifying enzymes to regulate gene expression [107]. Inhibition of the tumor sup-
pressor PTEN via mutually exclusive deletions of chromosome 10q and amplifications
of the miR-17-92 micro-RNA cluster have been also preferentially reported in
GCB-DLBCL [35, 86], where they favor the activation of the phosphatidylinositol
3 kinase (PI3K)/AKT pathway.
Ag
CD40L
BCR
CD40
TLR
CD79A,B
CARD11 MYD88
Protection from apoptosis
MAPK/ERK NF-κB Increased proliferation
PI3K/AKT
JAK/STAT
A20 IRF4
Interferon
P38/MAPK
Fig. 9.3 Disrupted signaling pathways in ABC-DLBCL. In normal B cells, a variety of signals,
including engagement of the BCR by the antigen, interaction of the CD40 receptor with the CD40L
presented by T-cells, and stimulation of Toll-like receptors activate the NF-kB transcription
complex, leading to the upregulation of numerous target genes (shown are IRF4 and A20). IRF4
downregulates the expression of BCL6, terminating the germinal center programme and allowing
the release of PRDM1/BLIMP1, another master regulator required for plasma cell differentiation.
The A20 negative regulator terminates NF-kB responses via a negative feedback loop. In ABC-
DLBCL, multiple genetic lesions converge on this pathway and disrupt it at multiple levels in
different cases. These observations suggest a model in which structural alterations in various
NF-kB pathway components promote lymphomagenesis by favoring the anti-apoptotic and pro-
proliferative functions of NF-kB while blocking terminal B-cell differentiation through mutually
exclusive alterations deregulating BCL6 or inactivating BLIMP1
of ABC-DLBCL cells, possibly because of its ability to induce of NF-kB (via the
CBM complex) and PI3K [114]. Indeed, more than 20% of ABC DLBCL biopsy
samples have selected gain-of-function somatic mutations affecting the immunore-
ceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) signaling modules of CD79B and
CD79A [114]. These mutations appear to promote chronic BCR signaling by atten-
uating the phosphorylation and activation of the Lyn kinase, which is necessary for
internalization of the surface BCR and serves as a negative feedback regulator of
this cascade. As a consequence, ABC-DLBCL cases with CD79B mutations display
greater abundance of BCR on their surface [114]. Interestingly, CD79A and B muta-
tions and CARD11 mutations tend to be mutually exclusive, indicating that they
may represent alternative mechanisms converging on the same pathway (Fig. 9.3).
166 L. Pasqualucci
Inactivation of PRDM1
More than 75% of all ABC-DLBCL cases lack expression of the PRDM1/BLIMP1
protein. In up to 25% of cases, this is due to genetic alterations that disrupt the
PRDM1 locus on chromosomal band 6q21, including truncating mutations, mis-
sense mutations, and genomic deletions [31, 32, 34]. In an additional large propor-
tion of cases, PRDM1 is transcriptionally repressed through constitutively active,
translocated BCL6 alleles [31, 32, 34]. The PRDM1 gene encodes for a zinc finger
transcriptional repressor that is expressed in a subset of GC B-cells undergoing
plasma cell differentiation and in all plasma cells [116, 117]. Since the PRDM1
protein constitutes an essential requirement for terminal B-cell differentiation [118],
one mechanism by which PRDM1 inactivation contributes to lymphomagenesis is
by blocking post-GC B-cell differentiation, as demonstrated in mouse models where
conditional ablation of this gene in GC B cells leads to the development of DLBCL
[31, 119] Notably, translocations deregulating the BCL6 gene are virtually never
found in PRDM1 mutated DLBCL cases [34, 35], suggesting that BCL6 deregula-
tion and PRDM1 inactivation represent alternative oncogenic mechanisms converg-
ing on the same pathway (Fig. 9.3).
Other Lesions
PMBCL
Concluding Remarks
During the past decade, our understanding of the pathogenesis of DLBCL has
improved dramatically. Genome-wide expression profiling has demonstrated the
degree of heterogeneity of DLBCL and opened the way to a better definition of
the molecular mechanisms underlying diverse subtypes of the disease. More
recently, powerful genomic technologies such as high-density genome-wide single
nucleotide polymorphism array analyses and massively parallel sequencing, applied
to whole genomes/exomes/transcriptomes, have allowed the identification of previ-
ously unsuspected genes and pathways that are disrupted by genetic alterations in
DLBCL, further improving our understanding of the disease. These discoveries will
be essential for the development of new diagnostic tests that may allow the
stratification of patients according to different prognostic groups as well as the
design of more effective therapeutic approaches aimed at targeting specific signal-
ing pathways in distinct disease categories.
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Chapter 10
Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma
Shuvomoy Banerjee, Hem Chandra Jha, Qiliang Cai, and Erle S. Robertson
Historical Overview
Almost 50 years ago, Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL) was initially described in associa-
tion with the first human tumour virus, Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) discovered in BL
tumour samples [1]. Since then, the role of EBV in BL pathogenesis has become
more enigmatic in the field of cancer Biology. In the middle of the last century, Denis
Burkitt, an English surgeon was working in central Africa in the Kampala region of
Uganda and equatorial Africa. He observed the occurrence of a malignant tumour in
children with lesions in the face, as well as upper and lower jaws. He also noted that
some children had huge abdominal masses, sometimes accompanied by disease in
the facial bones, although there was usually no lymph node involvement. This typi-
cal malignant syndrome was initially thought to be a sarcoma [2, 3], but later char-
acterized as a lymphoma, now referred to as BL. Interestingly, the lymphoma was
found to occur throughout tropical Africa except at high altitudes or in some areas
where the climate was relatively cool. Importantly, he also realized that BL was an
independent clinical entity with a particular geographical distribution [4]. On safari,
together with Ted Williams and Cliff Nelson, he identified epidemiological features
of this disease which was associated with high incidence in the low lands with tropi-
cal climate and its absence in the high lands with little rainfall [5, 6]. This phenom-
enon led to the hypothesis that malaria, a disease associated with the arthropod borne
parasite, was involved in the pathogenesis of this disease. These geographic and cli-
matic associations strongly suggested a compatibility with Plasmodium falciparum.
In 1961, Denis Burkitt made the acquaintance of Anthony Epstein, a young experi-
mental pathologist. He shipped samples of the lymphoma to him at his lab in
England. Epstein and his colleagues Barr and Achong identified the virus that is
now known as Epstein– Barr virus (EBV). This was the first description of a virus
involved in the pathogenesis of a tumour in humans. In present-day Africa, BL
continues to account for a large portion of childhood malignancies [7].
Werner and Gertrude Henle, two virologists at the Children’s Hospital in
Philadelphia, became interested in this novel virus and developed serological tech-
niques to detect the virus in the human population [8]. Surprisingly, they found that
Epstein–Barr virus was not only restricted to BL patients as initially believed, but
also proved to be prevalent in 95% of the adult population [4]. In the African popu-
lation, the virus appeared to be detected in the younger age groups, significantly
earlier than seen in the USA and Europe where seroconversion was often delayed to
adolescence [4]. Furthermore, African children with BL displayed particularly high
antibody titers to EBV [9]. In 1968, based on the seroepidemiological studies, the
Henles identified EBV as the causal agent of an acute disease, now reffered to as
infectious mononucleosis [10]. Infectious mononucleosis is characterized by fever
and swollen lymph nodes and an abnormal increase in mononuclear leucocytes or
monocytes in the bloodstream [10]. Volker Diehl, the Henles and John Pope in
Brisbane, independent of each other demonstrated that EBV has the ability to trans-
form primary human B cells into B blasts [10–12], which, upon a crisis and telom-
ere stabilization [13] grew out into continuously proliferating immortalized B-cell
lines. Later, zur Hausen et al. also established the association between EBV and
African Burkitt’s lymphoma as well as nasopharyngeal carcinoma [14]. These stud-
ies strongly suggested that the EBV genome is present in tumour cells of these
cancers in vivo and that the virus also has strong transforming potential in vitro.
Geographical Distribution
The zone of highest risk for BL appears to be between 10° north and 10° south of
the equator and in Papua New Guinea, where the prevalence of this malignancy is
10 Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma 177
very common in relation to other types of childhood cancers [17]. In general, the
proportion of lymphomas which accounts for BL is very high in these regions; in
Papua New Guinea, 58% (1979–1988), and in Nigeria, Uganda and Malawi (1985–
1995) 67–70% of lymphomas are considered BL [18]. Interestingly, the frequency
of BL may vary substantially, even within high-risk areas. It was reported that
occurrence of BL was preferentially found in lowland areas, warm, humid regions
of Western Kenya which is divided into three provinces, two of which are primarily
hot, moist, tropical savannahs (known as Nyanza and Western provinces), and the
other is predominantly highland area and semi-arid regions (known as Rift Valley
Province) [19]. Overall, BL accounted for one third (201/600) of solid tumours of
those under 15 years, but the proportion varied in each province. For example, it
accounted for 52% of neoplasms in Nyanza province, 31% in the Western province
and 23% in the Rift Valley [19]. The incidence of BL is also relatively infrequent in
other upland areas within the high-risk zone, such as Rwanda, Burundi and the pla-
teaux of Zambia and Zimbabwe [20].
Southern Europe, North Africa and Asia as far west as Iraq and Kuwait are desig-
nated as intermediate-risk regions [21]. In countries like Spain, France and Portugal
BL accounts for 15–46% of lymphomas, and for 25–33% of lymphomas in the
Middle East [22]. Denmark and the Netherlands may also fall into the intermediate
risk zone [23].
Most of the Northern and Eastern Europe, and Northern parts of South America
were recognized as the zone of low risk. The incidence of BL also appears to be rare
in certain regions of Asia including the eastern zone of Pakistan; Bangladesh, China,
Singapore and Vietnam with minimal report of cases of BL. Importantly, some
Asian registries tend to show lower childhood cancer incidence rates than registries
from America, Europe or Australia [24].
abdomen or chest, recurring infections, fever, itchy skin, sore throat, loss of appetite
and weight loss, a feeling of fullness in the groin area, fatigue and pain in the joints
and bones [25]. These signs and symptoms of BL typically can be similar to those
of other medical problems, especially blood disorders, making this type of cancer
difficult to diagnose.
There are three distinct epidemiological forms of BL that are well established. The
high-incidence “endemic” form typically presents as a jaw or abdominal tumour in
children in equatorial Africa where malaria is holoendemic, and is 100% EBV
genome positive [30]. Elsewhere, the occurrence of BL as a “sporadic” form in
children is related to the degree of EBV association in different geographical areas
[30]. It is therefore possible that chronic immune stimulation from other parasitic
infections may also increase BL incidence which preferentially involves EBV-
associated disease. Interestingly, a third, adult form of the disease, AIDS-associated
BL, has proven to be very common among HIV-infected individuals with about
30–40% of these tumours positive for EBV [30]. According to WHO report, BL
can be classified into classic, and two variant categories which depend upon their
cellular morphology that are BL with plasmacytoid differentiation and atypical
Burkitt’s/Burkitt-like lymphoma [31]. Classic BL is associated with some cases of
endemic BL and mostly in sporadic BL. For diagnostic purposes, it is very important
to review the morphological features of BL, as defined in the 2001 WHO leukaemia/
10 Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma 179
Even after intensive research in the field of viral oncology for over 40 years, the pre-
cise contributions of EBV in the pathogenesis of BL have yet to be fully realized.
EBV-infected cells display predominantly three different types of latency based on the
EBV-encoded protein and RNA expression. Type I latency is characterized by an
almost exclusive expression of EBV-encoded nuclear small non-polyadenylated RNA
(EBER) molecules and EBV-encoded nuclear antigen (EBNA) 1. Type II latency
shows additional expression of latent membrane proteins (LMP). Type III latency
displays expression of EBV nuclear antigen 2–6 by virtue of differential promoter
usage [38]. Generally, BL cells usually display latency type I but may convert to
latency type III in cell culture condition [39]. Table 10.1 shows some of the described
roles of the EBV latent antigens and their interacting host factors which are likely to
be important for progression of BL.
EBNA1
Studies have suggested that BL is a tumour derived from cells containing EBV
maintained as a persistent latent infection [65]. Some findings also indicated that
BL has the Ig gene somatic mutations of a memory B cell [66], and that EBV persists
180 S. Banerjee et al.
Table 10.1 The EBV latent antigens and their associated cellular proteins important for their
activities in BL cells
EBV latent Associated cellular
antigens proteins Functions References
EBNA1 PKR, H2B, Rag-1, Bcl2,Essential for B-cell immortalization, inhibition [40–45]
CD25 of apoptosis, genome maintenance
EBNA2 CD21, CD23, c-Fgr, Transcriptional co-activator that up [46–50]
RBP-JK, Spi, PU-1 regulates expression of viral (LMP1)
and cellular genes (c-myc)
EBER’s c-Myc, ribosomal protein Enhanced immunogenicity, Inhibition of [51–53]
L22 apoptosis, IL-10 production, BCL2L11
(BIM) down-regulation
BART’s miRBART 2, miRBART5, Protein product may modify Notch [54–56]
PUMA, p53, BIM, signaling
c-Myc
EBNA3A Bcl2, BIM Essential for B-cell immortalization, [57]
and 3C stabilizing c-Myc, cyclin D1 and Mdm2
LMP1 CD40, ICAM1, NFkB, Essential for B-cell immortalization, MAPK [58–60]
c-JUN, JNK, STAT and Wnt signaling
LMP2A AKT, mTOR, PI3K, Drives EBV in to latency, blocks BCR, AKT, [61–64]
c-Myc, p53 mTOR and PI3K signaling pathway
This table shows the important functions of EBV latent antigens and associated host factors in
Burkitt’s lymphoma cells. EBNA Epstein–Barr virus nuclear antigen, EBER EBV-encoded RNA,
BART BamHI-A rightward transcript, LMP1 latent membrane proteins1, PKR protein kinase
RNA-activated, H2B histone H2B, RAG1 V(D)J recombination-activating protein 1, BCL2 B-cell
lymphoma 2, CD cluster of differentiation, c-FGR Gardner–Rasheed feline sarcoma viral (v-fgr)
oncogene homolog, RBP-JK recombination signal binding protein for immunoglobulin kappa J
region, Spi, Salmonella pathogenicity island 1, PU.1 transcription factor PU.1, c-MYC v-myc
avian myelocytomatosis viral oncogene homolog, miR-BART micro-RNA BamHI-A rightward
transcript, PUMA p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis, BIM BCL2-like 11, ICAM1 inter-cellu-
lar adhesion molecule1, NFkB nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells,
c-jun jun proto-oncogene, JNK c-Jun N-terminal kinases, STAT signal transducer and activator of
transcription, AKT protein kinase B, mTOR mammalian target of rapamycin, PI3K phosphati-
dylinositol 3-kinases, MDM2 mouse double minute 2, MAPK mitogen-activated protein (MAP)
kinases, NOTCH Notch (Drosophila) homolog, Wnt proto-oncogene Int-1 homolog, BCR break-
point cluster region
in resting memory B cells in the peripheral blood [67, 68]. BL also showed a unique
pattern of viral latent protein expression, with expression of the EBV-encoded
nuclear antigen (EBNA) 1 protein, as the predominant latent antigen necessary for
maintenance and replication of the viral genome [69]. EBNA1 is produced from a
transcript of EBNA1 (Q-K), originating from a unique Qp promoter [70]. EBNA1
is ultimately to be a predominant target for cytotoxic T lymphocytes and previous
studies suggested that only EBNA1 is expressed in the progenitor of BL cell type
[65]. Recent genetic studies revealed that infection of B cells with derivatives of
EBV lacking EBNA1, induced their proliferative capacity but with less potency
when compared to wild-type EBV [40]. This indicated that the functions of EBNA1
can provide activities important for driving initiation and maintenance of the prolif-
erative state of EBV infected B cells. Other studies investigating EBV-infected B
10 Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma 181
EBNA2
In lymphoblastoid cell lines, only a subset of viral genes is expressed. They code for
six nuclear proteins, three membrane proteins and two small non-polyadenylated
nuclear RNAs [73, 74]. The latent genes required for transformation is still a subject
of intense investigation. The EBV nuclear antigen 2 (EBNA2) is deleted in the
transformation-defective virus P3HR 1 [73]. The two forms EBNA2A and EBNA2B
found in the different strains of the virus and share about 50% homology [75].
EBNA2 was detected as the first viral gene expressed together with EBNA-LP, after
infection of primary B cells [73, 76]. It functions as a transcriptional activator of
different latent viral as well as cellular proteins including the viral Cp, LMP1 and
LMP2, and cellular CD21, CD23 and c-fgr genes [46, 47, 77–87]. EBNA2 exerts its
trans-activating function by binding to RBP-JK in complex with its cognate DNA
sequence [48, 50, 88, 89], and through interaction with transcription factors of the
ETS gene family members including, Spi-1 and PU-1 [82, 90]. In vitro transforma-
tion of primary B cells is strictly dependent on EBNA2 [91, 92]. However, EBNA2
is not predominantly expressed in BL tumours [93], although some studies have
shown EBNA2 expressed in BL tumours [94]. Therefore, the role of EBNA2 in BL
is still significant. Studies have shown that EBNA2 down-regulates the surface
expression of IgM and transcription of the Ig-m locus [73]. BL cells with t(8;14)
translocations showed down-regulation of Ig- and m expression was observed in
association with concomitant transcriptional shut-down of the c-myc gene [73].
This finding revealed the dysregulation of c-Myc under the control of the Ig heavy
chain locus in these cells [73]. Additionally, the function of EBNA2 as a negative
regulator of Ig-I transcription provided an explanation for the growth inhibitory
effect of EBNA2 in Burkitt’s cells carrying a t(8;14) translocation [73].
EBERs
understood. Reports have suggested that the EBERs have anti-apoptotic effects on
infected cells but these results are still controversial. Currently, it was suggested that
EBERs may furnish B cells with a degree of protection from the pro-apoptotic
activity of alpha-interferon; however, the contribution of EBERs to the pathogene-
sis of BL is still unclear [96]. The genes coding for the non-polyadenylated RNAs
EBER1 and EBER2, 173 and 169 nucleotides, respectively, are highly expressed in
all EBV-associated tumours [97] and may contribute to EBV-mediated oncogenesis.
However, studies by Swaminathan et al. demonstrated that they were not essential
for in vitro transformation. Independent studies by Takada and Sample investigated
the oncogenic potential of the parental EBV-positive BL cells using individual EBV
genes. In this study, they used loss variants of EBV-positive BL cell lines as recipi-
ents. Interestingly, they concluded that EBNA1 alone is not sufficient to reconstitute
resistance of the cells to apoptotic stimuli and that the EBERs are partially respon-
sible for the onset of tumorigenesis [98]. Further, Niller et al. demonstrated a c-MYC
binding site in the EBER promoter and suggested that the probable role of c-MYC
is to induce expression of EBERs as cooperative partners which promotes oncogen-
esis [51, 99] . Importantly, it was also reported that EBER2, but not EBER1 contrib-
utes to B-cell immortalization [100]. Often, EBERs are found in complexes with the
La protein, the auto-antigen in lupus erythematosis, and the ribosomal protein L22
[101], but the functional relationship with EBV-mediated B-cell transformation has
not been elucidated.
BARTs
EBNA3
The three EBV latency-associated proteins, EBNA3A, EBNA3B and EBNA3C, are
a family of latent antigens which share limited but significant amino-acid sequence
homology predominantly in their amino terminal regions [110]. They have the same
gene structure and are arranged in tandem in the EBV genome [109]. Recently, it
was shown that BL cells latently infected with EBV provide significant protection
from programmed cell death induced by a variety of cytotoxic agents [57, 94, 111].
Studies on EBV latent gene expression patterns in various EBV-positive BL-derived
cell lines suggested that the EBNA3 family might play a crucial role in B-cell sur-
vival and transformation. Delecluse et al. generated recombinant viruses using a
bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) system to evaluate the contribution made by
each of the EBNA3 proteins in B-cell survival [57]. EBV recombinants were pro-
duced with deletions in the individual EBNA3 genes and, importantly, viruses in
which the deleted EBNA3 gene was restored to the wt viral genome (revertants) [57].
These viruses were used to infect EBV-negative BL cells. Several experiments with
EBNA3-knockout (KO) viruses in BL31 cells after exposure to different cytotoxic
drugs revealed that cell survival was dependent on both EBNA3A and EBNA3C,
which correlated with a significant down-regulation of the three isoforms of Bim,
BimEL (extra-long), BimL (long) and BimS (short) [57]. These findings suggest a
model which described the contribution of EBV to the pathogenesis of BL. EBV
nuclear proteins, EBNA3A and EBNA3C (but not EBNA3B) are necessary to estab-
lish LCLs [112], and their expression may be involved in the resistance of BL cells to
cytotoxic drugs. The regulation of Bim was observed predominantly at the RNA
level, with little evidence of post-translational Bim stabilization by EBV [113]. The
molecular mechanism by which Bim is regulated has not been completely
elucidated.
LMP1
The Epstein–Barr virus latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1) is critical for EBV-
induced B-cell immortalization and transformation [114]. Expression of LMP1
induces phenotypic changes of B cells and also activates cellular genes like CD40
or ICAM1/CD54, NFkB, c-jun N-terminal-kinase (JNK), and the STAT signaling
pathway [113]. This protein is abundantly expressed during the lytic cycle of viral
replication [115]. LMP1 possesses six hydrophobic transmembrane domains in its
protein structure that enable ligand-independent aggregation in the plasma membrane
important for altering cell growth and cellular gene activation [116]. This cellular
184 S. Banerjee et al.
gene activation is permitted through two major effector domains like, C-terminal
activation regions (CTAR) 1 and 2 [117, 118]. The C-terminal activation region1
contributes to the initial induction of lymphocyte transformation and NFkB activa-
tion and also interacts with tumour necrosis factor receptor-associated factor (TRAF)
[119]. It was also reported that CTAR2 is critical for long-term growth of lympho-
blastoid cell lines [118]. This domain was proved to interact with TNF receptor-
associated death domain protein (TRADD) and is essential for activation of NFkB
and JNK [117, 120]. EBV suppresses the cellular apoptotic program important for
establishment of latent infection and the development of viral associated neoplasia.
Furthermore, expression of LMP1 in BL cell lines leads to increased mRNA levels
of bfl-1, the cellular anti-apoptotic gene [121]. Moreover, ectopic expression of
Bfl-1 in an EBV-positive cell line induces a latency type 1 program and protects
against apoptosis induced by growth factor deprivation [122]. A recent report dem-
onstrated that LMP1 can activate the bfl-1 promoter activity through interactions
with components of the tumour necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)/CD40 signaling
pathway in BL-derived cell lines [122].
LMP2A
LMP2A influences the balance of survival factors in B lymphocytes and may con-
tribute functionally to BL-associated pathogenesis. Low levels of LMP2A tran-
scripts were detected in fresh tumour biopsies supporting the hypothesis that
LMP2A protects B cells from apoptosis which is induced by deregulated c-MYC in
human BL cell lines [123]. Additionally, studies using transgenic mice revealed a
functional role for LMP2A in development of BL [124]. It was reported that LMP2A
induces a BCR-like signal in absence of functional BCR [63]. Previous studies have
shown that LMP2A plays a major role in activation of PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling
pathway [125]. Akt was identified as one of the downstream targets of LMP2A in B
cells [126], and LMP2A expression induces PI3K dependent AKT phosphorylation
[127]. Additionally, expression of c-Myc in association with LMP2A increases the
probability of acquiring a mutation in p53 in EBV-positive cells [123]. Therefore,
LMP2A is probably an important component of the missing link between EBV and
BL. Moreover, LMP2A was found to increase the pro-survival levels of Bcl family
members in B lymphocytes [123].
c-Myc is a major transcription factor which plays a crucial role in many cellular
processes like-growth, proliferation and apoptosis [128, 129]. Interestingly, c-Myc-
induced apoptosis was found as a key phenomenon in BL cells as c-Myc expression
10 Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma 185
levels above a threshold induces apoptosis of these cells [130]. However, c-Myc
potently drives S phase progression in somatic cells [131]. Therefore, c-myc expres-
sion is tightly regulated and immediately sensitive to external stimuli. In case of
normal cells, c-Myc exerts pro-proliferative effects by the upregulation of cyclins
including, D and E and down-regulation of p27 [30]. In addition, over-expression of
c-Myc in B cells leads to induction of p53 or ARF and results in induction of apop-
tosis [132]. It was also demonstrated that in mouse cells, the product of CDKN2A
(INK4a-ARF) locus, p19ARF80 stabilizes p53 by forming a complex with and
antagonizing MDM2, a key negative regulator of p53 [133, 134]. In human, the
p14ARF protein is a homolog of the ARF protein [135]. Interestingly, deregulation
of c-Myc is implicated in a number of human malignancies which occurs through
gene translocation or amplification, mRNA stabilization, enhanced translation or
protein stabilization [136]. Different forms of BL are strongly associated with
specific chromosomal translocations that result in the juxtaposition of the c-myc
locus on chromosome 8 and various immunoglubulin (lg) loci located on chromo-
some 14, 22, or 2 [137, 138]. These chromosomal translocations lead to deregulated
expression of the c-myc gene [139, 140], because of structural alterations present in
the 5¢ regulatory portion of the translocated gene [141, 142]. Additionally, a number
of transcriptional regulatory factors from the lg loci also influence c-myc expression
[139]. Deregulated expression of the c-myc gene plays a pathogenic role in BL and
in analogous B-cell tumours in several animal species [143]. This was also shown
in studies, involving the transfection of an activated c-myc gene into murine B lym-
phocytes [144], and in vivo studies using transgenic mice carrying activated c-myc
genes in their B cells [145]. Those experiments indicate that c-myc activation per se
does not lead to transformation, and that additional, most likely genetic, alterations
are required for tumour development. Lombardi et al. observed that EBV infection
and c-myc activation are sufficient for tumorigenic conversion of human B cells
in vitro, strongly supporting the hypothesis that these same two pathogenic steps
may be involved in the in vivo development of BL [146]. It is well established that
higher levels of c-Myc expression facilitates enhanced protein synthesis and energy
metabolism, reduction of cell adhesion, stimulation of angiogenic property, pro-
motes genomic instability and metastasis potential towards lymphomagenesis [147].
This growth promoting activity of c-Myc is counteracted by its capacity to induce
programmed cell death via activation of ARF [148]. ARF stabilizes p53 by antago-
nizing MDM2, which results in transcriptional activation of the pro-apoptotic tar-
gets of p53 like, NOXA, PUMA and BAX [149]. The majority of BL tumours and
derived cell lines carry mutations that result in deregulation of the p53/MDM2/ARF
signaling pathway [149] and threonine 58 mutation blocks the ability of c-Myc
protein to induce the expression of the apoptotic BCL-2 family member BIM [131].
BIM interacts with the anti-apoptotic protein BCL-2, inhibiting its function and
appears to be an important regulator of apoptosis [150]. The exact mechanism
by which MYC activates BIM is not fully understood and recent studies demon-
strated that EBV-infected cell lines express lower levels of BIM than parental lines,
suggesting that a latent EBV product blocks apoptosis by down-regulating the
expression of BIM [151]. Interestingly, the anti-apoptotic kinase, PIM-1 was also
reported to be hyperactive in BL and induces MDM2 in these cells resulting in the
186 S. Banerjee et al.
EBV viral onco-proteins are capable of altering a number of cellular signal trans-
duction pathways. These EBV latent proteins play prominent roles in deriving
virus-mediated oncogenesis. They can trigger several signaling cascades which
alter cellular growth and survival. These viral oncoproteins can stimulate a number
of signal transduction pathways such as, NF-kB, JNK, JAK/STAT, PI3K/Akt,
ERK1/2, and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) [165]. Additionally,
they can regulate downstream genes which are functionally related to different
biological processes. These deregulated cellular signaling can contribute to the
development of BL. Here we will discuss the molecular interactions of EBV latent
proteins with cellular host factors (Fig. 10.1), which contribute significantly to the
modulation of cellular signal transduction pathways.
JAK-STAT Signaling
The EBV latency antigens, EBNA-1, EBNA-2 and LMP-1, have been shown to play
critical roles in B-lymphocyte transformation [91, 167]. The LMP1 protein is com-
posed of a short cytoplasmic N-terminus domain of 24 amino acids, six transmem-
brane domains of 186 amino acids and also a cytoplasmic C-terminus domain of
200 amino acids [168]. The six transmembrane domains are essential for LMP-1
aggregation in the cell membrane as well as cellular signal transduction [169]. The
long cytosolic C-terminal domain contains the C-terminal activating regions
(CTAR)-1 and -2 [170]. These domains play a major role in LMP1 contribution to
EBV mediated B-cell transformation and immortalization [117]. Interestingly, the
region between CTAR-1 and -2 (CTAR-3) was also found to induce the JAK/STAT
signaling pathway [171]. LMP-1 mimics a constitutively active tumour necrosis
factor receptor (TNF-R), and by this constitutive activation contributes to B-cell
188 S. Banerjee et al.
Fig. 10.1 EBV latency proteins modulate major cellular signal transduction pathways [166]. Viral
proteins interact with different cellular proteins to deregulate their signaling cascades. This eventu-
ally leads to the formation of Burkitt’s lymphoma by abnormal cell proliferation and inhibition of
the apoptotic process
immortalization and transformation [113, 172]. Interestingly, IL-21 can also induce
the JAK/STAT signaling pathway and so regulate expression of the EBV latency
proteins EBNA2 and LMP1 in BL cell line Jijoye, as well as in B95-8 transformed
lymphoblastoid cells [173]. They also suggested that intact JAK/STAT signaling
10 Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma 189
PI3K/Akt Pathway
The serine/threonine kinase Akt or PKB promotes cellular proliferation, survival and
apoptosis in a wide range of cell types [184]. Akt is a well-known downstream effec-
tor molecule of PI3-kinase [185]. Akt phosphorylates a number of signaling mole-
cules involved in a number of major cellular processes [186, 187]. Akt phosphorylates
the Bcl-2 family member BAD, to promote cellular survival [186]. Thus, PI3-K/Akt
signaling pathway is involved in regulation of cell proliferation and survival in a
wide range of different malignancies. In EBV-immortalized B-cells, PI3-K/Akt sig-
nal transduction also plays a crucial role in both cell survival and proliferation [188].
PI3-K/Akt pathway activation cooperates with EBV proteins in B-cell transforma-
tion. Latent membrane protein (LMP) 2A activates the PI3-K/Akt pathway and
inhibits TGF-beta-induced apoptosis in BL and gastric carcinoma cell lines [189].
LMP2A can also contribute to EBV-associated neoplasia by regulating b-catenin
signaling pathways [127]. LMP1 can also promote cell survival through these path-
ways. In the context of EBV lytic infection, BRLF1, but not BZLF1 has a contribu-
tory role in PI3-K/Akt activation and studies have also demonstrated that PI3-K is a
major determinant of responsiveness to the B-cell antigen receptor (BCR)-mediated
190 S. Banerjee et al.
EBV activation [189]. These findings provide important evidence for the role of
PI3-K/Akt signaling pathway in EBV-mediated growth and survival of BL cells.
Notch Signaling
Signal transduction through members of the Notch signaling pathway has multiple
roles in cell fate determination. This family of proteins is conserved in evolution
from nematodes to human [190]. The Notch signaling pathway in mammals includes
four different receptors, Notch1-4, and five ligands including Jagged1, 2 and Delta-
like1, 3, 4 [191]. The Notch receptor is activated by direct interaction with its ligands
expressed on neighbouring cells [192]. Sequentially, the intracellular domain of the
Notch receptor (NIC) is released from the membrane after receptor cleavage which
is executed by the ADAM/TACE protease and gamma-secretase complexes [193].
NIC translocates to the nucleus and associates with the transcription repressor
RBP-Jk, which results in transactivation of the RBP-Jk responsive promoter through
recruitment of the co-activators of the Mastermind-like (MAML) family [194]. The
N-terminal Delta-Serrate-Lag2 (DSL) domains are extracellular domains which are
essential for Notch-binding [195].
Notch signaling is linked to multiple functions during mammalian haematopoi-
esis and lymphopoiesis [196]. One important function is the regulation of T-cell
commitment from a common lymphoid precursor at the expense of B-cell develop-
ment in the thymus [149]. Notch signaling also controls marginal zone B-cell dif-
ferentiation in the spleen [56] and deregulated Notch signaling plays a pivotal role
in T-cell malignancies [197]. Importantly, EBV antigens have derived strategies for
usurping this function of Notch. Involvement of EBV protein EBNA2 with the tran-
scription factor RBP-Jk was shown to be essential for B-cell transformation [198,
199]. EBNA2 activates B cells by up-regulating the B-cell activation markers CD21
and CD23 [199]. Thus, deregulated Notch signaling may promote the immortaliza-
tion of B cells through usurpation of RBP-Jk interaction. Notch-1 can mimic
EBNA2’s ability to activate CD21 expression and down-regulate Igm transcription
in BL cell lines infected with a mutant EBV lacking EBNA2 [200]. Interestingly,
CD23 and LMP1 were not activated by Notch-1 [200], and activated Notch-1 can
transiently maintain the proliferation of LCLs [201]. These LCLs do not have
EBNA2 but express viral oncoprotein LMP1 suggesting that activated Notch-1 can
partially substituted for EBNA2 [202].
Wnt Signaling
Malaria
infection [230]. This suggested that peripheral EBV loads may reach levels five times
higher during acute malaria compared to healthy individuals [226]. The findings of
Whittle and co-workers also demonstrated that peripheral blood lymphocytes from
adults and children with acute malaria were unable to control outgrowth of EBV-
transformed cells in colony regression assays in vitro [231], and P. falciparum may
stimulate EBV latently infected memory B cells via Toll like receptor-9 engagement
[224]. Furthermore, the expression of interleukin-10 (IL-10) was increased after
P. falciparum infection leading to TLR9 induction in naïve B cells [232]. Kataaha
and co-workers observed that addition of P. falciparum extracts to peripheral blood
lymphocytes ex vivo increased the efficiency of EBV-induced cell transformation
[233]. Thus, P. falciparum infection is an additional factor which can contribute to
endemic BL pathogenesis (Fig. 10.1). In addition the influence of malaria in stimu-
lating B-cell expansion is only one contributor; however, there is the possibility that
mosquito-borne arboviruses are another risk factor for endemic BL [235].
AIDS
Over the past few years, BL research has focused on identifying more efficacious
but less toxic regimens. Additionally, the rapidly growing knowledge providing
molecular diagnosis of this disease has enabled the development of novel treatment
options. Systemic chemotherapy is one of the treatments of choice in BL [28].
A careful patient history, physical examination and routine laboratory studies, gal-
lium-67 scintigraphy, CAT scanning, and abdominal ultrasonography are all useful
techniques for identifying tumour sites as well as follow-up examination in response
to therapy [247]. The gallium concentrates preferentially in tumour nodules and is
the most sensitive of the three studies [248]. The CAT scan and ultrasonogram are
important for localization of the tumours in the abdomen and is also important in
preparing for surgical removal [249]. In addition, the serum lactate dehydrogenase
level also reflects the tumour burden and hence becomes a sensitive indicator of
tumour regression and relapse [250]. BL was known as one of the few B-cell malig-
nancies in which the treatment regimen for adults has been modeled on the basis of
10 Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma 195
paediatric regimens. BL was associated with poor outcomes before the advent of
high intense chemotherapy due to its high proliferative rate [251]. The prognosis for
many patients with BL has changed significantly with the introduction of short,
intensive chemotherapeutic regimens [251]. This advancement has significantly
improved clinical outcomes for the BL patients. A report by Magrath et al., suggests
that in cases of high-grade B-cell lymphomas, chemotherapeutic drugs like-cyclo-
phosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, high-dose methotrexate and intrathecal
therapy should be alternated with ifosfamide, etoposide, high-dose cytarabine and
intrathecal therapy for two cycles each for high-risk patients, whereas those with a
low risk should receive three cycles of cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin
and high-dose methotrexate [252]. They also demonstrated that short courses of
intensive therapy can elicit excellent response rates [251]. However, the toxicity rate
was found to be very significant, including neurotoxicities from intrathecal therapy,
haematological toxicity and severe mucositis symptoms [251]. A recent report dem-
onstrated that a phase II study utilizing a modified regimen [252], treated adult
patients with reduced doses of systemic methotrexate and intrathecal cytarabine,
and altered the fractionated schedule for the cyclophosphamide resulting in a
significant decrease in neurotoxicity and mucositis [253]. With the advancement of
immunotherapy, the potential usage of monoclonal antibodies and other biological
reagents, such as adjuvant therapy, opened new therapeutic options in BL treatment.
For example, rituximab, or anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody, which acts by several
mechanisms including the activation of cell-dependent cytotoxicity as well as anti-
body-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, has been used most extensively with combi-
nation of cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin and dexamethasone drugs
[254]. Additionally, this same strategy has recently been found to be very effective in
treating HIV-associated BL [255, 256]. Other agents like, small peptide nucleic acids
can theoretically be used to target oncogenes. Recently, an in vivo study demonstrated
that BL grown in severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice can be inhibited by
a peptide nucleic acid complementary to regulatory intronic sequences, thus inhibit-
ing production of c-Myc [257].
Several therapeutic strategies using stem cell transplantation in the treatment of
BL have also been explored. Different studies have focused on the potential benefit
of high-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell transplant. A recent
report on phase II study demonstrated an intensive chemotherapy course followed
by autologous stem cell transplant for adult patients resulted in comparable or
slightly better overall survival rate for those with BL compared with current chemo-
therapy regimens utilized for comparable-aged patients [258]. Some additional
reports were also found providing retrospective evaluations of allogeneic transplan-
tation for BL. The reports demonstrated lower relapse rates for allogeneic transplant
patients compared with autologous transplant recipients, but unfortunately, the mor-
tality rate was found to be higher in allogeneic transplant patients [259]. Anti-viral
therapy is also a very useful approach for treatment of viral positive BL. Latently
infected BL cells with EBV remained unaffected by conventional anti-viral drugs
like, acyclovir and ganciclovir [260]. They lack the expression of the viral thymi-
dine kinase (TK) necessary to convert nucleoside analogues to their monophosphate
10 Epstein–Barr Virus and Burkitt’s Lymphoma 197
form [261]. Moreover, it was observed that exposure to arginine butyrate can induce
expression of EBV TK and sensitize the EBV-infected cells to these drugs [262].
Other drugs like cidofovir may also target expression of EBV latent genes, as some
studies have demonstrated that cidofovir can down-regulate LMP1 expression and
also decrease Bcl-2 expression levels in BL cells [262]. Further studies into the use
of viral specific therapies for use against EBV-associated BL would provide another
avenue for development as well as increased specificity and efficacy important for
future targeted therapies.
Future Perspective
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Chapter 11
Molecular Biology of Burkitt Lymphoma
Introduction
Burkitt lymphoma (BL) was first described by Dennis Burkitt in 1958 as a unique
sarcoma involving the jaw in African children [1]. He spent the next few years visit-
ing hospitals in East and Southern Africa and found that this tumor had a geographi-
cal distribution that overlapped with areas hyperendemic and holoendemic for
malaria, suggesting a potential link to an insect vector [2]. Shortly after, a newly
discovered herpes virus, now known as EBV, was isolated from BL tumors [3].
Further studies confirmed the presence of EBV in almost 100% of Burkitt lym-
phoma cases in Africa.
We now recognize three epidemiologic subtypes of BL: endemic, sporadic, and
HIV-associated. The endemic type, as described by Burkitt, presents as an abdomi-
nal or jaw mass in children in equatorial Africa and Papa New Guinea, areas with
high transmission rates of Plasmodium falciparum malaria. In these cases >95% of
tumors are found to have EBV. The sporadic type, seen in the USA and Europe,
often presents as lymph node enlargement and is associated with EBV in approxi-
mately 20% of cases. HIV-associated BL is seen worldwide and is associated with
EBV in approximately 30% of cases. The unifying characteristic of all three epide-
miologic subtypes is the translocation of the MYC proto-oncogene to one of the
three immunoglobulin chains. This essentially puts MYC translation under the con-
trol of the immunoglobulin locus and leads to constitutive Myc activation.
L. Giulino-Roth
Department of Pediatrics, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology,
Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York, NY, USA
E. Cesarman (*)
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College,
New York, NY, USA
e-mail: [email protected]
Burkitt lymphoma has an important role in history being the first human cancer
to be linked to an oncogenic virus, EBV, and a cellular proto-oncogene, MYC.
In more than 50 years since its discovery this tumor has continued to fascinate sci-
entists due to the complex interplay between cellular genetics, infectious agents,
and host immunity. In this chapter we will focus on the molecular characteristics of
Burkitt lymphoma, and the complexities of Myc activation in conjunction with other
cellular genetic or functional alterations that provide insights into the pathobiology
of this highly aggressive malignancy.
Pathologic Diagnosis of BL
BL Karyotype
Nearly all BLs contain a translocation of the MYC locus (8q24). The most common
partner is IgH on chromosome 14q32; however, rearrangements with the k (22q11)
or l (2p12) light chains are also seen. There are infrequent cases of BL that lack any
detectable MYC translocation as determined by cytogenetics or molecular testing
[5]. While studies in adults report a simple karyotype with rare additional cytoge-
netic abnormalities [6], complex karyotypes are frequently seen in pediatric cases
[7–10]. The most common alterations are gains in 1q, 7q, and 12q and losses in 6q,
13q, and 17p [11]. In particular, loss of 13q has been associated with inferior
outcome in two retrospective pediatric studies and may have a role in risk
stratification [10, 11].
11 Molecular Biology of Burkitt Lymphoma 213
Myc Function
The MYC gene encodes for the transcription factor Myc (c-myc), which was first dis-
covered as the cellular homologue of a retroviral oncogene encoded by the avian
myelocytomatosis virus (v-myc) [12]. It is part of a family that includes N-Myc and
L-Myc. Myc is a nuclear phosphoprotein with gene activating and repressing capabili-
ties that is involved in many cellular processes including growth (increase in cell size),
proliferation (DNA replication and cell cycle control), metabolism, and apoptosis. The
N-terminus contains conserved regions known as Myc Box I, II, and III which play
important roles in Myc stabilization and interaction with target genes. The C-terminus
contains a helix-loop-helix domain, which allows Myc to form a heterodimer with the
constitutively expressed protein MAX [13]. The MYC-MAX complex binds to
CACGTG DNA sequences known as E boxes and activates transcription via recruit-
ment of TRRAP-associated histone acetylation complexes and the INI1-associated
chromatin modulating proteins [14]. Myc is implicated in the transcription of approxi-
mately 15% of all known genes and is one of the most commonly activated oncogenes
in human cancers [15]. It has also been shown to act as a transcription repressor, one
mechanism involving binding and inhibition of the transcriptional-activating protein
Miz-1 [16]. A recent study by Rahl et al. also suggested a role for Myc in RNA poly-
merase II pause release (Rahl et al, Cell 141, 432-445 April 30, 2010). Promoter-
proximal pausing is a post-initiation regulatory step that is known to play a crucial role
in the control of gene expression. In this study, the authors present evidence that Myc
may be responsible for the release of paused polymerase in specific genes. Large-scale
gene expression profiling and chromatim immunoprecipitation studies to search for
direct Myc targets have shown that thousands of genes are affected by Myc, and these
genes are involved in a wide range of functions. Many are involved in cell growth, and
include those in ribosome biogenesis, protein synthesis, and metabolism.
The function of Myc in normal cells is complex and nuanced, but it appears to
play a central orchestrating role in differentiation as well as generation and mainte-
nance of stem cells and their pluripotency [17]. In fact, MYC is among a handful of
genes that in combination can induce reversion of differentiated cells into multipo-
tent stem cells [18, 19].
Myc is activated in response to mitogenic signals and transcribes genes that are
important in cellular proliferation. In the absence of apoptotic inhibiting signals,
however, Myc is also responsible for initiating apoptosis. Myc drives cells into the
cell cycle by inducing transcription of genes that encode for cyclins D and E and by
downregulating the cyclin inhibitor p27. This drives cells from G0/G1 to the S phase
of the cell cycle. An additional non-transcriptional role for Myc in DNA replication
has also been documented, induced by increased replication origin activity with
resulting DNA damage and checkpoint activation [20]. In addition, Myc can increase
reactive oxygen species production and contribute to chromosomal instability. As a
result of all of these effects, overexpression of Myc will ultimately lead to apoptosis
in otherwise normal cells. There are multiple pathways by which Myc expression
214 L. Giulino-Roth and E. Cesarman
modulates apoptosis. Myc activates the p53 program through the nuclear tumor sup-
pressor ARF. It also activates the proapoptotic protein Bim and inhibits anti-apoptotic
proteins such as BCLX1 and BCL2. Myc-induced lymphomagenesis can likely only
take place in the setting of inhibition of the Myc-induced apoptotic signals.
Concordantly with its role in cell growth, a role for Myc in metabolism and ribo-
some biogenesis has recently been appreciated [21]. In Drosophila, a hypomorphic
allele of dMYC results in flies with a “Minute” phenotype that resemble those that
result from loss of function in genes involved in ribosome biogenesis, so it has been
postulated that this may be the primordial function of Myc [21]. In addition to
numerous genes involved in glucose and glutamine metabolism (which are tran-
scribed by RNA polymerase II), Myc stimulates genes transcribed by RNA
Polymenrase II (E.G. tRNA and 5S rRNA genes) [22], and RNA polymerase I,
which transcribes genes encoding ribosomal RNA [23]. Myc also is thought to inte-
grate proliferation with glucose metablolism (promoting both oxidative phosphory-
lation and glycolysis) and glutamine catabolism [24].
translocated to the IgL k (t(8;22)) or l (t(2;8)) genes. This places MYC under the
control of the immunoglobulin locus resulting in constitutive activation.
In the endemic form of BL, where the Ig regulatory elements are at a great distance,
mutations in the first exon of MYC have been found that lead to a release in a block
of transcriptional regulation, contributing to deregulated expression [33]. However,
the regulatory elements of the MYC gene are complex, and still incompletely char-
acterized. Two major promoters in the MYC gene have been described: P1 and P2.
While both are used in normal cells, a shift to the upstream P1 was shown to occur
in BL [34, 35]. There seems to be relationship between the block of transcriptional
elongation and promoter utilization. The P1-initiated c-myc transcripts were not
found to terminate at discrete sites near the 3¢ end of exon 1 where this block is
216 L. Giulino-Roth and E. Cesarman
Point mutations in the coding region of Myc are frequent in many B-cell lymphomas
including BL [37–40]. The conserved Myc box I region has multiple mutational
hotspots, the most common of which is a missense mutation affecting threonine 58
(T58). Phosphorylation of T58 by GSK-3b targets Myc for degradation by the prote-
osome. Point mutations affecting T58 inhibit Myc degradation resulting in stabiliza-
tion of the protein and enhanced transforming activity [41]. The second most common
mutation interferes with Pro57 and likely has the same effect due to the fact that
Pro57 is required for T58 phosphorylation. These mutations allow Myc, which nor-
mally has a short half-life of <30 min, to escape degradation in BL cells.
A small subset (<10%) of both endemic and sporadic BL lack the Myc transloca-
tion. Examination of these cases demonstrates elevated expression of Myc at levels
equivalent to that seen in cases of BL with Myc translocation [42]. There is evi-
dence that micro-RNAs (miRNAs) are responsible for Myc overexpression in
translocation-negative cases. MiRNAs are small non-coding RNA strands that
bind to mRNA and regulate gene expression by mRNA cleavage or translational
inhibition [43].
Downregulation of hsa-miR-34b and hsa-miR-9 has been implicated as mecha-
nisms of translocation independent upregulation of Myc [42, 44]. Leucci et al.
investigated the miRNA expression pattern in BL cases with and without a Myc trans-
location. They found downregulation of hsa-miR-34b, a miRNA predicted to target
Myc, in translocation-negative cases but not in translocation-positive cases. The role
of hsa-miR-34b in Myc expression is supported by in vitro studies showing a dose-
dependent inverse relationship between hsa-miR-34b and Myc. Lymphoblastoid cell
lines (LCLs) transfected with synthetic hsa-miR-34b showed a dose-dependent
decrease in Myc expression. Conversely, transfection with a hsa-miR-34b-inhibitor
resulted in increased in Myc expression [42].
A more recent study evaluating miRNAs in BL found that downregulation of
hsa-miR-9 may also be responsible for Myc upregulation in BL cases lacking a
Myc translocation [44]. Hsa-miR-9 expression was found to be decreased in trans-
location-negative cases when compared with translocation-positive cases. These
cases were found to have heavy methylation of the hsa-miR-9 gene. Has-miR-9
modulates E2F1, a transcription factor that upregulates Myc expression. E2F1 was
found to be upregulated only in BL cases that lacked a Myc translocation. LCLs
11 Molecular Biology of Burkitt Lymphoma 217
p53 Deregulation
suppressor pathway, has also been documented in WT p53 BL cases implying that
alterations in both the p53 and RB pathways exist in BL [58]. These alterations likely
complement Myc activation by inhibiting Myc-mediated apoptosis.
RBL2/p130 is one of the three members of the retinoblastoma family of genes along
with pRb and p107 [59]. The pocket region, which is homologous in all three family
members, mediates interactions with E2F/DP members and viral oncoproteins. Loss
of genes in this pathway may confer growth advantage or resistance to apoptosis in
BL. While the pRB pathway is intact in BL, RBL2/p130 is mutated in most cases of
endemic BL and some cases of sporadic BL. These mutations interfere with the
nuclear localization of the protein product [60, 61]. HIV-associated BL (HIV-BL),
in contrast, does not harbor mutations in RBL2/p130. Another mechanism of RBL2/
p130 inactivation, specifically in HIV-BL may be via interactions between the
HIV-1 TAT protein and RBL2/p130 [62, 63]. However, HIV does not directly infect
BL cells, so this process would have to be a result of entry of Tat protein into BL
cells at sufficiently high concentrations, after release from infected T cells or mac-
rophages, which has not been experimentally documented to occur in vivo.
The importance of RBL2/p130 downregulation in complementing Myc has been
demonstrated in vitro and in vivo [4]. Introduction of WT RBL2/p130 into BL cell
lines with RBL2/p130 mutation results in cell cycle arrest via a G0-G1 phase block.
These cells also have altered expression genes important in apoptosis, B-cell activa-
tion, and cell proliferation [64]. Overexpression of Myc and silencing of RBL2/
p130 in EBV-positive B-cell lines accelerates cell proliferation and decreases apop-
tosis. This effect is greater than either alterations in Myc or RBL2/p130 alone. In
vivo xenograft murine models that are transfected to overexpress Myc and silence
RBL2/p130 demonstrate development of B-cell lymphomas. In conclusion, RBL2/
p130 signaling is deregulated in endemic and some sporadic BL and may cooperate
with Myc to mediate lymphomagenesis.
Burkitt lymphoma
Normal B cells
b c d
a
Wild type Myc Mutant Myc Wild type Myc
Plus EBV
Cyclin D, E B
p27 i
ARF/P53
m
+
Cyclin D, E Cyclin D, E B Cyclin D, E B
B
p27 p27 ARF/P53i p27 ARF/P53 i
ARF/P53 i m USP7 m
Cell cycle arrest m Wp
W (BHRF1)
Apoptosis
EBNA1
Proliferation Proliferation
Lymphomagenesis EBV
Fig. 11.2 Mechanisms for escaping c-MYC-induced apoptosis. Panels a–c are adapted from
Dang et al. Cancer Cell 2005; 8:177-178 (a) Acute activation of Myc induces target genes involved
in proliferation, but the activation of ARF, p53, and Bim (which inhibits Bcl2) leads to apoptosis
or cell cycle arrest. Activation of both the ARF/p53 and Bim pathways is required for apoptosis
induction (b) Chronic expression of wild-type Myc induces lymphomagenesis coordinately with
the inactivation of ARF or p53. (c) Chronic expression of Myc mutants derived from Burkitt lym-
phoma (BL) cells fail to activate Bim and hence promote lymphomagenesis despite the presence
of wild-type p53 or ARF. (d) In our proposed model, EBV in a Wp-restricted form of latency
downregulates Bim in BL cells and thus contributes to lymphomagenesis. Adapted from Rickinson,
PhD; Alfred Reiter, MD; and John T. Sandlund, MD, Hematology 2007
apoptosis [67]. Irradiated mice that are immune reconstituted with hematopoietic
stem cells containing mutated Myc develop tumors at a faster rate than mice recon-
stituted with WT Myc. Tumors as a result of mutated Myc do not have alterations in
the p53 pathway but demonstrate decreased expression of Bim. These studies are
validated with work in BL tumor samples that shows that BL cases with WT Myc
are more likely to have p53 mutations and cases with mutated Myc are more likely
to have decreased Bim expression [67].
It is therefore likely that there are multiple mechanisms by which BL cells can
evade Myc-mediated apoptosis (Fig. 11.2). For tumors with WT Myc, apoptosis
is inhibited via alterations in the AFR/p53 pathway. In cases of Myc mutations,
the p53 pathway remains intact but apoptosis is inhibited via decreased expres-
sion of Bim.
220 L. Giulino-Roth and E. Cesarman
EBV may represent another mechanism by which BL cells are able to avert
Myc-mediated apoptosis. EBV is present in almost all endemic BL and a subset of
sporadic and HIV-associated BL. EBV is a g-herpes virus that can exist in lytic and
latent states. The majority of adults have been infected with EBV and carry the
latent virus in 1 of every 105 to 106 circulating memory B-cells. In EBV-positive
BL, EBV is found in every tumor cell, implying a role for the virus in generation of
a malignant clone. While EBV is known to have growth-transforming capacity in
B-cells this may not be its role in BL as the majority of EBV-transforming proteins
are not expressed in BL. In the case of BL, EBV exists in a latency I pattern where
only Epstein Barr nuclear antigen-1 (EBNA1), and non-coding EBV-encoded RNAs
(EBERs) are expressed. There is mounting evidence that the role of EBV in BL may
not be to transform B-cells but to counteract Myc-induced apoptosis. Two EBV
encoded proteins have been suggested to have an anti-apoptotic role.
EBNA1
EBNA1 is essential for EBV episome replication and is expressed in all EBV-
associated malignancies. Overexpression of a dominant-negative EBNA1 mutant in
EBV-positive BL cell lines is associated with increased cell death [68]. Similarly,
downregulation of EBNA1 in BL cell lines by RNA interference results in moder-
ately decreased cell proliferation [69, 70]. One proposed mechanism by which
EBNA1 inhibits apoptosis is by interfering with WT p53 [68, 71]. EBNA1 binds the
deubiquitinizing enzyme HAUSP/USP7. This enzyme is known to bind to p53 lead-
ing to p53 stabilization. EBNA1 competes with p53 for binding to USP7 and is
thought to reduce p53 stability. The importance of EBNA1 in evading apoptosis in
BL, however, has been debated. Studies in LCLs treated with DNA cross linking
agents have shown that latent EBV does not result in alterations in p53 levels or p53
phosphorylation [72]. A recent study suggested that an alternative mechanism of by
which EBNA1 may counteract apoptosis is via upregulation of survivin, an anti-
apoptotic protein [73].
BHRF1
are derived from the Wp promoter; however, a deletion removes EBNA2 resulting
in transcription of EBNA1, EBNA 3A, 3B, and 3C, and a truncated form of
EBNA-LP. Deletion of EBNA2 puts BHRF1 in close proximity to the active BamH1
W promoter resulting in expression of this protein, which is usually only seen in
lytic replication. BHRF1 is known to protect B-cells from programmed cell death
including Myc-mediated apoptosis [76, 77]. BHRF1 expression in latency I BL
cell lines protects cells from apoptosis [78]. Additionally, knockdown of BHRF1
by RNA interference in Wp-restricted BL cells results in increased cell death
[79]. These results support the role of EBV in the evasion of Myc-inducted apop-
tosis in BL.
Microarray technology has been used to provide additional insights into the molecular
pathways relevant in BL. Gene expression data has identified a genetic signature
that can distinguish BL from DLBCL. Similar technology has been used to evaluate
differences between the BL epidemiologic subtypes.
It is occasionally difficult to reliably differentiate BL from DLBCL using mor-
phology, immunophenotype, and standard molecular testing, and descriptors such
as BL-like or atypical BL have been used to describe these cases. The current WHO
classification schema now recognizes a separate diagnostic category of B-cell lym-
phoma unclassifiable with features intermediate between BL and DLBCL (BCL, U)
[80]. Differentiating BL from DLBCL is clinically relevant as the optimal therapy
varies between the two.
Gene expression profiling (GEP) has identified a BL that is unique from DLBCL
[6, 81]. These studies, which included cases of sporadic BL, compared BL to DLBCL
and found the BL signature to be enriched in Myc targets and GC B-cell genes. MHC
class I and NF-kB target genes were downregulated in BL [81]. Importantly, tumors
with the “molecular BL” signature included not only cases that were pathologically
diagnosed as BL but also cases of BCL, U and some cases of DLCBL. Patients with
tumors molecularly classified as BL had a superior outcome when treated with inten-
sive BL-type therapy than those treated as DLCBL [81]. These studies highlight the
difficulty in diagnosing BL by standard methods and identify a sporadic BL-specific
signature that can be obtained by molecular profiling.
More recently GEP profiling has been performed on all three epidemiologic sub-
types of BL [4]. Unsupervised clustering shows that the BL subtypes cluster together
apart from other aggressive lymphomas. While the epidemiologic subtypes were
relatively homogeneous, some modest differences were reported. Endemic and
HIV-associated BL cluster together apart from sporadic BL. Differences between
endemic BL and sporadic BL include genes important in B-cell receptor signaling,
TNF-a/NF-kB pathways and IL-dependent signaling cascades. It has been postu-
lated that differences may be related to chronic antigenic stimulation in the context
of endemic BL.
222 L. Giulino-Roth and E. Cesarman
Conclusions
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226 L. Giulino-Roth and E. Cesarman
Introduction
Epstein Barr virus (EBV) is a common human g-herpesvirus that infects more than
90% of the human adult population [1]. After transmission via saliva exchange,
EBV primarily infects and establishes persistence in human B cells. Depending on
the differentiation stage of the infected B cell, EBV infection leads to the expression
of latency programs, consisting of eight proteins in naïve B cells, three proteins in
germinal center B cells, and zero or transient single protein expression in memory
B cells (latencies III, II and I, respectively) [2]. These latency proteins (six nuclear
antigens or EBNAs and two membrane proteins or LMPs) are thought to drive
infected B cells into memory B-cell differentiation for long-term persistence in this
cellular compartment and reactivation of virus producing, lytic infection after B-cell
receptor cross-linking on EBV infected memory B cells [3, 4]. Accordingly, most
EBV-associated tumors that are thought to emerge from these B cell differentiation
stages are B cell lymphomas and express different sets of EBV latent proteins. Post-
transplant lymphoproliferative disease carries latency III, Hodgkin’s lymphoma
latency II, and Burkitt’s lymphoma latency I. In addition, EBV associated T and NK
cell lymphomas, as well as carcinomas of epithelial cell origin exist, but their etiology
remains poorly defined [5].
EBV-associated Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL) develops primarily during coinfection
with the immunomodulatory pathogens Plasmodium falciparum malaria and human
immunodeficiency virus [6], resulting in endemic BL (95% EBV associated) and
A. Moormann
Department of Pediatrics, University of Massachusetts Medical School,
Worcester, MA 01605, USA
e-mail: [email protected]
C. Münz (*)
Viral Immunobiology, Institute of Experimental Immunology, University of Zürich,
Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland
e-mail: [email protected]
Since overexpression of the oncogene c-myc, due to either the translocation into the
immunoglobulin loci or down-regulation of c-myc targeting miRNAs, drives BL
proliferation [7], these tumor cells express only few viral products which are thought
to block apoptosis of proliferating cells [8]. In fact most BL tumors express only the
nuclear antigen 1 of EBV (EBNA1) at the protein level and non-translated EBV-
encoded RNAs (EBERs) from the viral episomes that they harbor. And thus leave
the immune system few clues by which to detect BL cells. Innate immune activation
involves lymphocytes and antigen presenting cells, such as dendritic cells (DCs)
that detect pathogens via germ-line encoded receptors for pathogen-associated
molecular patterns recognized by toll-like receptors (TLRs), or for stress-induced
ligands that activate natural killer (NK) cell [9, 10]. These innate leukocytes then
interact with each other before priming adaptive lymphocytes [11]. While the innate
immune response was originally thought to limit pathogen burden prior to immune
control by adaptive immunity, it has recently become clear that innate lymphocytes
also contribute to immune control of persistent infections [11]. Nevertheless, patho-
gen detection by the innate immune system is required to initiate adaptive immunity
to EBV.
Of the few viral components that are expressed in BL cells, viral DNA has been
reported to stimulate plasmacytoid DCs [12, 13]. These type I IFN producing cells
were able to detect viral episomes via TLR9 (Fig. 12.1). This recognition limited
EBV infection in a human peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) xenotrans-
plant model of NOD-SCID mice. However, type I IFN only prevented B-cell trans-
formation by EBV within the first 24 h after infection [14]. While plasmacytoid
DCs are, however, innate effector cells in antiviral immune responses, their capacity
to present antigen for the priming of adaptive immune responses is not their primary
function [15]. Thus, activation of conventional DCs should accompany plasmacy-
toid DC stimulation in order to initiate adaptive immune responses. Along these
lines, EBERs have recently been proposed to stimulate conventional human DCs [16].
It was found that EBERs by intramolecular base pairing from stem-loop structures
12 Immune Responses to Burkitt’s Lymphoma 229
Burkitt’s lymphoma
Conventional
DC Plasmacytoid
DC
EBNA1 type I
IFN
viral RNA
viral DNA
NK
NK cell Innate
activation BL immunity
lytic
replication
EBNA1 specific
T cells
T cell
priming Adaptive
T BL
immunity
Fig. 12.1 Innate and adaptive immune responses to EBV components in Burkitt’s lymphoma.
Viral DNA was suggested to stimulate plasmacytoid DCs via TLR9 to produce type I IFN, which
blocks B-cell transformation by EBV only in the first 24 h. Viral RNA, especially the small non-
translated RNAs called EBERs, stimulate conventional DCs via TLR3. These antigen presenting
cells then mature, allowing them to efficiently activate NK cells and prime EBV-specific T cells.
The activated NK cells can efficiently target infected B cells undergoing lytic replication via cyto-
toxicity, and restrict B-cell transformation by EBV via IFN-g. Among the primed EBV-specific
T cells, EBNA1-specific CD4+ T-cell responses can target BL cells. However, cell intrinsic immune
escape mechanisms and immunosuppressive coinfections like HIV infection and malaria can com-
promise these
stimulated the double-stranded (ds) RNA receptor TLR3 and EBER-matured DCs
were in turn able to stimulate T-cell responses. Thus BL cells could provide EBV
DNA and RNA for plasmacytoid and conventional DC stimulation in order to acti-
vate innate and prime adaptive lymphocytes in tandem.
Although innate NK cells have been suggested to restrict EBV infection, they
appear dispensable in the mouse g-herpesvirus 68 model [17]. For human g-herpes-
virus EBV, however, NK cell depletion rendered PBMC xenografted mice more
230 A. Moormann and C. Münz
3B and 3C, as well as early lytic antigens (i.e., the immediate early transactivators
BZLF1 and BRLF1) helper CD4+ T cells are specific for EBNA1, 2 and 3C, as well
as late viral antigens. Within this hierarchy in EBV antigen recognition only a
small proportion of T cells would have the capacity to mediate immune control
over BL cells.
In fact, the majority of BL cells express only EBNA1 as the sole viral antigen,
and only a subset (around 15%) additionally express EBNA3A, -3B, -3C, -LP, and
BHRF1 [8, 28, 29]. Both EBNA1 and BHRF1 are targeted by CD4+ T cells, some
of which have been shown to recognize BL cells (Fig. 12.1) [30–32]. In contrast,
EBV-specific CD8+ T cells are unable to detect viral antigens in BL cells even when
they are ectopically expressed [33–35]. Therefore, CD4+ T cells exert the majority
of immune control over BL cells. Indeed, it has been shown that EBNA1 is the most
consistently recognized CD4+ T-cell antigen among the latent EBV gene products
[36, 37]. Moreover, Th1 polarized EBNA1-specific CD4+ T cells are cytotoxic for
EBV transformed B cells [38], and EBNA1-specific CD4+ T cell clones can kill
transformed B cells of all EBV latencies [31], as well as restrict B-cell transforma-
tion by EBV in vitro [39]. EBNA1 transfected mouse B-cell lymphoma cells with
c-myc translocations are controlled by EBNA1-specific CD4+ T cells in vivo [40].
CD4+ T-cell recognition of EBNA1-positive EBV transformed B-cell lines is in part
due to antigen processing for MHC class II presentation via macroautophagy, a
catabolic pathway that delivers cytoplasmic constituents for lysosomal degradation
[41, 42]. Although BL cells display lower constitutive macroautophagy levels than
EBV transformed B cells of other latencies ([43] and Münz, unpublished observa-
tions), the very same pathway might sensitize BL cells for killing by CD4+ T cells.
Thus, since antigen presentation by MHC class I molecules is blocked in BL cells,
MHC class II restricted CD4+ T-cell responses might be the only adaptive immune
control over BL tumor cells.
In addition to the limited number of EBV protein antigens that are expressed in BL
cells and targeted by the adaptive immune system, immune escape mechanisms are
also employed by this tumor, which affect antigen processing for MHC class I pre-
sentation in general, limit antigen presentation of EBNA1 and condition the tumor
microenvironment for immune suppression [29, 44]. Along these lines, c-myc over-
expression, which is caused by translocation of this oncogene into the immuno-
globulin loci in BL cells, has been linked to deficient MHC class I antigen
presentation to CD8+ T cells [45]. C-myc down-regulates proteasomal activity,
which generates most MHC class I ligands, and activates other intracellular prote-
olysis pathways, like the subtilisin-like protease tripeptidylpeptidase II (TPPII),
which might destroy MHC class I ligands by generating peptides, which are too
short for MHC class I presentation [46]. These mechanisms have been suggested to
be responsible for low MHC class I antigen presentation by BL cells. Indeed, TPPII
232 A. Moormann and C. Münz
than severe malaria, thus emphasizing the need for longitudinal studies to understand
the role of malaria coinfections in BL pathology.
We know that children diagnosed with BL at some point become selectively
deficient in their Th1 polarized (IFN-g producing) cell immunity to EBNA1 [60],
yet we have not determined whether EBNA1-specific T cell immunity is restored
during remission and is associated with long-term survival, nor if its deficiency
predisposes for BL development. However, it has been proposed that blood stage
malaria infection is controlled by Th2 polarized immunity [76], which could com-
promise the simultaneous priming of protective Th1 immunity against EBV.
Moreover, the Plasmodium falciparum erythrocyte membrane protein (PfEMP1)
has been shown to inhibit early IFN-g production [77], which could also divert EBV
specific T-cell immunity from Th1. Finally, Plasmodium infected erythrocytes were
found to inhibit dendritic cell function [78], which could compromise priming of
efficient EBV-specific immune control. Indeed this immune control was found to be
compromised by malaria infection [79] and loss of EBNA1-specific T-cell responses
was observed in BL patients [60].
In addition to this immunomodulatory function of malaria, which could impair
EBV-specific immune control, Plasmodium infection might also predispose for BL
development via B-cell stimulation. Malaria parasite-derived TLR ligands have
been shown to signal innate immune responses via TLR4 [80] and TLR9 [81]. Thus,
it is curious to note that c-myc translocations, the hallmark of BL cells, are created
by activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) during antibody class switching or
somatic hypermutation [82] and that expression of AID may be mediated by TLR9
in cooperation with IL-10 signaling [83]. Furthermore, Plasmodium antigen driven
B-cell activation, by the polyclonal B-cell activator PfEMP1 [84], could also drive
more EBV-infected B cells into germinal center reactions, which could favor AID
mediated c-myc translocation. It is speculation at this point if repeated malaria
infections continue to exacerbate this dynamic and thereby increase the risk of BL
relapse. Nevertheless, malaria-driven immune modulation and B-cell activation
could both favor BL development.
EBV is found in 40–60% of HIV-associated BL cases [85, 86] and often occurs as
the first sign of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) [87]. Interestingly,
an altered viral set-point for EBV infection in HIV carrying individuals does not
correlate with the development of EBV-associated lymphomas during the progres-
sion to AIDS [88], suggesting that selective loss of EBV immune control contributes
to the development of HIV-associated BL. While other EBV-associated lympho-
mas, like diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCL) occur later in the progression of
AIDS and have been found to be responsive to highly active anti-retroviral treatment
(HAART) [89, 90], BL frequencies and outcome have not been significantly
12 Immune Responses to Burkitt’s Lymphoma 235
Conclusions
The restricted EBV gene expression pattern of endemic BL makes these tumors
difficult to detect for the human immune system. While viral DNA and RNA,
harbored also in BL cells, can activate plasmacytoid and conventional dendritic cells,
respectively, only one EBV antigen is expressed at the protein level in most BL cells
and can be recognized by the adaptive immune system. Besides being the only EBV
antigen expressed in BL cells, EBNA1 down-modulates its processing onto MHC
class I for CD8+ T-cell recognition and the BL-characteristic c-myc overexpression
by translocation compromises further MHC class I antigen processing. Only EBNA1-
specific CD4+ T-cell responses show a limited reactivity against BL cells. But the
CD4+ T-cell compartment and particularly Th1 polarized CD4+ T cells, which orches-
trate cell-mediated immunity, are compromised by HIV and Plasmodium falciparum
coinfections. Thus, strengthening of this immune response by vaccination during
antiretroviral therapy and malaria containing treatment should be explored to prevent
BL development.
236 A. Moormann and C. Münz
Acknowledgments Work in the Münz laboratory is in part supported by the National Cancer
Institute (R01CA108609), Cancer Research Switzerland (KFS-02652-08-2010), the Association
for International Cancer Research (11–0516), the Sassella Foundation (10/02), the Vontobel
Foundation, the Baugarten Foundation, Novartis and the Swiss National Science Foundation
(310030_126995). Work in the Moormann laboratory is in part supported by the National Cancer
Institute (CA134051), The Worcester Foundation ARF Grant, and the University of Massachusetts
Medical School Dean’s Challenge Award.
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Chapter 13
The Many Roles of Malaria in the Etiology
of Endemic Burkitt Lymphoma
Following the first clinical description by Denis Burkitt of the lymphoma now bearing
his name [1], several epidemiologic studies were done to determine the geographic
distribution of this cancer. The earliest study was undertaken by Denis Burkitt who
embarked on a “tumor safari” to map cases of eBL throughout Africa [2]. He gener-
ated a low-resolution map of eBL that describes a lymphoma belt across equatorial
Africa. Case identification was based on response to questionnaires and personal
reporting. Haddow [3] used this data to determine that eBL had a striking geo-
graphical restriction with cases occurring in a band approximately 10° north or
south of the equator and within that region, not occurring in areas with altitudes
greater than 1,500 m. Papua New Guinea was the only other region of the world that
where cases of BL similar to the “African” lymphoma were found [4]. Based on
these observations, early investigators hypothesized that an infectious agent, pos-
sibly a vectored virus such as an arbovirus, might be etiologically linked with this
cancer [3, 5]. However, it quickly became evident that eBL occurred at a high inci-
dence in regions where malaria transmission of Plasmodium falciparum was sus-
tained and intense, i.e. holoendemic [6, 7].
Because of the limitations of cancer registries in Africa and availability of accu-
rate population data, a direct correlation of eBL incidence rates with P. falciparum
R. Rochford (*)
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, SUNY Upstate Medical University,
Syracuse, NY, USA
e-mail: [email protected]
A.S. Asito
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, SUNY Upstate Medical University,
Syracuse, NY, USA
Centre for Global Health Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute, Kisumu, Kenya
parasite prevalence at a finer geographic level of analysis wasn’t done for almost
two decades after the original discovery of eBL [8]. More recently, a study based in
Kenya reexamined the association between eBL and malaria using new ecological
models of malaria transmission [9]. Consistent with the earlier studies, eBL inci-
dence rates were greater in regions with chronic and intense malaria transmission
intensity than in regions with no or sporadic malaria transmission.
The variability in eBL onset age correlates with differences in malaria exposure.
For example, patients living in holoendemic malaria areas develop eBL younger
than those living in sporadic or seasonal malaria areas [8]. A ten-year study in
Uganda during the 1960s detected a median onset age of 12 years in areas where
malaria transmission was weak or inconsistent (hypo-endemic), compared to 8 and
6 years, respectively, in areas with meso- and hyper-endemic transmission [10].
Burkitt and Wright detected an equal susceptibility, but older onset age, among
persons migrating from low- to high-risk eBL areas, which is ecologically consis-
tent with non-malarious and endemic malaria zones, respectively [11].
While the above studies firmly established an ecologic link between eBL risk
and malaria endemicity, two recent case–control studies based in Uganda and
Malawi have provided more direct evidence of a biologic link between malaria
exposure and increased risk for eBL [12, 13]. Malaria-specific antibody titers in
children with eBL and age-matched hospital-based controls were examined. Risk
for eBL increased with increasing antibody titers against malaria. Cases were also
more likely to have elevated antibody titers against both malaria and EBV relative
to controls suggesting a synergistic linkage between these two pathogens in the
etiology of eBL. Interestingly, a correlation between age when multiple P. falci-
parum genotypes were detected in the population and age of peak onset of eBL was
found [14] suggesting that infection with multiple P. falciparum genotypes could be
linked to onset of eBL. This observation is consistent with an etiologic model pre-
sented below that has the repeated infections associated with holoendemic malaria
that are driving increased risk.
In sum, since eBL was first described there has been a consistent epidemiologic
association with high levels of malaria transmission and increased risk for eBL. The
efforts underway to reduce malaria in sub-Saharan Africa should be monitored
closely to determine if eBL incidence also decreases.
To understand why malaria increases the risk of eBL, there are three features of
P. falciparum pathogenesis that provide clues to this question. First is the varying
transmission dynamic of P. falciparum malaria. As discussed in the first section,
eBL is correlated with holoendemic transmission of malaria, not just a single
P. falciparum infection. P. falciparum malaria only elicits protective immunity after
several years of continuous exposure, during which time recurring infections and
illness occur [15]. Because of this, children aged 1–5 years living in holoendemic
malaria regions are at the highest risk of morbidity and mortality associated with
13 The Many Roles of Malaria in the Etiology... 243
There are two pathogens linked to the etiology of eBL, P. falciparum and Epstein–
Barr virus (EBV). For a more extensive discussion of the biology of EBV and its
link to eBL pathogenesis, see Chapter 10. Relevant to the role of malaria, EBV
exists as a persistent infection in B cells throughout the lifetime of the host and this
infection is controlled by both CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses.
Several studies have pointed to a profound dysregulation of EBV persistence in
children due to P. falciparum malaria [27, 35–40]. For example, increases in EBV-
infected B cells were observed during single episodes of acute P. falciparum malaria
[35, 39]. There is also evidence that malaria induces reactivation from latently
infected cells both in vitro [41] and in children with acute malaria [36, 37]. Serologic
evidence of ongoing EBV reactivation in children living in malaria holoendemic
region has also been reported [40]. A higher EBV load set point—indicative of the
frequency of latently infected cells—occurs in children from malaria endemic
regions relative to children from malaria sporadic regions [27] and the viral load
observed in these children more closely matches levels seen in patients with acute
infectious mononucleosis [35].
Two potential but not exclusive mechanisms for these observations exist:
reactivation and infection of new B cells or expansion of latently infected B cells.
Because of the high antigen burden, clearance of the parasite-infected red blood
244 R. Rochford and A.S. Asito
cells (RBC) in the spleen—an organ rich in B cells—there is a strong likelihood that
infected RBC could directly contact EBV-infected B cells. The P. falciparum anti-
gen cysteine-rich interdomain region 1a (CIDRa) expressed on the surface of
infected red blood cells can directly bind to B cells and induce lytic reactivation of
EBV [32]. Reactivation of EBV would result in elevated viral loads through release
of infectious virus and reinfection of naive B cells. That this pathway is essential for
maintenance of EBV loads in healthy individuals was recently demonstrated by
Hoshino et al. [42] who found that treatment of healthy EBV-positive individuals
with valacyclovir, an antiviral drug that blocks lytic infection, resulted in the reduc-
tion in frequency of EBV-infected cells over time.
The alternative possibility for elevated viral loads is that the P. falciparum is
driving memory B-cell expansion through interaction with TLR9 on memory B
cells. P. falciparum has a ligand for TLR9 [43]. TLR9 is expressed on B cells and
TLR9 signaling also essential for B-cell proliferation [44]. Thus, interaction of a
latently infected B cell with the P. falciparum TLR9 ligand could drive those cells
to proliferate.
A recent study found that infants living in a high malaria transmission region of
Kenya were infected with EBV significantly earlier in life (7.3 months of age) com-
pared to infants from a non-malaria endemic region (8.4 months) pointing to an
additional role of malaria in modulating EBV persistence [45]. In addition, the ear-
lier age of infection led to more frequent detection of EBV and higher EBV viral
loads over time. Interestingly, these data support a model first proposed by de-Thé
in 1978 who hypothesized that infection of infants with EBV early in life could
result in an infection that was poorly controlled by the host and thus increased the
risk for eBL [46]. What remains to be determined is why are these infants infected
with EBV so early in life and whether malaria also plays a role in this.
What is the relevance of high viral loads to an increased risk for eBL? EBV
latency membrane protein (LMP)-1 interacts with DNA methyltransferase and
results in epigenetic modification and subsequent down-regulation of the pro-
apoptotic Bim gene [47]. So latently infected memory B cells would have reduced
the levels of Bim even though the LMP-1 protein is no longer expressed in these
cells, i.e. this would be a consequence of them being “marked” by their primary
infection with EBV when all the EBV latent proteins are expressed [48]. Thus,
higher viral loads in children from malaria endemic regions would result in a greater
number of circulating B cells that were resistant to apoptotic stimuli.
Interestingly, signaling through TLR was shown to induce the enzyme activa-
tion-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) in human B cells [49, 50]. AID over-expres-
sion induces IgH-c-myc translocations [51] characteristic of BL. Thus, elevated and
unregulated AID expression in B cells triggered by P. falciparum could increase the
risk for a c-myc translocation. If over-expression of c-myc occurred following an
AID-mediated translocation, normal B cells would die by apoptosis. However,
because of the down-regulation of Bim, the memory B cells would be resistant to
apoptosis and would tolerate the c-myc translocation. Cells that escaped apoptosis
and carrying the c-myc translocation would ultimately lead to the emergence of a
malignant clone [52]. Escape from T-cell surveillance would also be critical and
how malaria plays a role in this will be discussed next.
13 The Many Roles of Malaria in the Etiology... 245
Three early studies suggested that P. falciparum malaria could interfere with EBV-
specific cellular immune responses. Whittle et al. [24] demonstrated that peripheral
blood lymphocytes isolated from adult patients with acute malaria were unable to
control outgrowth of EBV-transformed cells in a standard regression assay to
assess EBV-specific T-cell function. Moss et al. [53], with a similar assay, demon-
strated that healthy adults living in malaria holoendemic regions of Papua New
Guinea had impaired EBV-specific T-cell responses. In children experiencing an
episode of acute malaria, spontaneous outgrowth of EBV-transformed B cells ex
vivo occurred at even greater frequency compared to the same children following
recovery from malaria [54]. Subsequent to these studies, Moormann et al. [55]
found that Kenyan children from a malaria holoendemic area had significantly
fewer EBV-specific IFN-g responses compared to children from a highland area
with infrequent malaria exposure. This effect was most pronounced in children
5–9 years old, coinciding with the peak incident age of eBL. Njie et al. [35] found
that during an episode of acute malaria in children from the Gambia there was a
transient decrease in EBV-specific CD8 T-cell immunity. In a longitudinal cohort
in Kenya, following infants EBV-specific T-cell responses after prospective cohort
[45], there was a significant difference in the capacity of children living in a malaria
holoendemic region compared to malaria sporadic region to maintain a T-cell
response to EBV lytic antigens (Asito, Piriou, Moormann, and Rochford, unpub-
lished observation). This suggests that P. falciparum malaria contributes to loss of
EBV-specific immunity by inducing the collapse of an antiviral IFN-g-mediated
CD8+ T-cell response. More detailed discussion of the effects of malaria on EBV
T cell immunity is found in Chap. 12.
Interestingly, a potential role is also indicated for gd T cells in the etiology of
eBL. P. falciparum infection is associated with expansion of Vd1+ T cells in periph-
eral blood [56, 57]. This suggests that chronic exposure to P. falciparum in children
would affect normal gd T-cell immunity and expand Vd1+ T cells. Of interest rela-
tive to the link between P. falciparum and EBV in eBL etiology is the studies that
show increased EBV viral load as described above and increased B-cell activation
in children living in malaria holoendemic regions. One possible outcome of elevated
EBV viral load and activated B cells would be an expansion of the Vd1+ T cells in
these children living in a region where the malaria is holoendemic and the risk for
eBL is high. Interestingly, alterations in Vd1+ T-cell activation and frequencies in
children with eBL are comparable to children with acute P. falciparum malaria [58].
Moreover, recent studies have found that tumor derived Vd1+ cells isolated from
breast cancer patients can negatively down-modulate ab T-cell responses and inhibit
the capacity of CD8+ T cells to kill tumor cells in an in vivo model [59] suggesting that
expansion of Vd1+ T cells during P. falciparum infection could have the unintended
consequence of losing antitumor immunity and allowing the emergence of a malig-
nant B-cell clone. Further studies to evaluate a potential role for gd T cells in EBV
immunity and risk for eBL are needed.
246 R. Rochford and A.S. Asito
Early reviews postulating on the mechanism by which malaria increases the risk for
eBL postulated either a role for inducing B-cell activation or causing T-cell suppression.
However, given the chronic nature of P. falciparum infections, the high antigen
burden, and the overall impact the holoendemic malaria has on a population, malaria
likely serves many nonexclusive roles in increasing the risk for eBL. As shown in
Fig. 13.1, malaria plays a role by first increasing the number of latently infected B
cells via a number of potential mechanisms; second, through loss of immune control
Fig. 13.1 Model for the different roles of malaria in increasing risk for eBL. In stage 1, infants are
infected at less than 6 months of age, increasing the numbers of latently infected B cells. While this
phenomenon is age dependent, living a malaria endemic region increases the frequency of early
age of EBV infection [45]. In stage 2, repeated malaria infections during infancy and early child-
hood expand the numbers of latently infected B cells [27, 35–40]. The higher EBV load also results
in loss of EBV-specific CD8+ T cell immunity [55] further amplifying this effect. In stage 3, the
higher viral load equates to greater numbers of latently infected B cells resulting in a greater sto-
chastic chance for a direct interaction of a TLR9 ligand derived from P. falciparum [43] to bind to
TLR9 on memory B cells. This could result in activation of the enzyme AID [49, 50]. AID is
required for c-myc translocations in mouse models [51], and it is postulated that aberrant AID
activation results in the c-myc translocation characteristic of BL. If over-expression of c-myc
occurred in a normal B cell at the wrong stage of B-cell development, regulatory mechanisms
resulting in apoptotic death of the B cell would occur. However, if the B cell had been epigeneti-
cally marked by EBV, loss of expression of the pro-apoptotic protein Bim could result in a cell that
could tolerate c-myc over-expression and ultimately lead to emergence of malignant clone
13 The Many Roles of Malaria in the Etiology... 247
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Chapter 14
Therapeutic Approaches to Burkitt’s
Lymphoma
History
The treatment of Burkitt lymphoma has evolved over the last 50 years, and that
progression has been contingent upon understanding the biological characteristics of
the disease, such as the rapid doubling time of the tumor, the propensity for extra-
nodal sites, high chemosensitivity, and the potential for CNS relapses [1]. The com-
bined efforts of multiple consortiums, including the BFM, SFOP, CCG, and UKCCG,
have advanced treatment since Dr. Denis Burkitt’s first description of events in Uganda
in 1958 [2]. Although Dr. Burkitt lost his right eye at age 11, the result of a thrown
stone during a school-yard fight, his keen observation skills remained unaffected [3].
Let me take you back 30 years to a morning that I was surgeon on duty at the teaching
hospital in Uganda. I was called in consultation by the physician on duty, Dr. Hugh Trowell,
to see a patient who had some sort of lesion involving all four quadrants of the jaws. I could
not make out what it was. It did not fit in with a tumor…it did not fit in with sepsis…it did
not fit in with anything. I documented it in my mind, believing it to be an oddity you might
see once in a lifetime, and did not give it any more thought.
About two weeks later, while on ward rounds in another hospital 30 miles away, I looked
out the window and saw another child with a swollen face. Giving up my ward round, I went
out to find this child with tumors of some kind in all four quadrants of the jaws. I put the
child and his mother in my car, drove them back to the hospital, and began to investigate
these jaw tumors [4].
Although first described as a “round cell sarcoma,” Burkitt and O’Connor defined
the disease as a malignant lymphoma in 1961, including the pathological terminology
of a “starry sky” background still used today [5].
J. Armitage (*)
The Joe Shapiro Professor of Internal Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center
e-mail: [email protected]
D.W. Coulter
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
e-mail: [email protected]
The specific biology of Burkitt lymphoma drove early attempts at therapy. Surgery
was an early accepted treatment modality until the multifocal nature of the disease
was understood, making radical surgery pointless [6].
Given the rapid rate of tumor growth, the plausibility of radiotherapy as a treatment
modality was evaluated. Irradiation induced rapid regression of tumors; however,
as in the case of surgical resection, patients eventually succumbed to growth of
multifocal untreated masses [6].
The multifocal nature of the disease made systemic chemotherapy the early treat-
ment of choice. The earliest described monotherapy involved nitrogen mustard,
either injected intravenously or intra-arterially at doses ranging from 0.2 to 2.5 mg/kg,
which produced rapid improvement that often times only lasted a few weeks [5, 7].
Other early monotherapy included cyclophosphamide, either orally or intrave-
nously, and methotrexate either infused through the external carotid artery or admin-
istered orally. The results again showed only temporary regression of the tumors.
Through the 1960s, monotherapy with many of the drugs available at the time
confirmed the high degree of chemosensitivity of Burkitt lymphoma. Dr. Burkitt origi-
nally documented rapid response and sometimes durable remission to cyclophosph-
amide given as a one-time dose of 40 mg/kg IV [8]. This dosing regimen was chosen
based on necessity, given the short hospitalization stays of African children in Uganda
[9]. Agents such as cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, or vincristine usually induced
rapid regression of tumor bulk, but most patients who maintained their original good
response had limited disease [10–13]. The majority of patients treated in the early
1960s had long-term survival rates approaching 20% [14]. A summary of agents given
as monotherapy and the resulting response rates is outlined in Table 14.1 [15].
Table 14.1 Previous monotherapy used in the treatment of Burkitt lymphoma [15]
Drug No. of patients CR CR + PR OR (%)
Cyclophosphamide 163 43 132 81
Orthomerphalan 14 ? 14 100
Chlorambucil 12 3 10 83
Nitrogen mustard 61 10 44 72
Melphalan 26 8 16 61
Procarbazine 6 0 0 0
BCNU 5 0 4 80
Vincristine 21 10 17 81
Vinblastine 2 0 0 0
Methotrexate 45 11 26 58
6-Mercaptopurine 3 0 0 0
Cystosine arabinoside 3 2 2 2
Epipodophyllotoxin 2 2 2 2
Actinomycin D 4 1 4 4
Variety of doses and schedules were used, even for the same drug
CR complete response
OR overall response
PR partial response
14 Therapeutic Approaches to Burkitt’s Lymphoma 253
for the almost 50% of patients who presented with CNS positive disease, treatment
was given with either intrathecal methotrexate or cytarabine with comparative
outcomes [21].
Thus, the stage was set for the incorporation of intrathecal chemotherapy into
trials using multiagent therapy, both elements of treatment plans used today. During
the 1970s, treatment studies for Burkitt lymphoma focused on combination chemo-
therapy, central nervous system prophylaxis, and salvage therapy for patients who
experienced relapse [9]. This work resulted in an increase in overall survival from
20% to 50%. In 1977, a landmark study (CCG-551) comparing 18 months of therapy
with cyclophosphamide, vincristine, methotrexate, and prednisone (COMP) to the
ten-drug LSA2L2 regimen (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, daunomycin,
methotrexate, cytarabine, thioguanine, L-asparaginase, carmustine, and hydroxyurea)
revealed that patients with Burkitt lymphoma fared better with four-drug therapy
(57% versus 28% 2-year disease-free survival), and that patients with bone marrow
or central nervous system involvement had the worst outcome (30%) [22]. These
results were later verified to be stable at 5 years (50% versus 29%) [23].
The French Society of Pediatric Oncology (SFOP) completed a series of four
successive Lymphome malin B (LMB) trials, which continued to increase the event-
free survival for patients with Burkitt lymphoma. The LMB 0181 Pilot Study was
conducted between February and October 1981, accruing 32 patients [24]. The pro-
tocol was designed to increase survival by employing treatment with chemotherapy
alone (no irradiation or surgical debulking), intensifying therapy in the third and
fourth months of treatment to decrease relapses, and to improve central nervous
system prophylaxis without using cranial irradiation. Although the treatment proved
efficacious, a high amount of toxicity was identified, requiring modification of the
protocol. Subsequently, the LMB 0281 study ran from November 1981 to March
1984. Therapy included vincristine, prednisone, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide,
and methotrexate with therapeutic reinforcement using two courses based on con-
tinuous infusion of cytarabine. Maintenance therapy lasted 8 months and CNS
prophylaxis included high-dose methotrexate, intrathecal methotrexate and cytara-
bine, continuous infusion cytarabine, and lomustine. The results showed increased
survival for high-stage patients without CNS disease (75%), but an unacceptable
toxic death rate (10%) [24]. The CNS relapse rate was only 1%.
A pervasive focus of subsequent therapy became decreasing treatment toxicity
while keeping survival stable. From July 1984 to September 1987, the LMB 84
study compared 7-month therapy versus 4-month therapy in 216 patients without
CNS disease. Therapy included an initial reductive phase of cyclophosphamide,
vincristine, and prednisone (COP) with intrathecal methotrexate and hydrocorti-
sone. The purpose of the cytoreductive phase was to solve metabolic problems,
most due to acute tumor lysis, without being forced to manage the complications of
intensive therapy such as aplasia and mucositis [25]. The results revealed an equiva-
lent cure rate (78%), with a decrease in the toxic death rate (6%) [26].
Other information gleaned from these early trials included the emergence of risk
factors, such as CNS involvement, no response to a cytoreductive phase, and no
complete response after the third or fourth cycles [27]. In July 1989, the LMB 89
14 Therapeutic Approaches to Burkitt’s Lymphoma 255
study sorted patients into one of the three therapeutic groups (A, B, or C) dependent
upon their disease stage and prognostic factors. Group A patients had achieved com-
plete resection of Stage I and abdominal Stage II tumors. Group C patients had CNS
involvement or Burkitt leukemia with at least 70% blasts in the bone marrow. All
remaining patients were stratified to group B. The results revealed that 90% survival
could be obtained when treatment is modified for the risk factors of the patient [25].
These results lead to the FAB LMB 96 trial completed by the Societe Francaise
d’Oncologie Pediatrique (SFOP), Children’s Cancer Group (CCG), and the United
Kingdom Children’s Cancer Study Group (UKCCG). This international trial showed
that treatment reduction in both cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin for early
responding patients was possible [28]. Response to therapy was identified as the
most significant prognostic factor, with patients showing <20% reduction of disease
after prophase reduction having an event-free survival of 30% [29]. Finally, the results
showed that patients presenting with CNS-positive disease received no survival
benefit from craniospinal irradiation [28].
Treatment for adults has been based on the success achieved in pediatric patients.
In 1995 the results of a retrospective review of 65 adult patients treated according
to the pediatric LMB 81, 84, 86, and 89 regimens revealed an 89% complete
response rate with a three-year overall survival of 74% [30]. In 1996, these results
were confirmed by a prospective study evaluating 72 adult patients treated accord-
ing to the LMB protocol (CR rate 83%, 2 year OS 66%) [31].
A more recent prospective study of 72 adult patients treated with LMB 89 therapy
revealed a 72% complete response rate with a 2-year overall survival rate of 70%.
Patients with higher lactate dehydrogenase levels and advanced age tended to do
worse (2-year OS rate of 84% in patients aged <33 years compared to 60% in
patients aged >33 years) [31].
Other therapies used in children and adults include CODOX-M and IVAC, pio-
neered by Magrath [32]. This regimen utilizes three cycles of CODOX-M for patients
with low-risk disease, and four cycles of alternating CODOX-M and IVAC for
patients with high-risk disease. In 1996, Magrath et al. reported a 2-year event-free
survival of 85% in children, and 100% in adults with a mean age of 25 years [32].
Two years later, an updated report revealed complete responses in 24 of 26 adult
patients studied, with 22 patients alive and disease-free (follow-up 12–91 months)
[33]. In Europe, attempts to use CODOX-M/IVAC have not produced similar results,
although mean patient age may be a factor. The United Kingdom Lymphoma Group
reported a 2-year event-free survival of 64.6% in a group of patients with a mean age
of 35 years, with side effects of myelosuppression and mucositis [34].
HyperCVAD has been used exclusively in adults, and investigators at The
University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center showed a complete response rate
of 81% in 26 adult patients with a median age of 58 [35]. The addition of a monoclonal
256 J. Armitage and D.W. Coulter
antibody against CD20 (rituximab) has improved the results of HyperCVAD with a
3-year overall survival of 89% in patients less than 60 years of age [36].
Rituximab is currently being investigated in pediatric patients when combined
with intensive chemotherapy based on the French LMB–89 protocol. Results of the
study are currently pending.
In the past, patients with HIV-associated Burkitt lymphoma had greater treat-
ment-related mortality than patients with endemic or sporadic disease [37]. Early
studies in the era of combination antiretroviral therapy have improved the survival
for these patients, although changes are being tested to reduce the morbidity for
patients [38].
After showing efficacy in untreated patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
[39], dose-adjusted etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, and dox-
orubicin with rituximab (DA-EPOCH-R) has been evaluated in patients with Burkitt
lymphoma. Twenty-nine adult patients, including 17 with Stage III/IV disease and
10 with HIV were treated with DA-EPOCH-R with event-free and overall survival
of 97% and 100%, respectively, at a median follow-up of 57 months. Treatment was
well tolerated, with notable toxicities including tumor lysis syndrome in one patient
and febrile neutropenia in 16% of cycles [39].
Patients with Burkitt lymphoma require intensive multi-agent therapy with CNS
prophylaxis. Given the extremely rapid growth rate of Burkitt lymphoma, it is
imperative that the time course from diagnosis and staging to initial treatment be as
short as possible. The current treatment recommendations for newly diagnosed
pediatric patients with Burkitt lymphoma are listed in Table 14.2 with agents listed
in Table 14.3. Prior to initiating chemotherapy it is recommended that all patients be
placed on cooperative study protocols if available.
Table 14.2 Treatment recommendations for pediatric patients with newly diagnosed Burkitt
lymphoma. Modified from the Physicians Data Query [68]
Stratum Disease manifestations Treatment
FAB/LMB – 96 A Completely resected Two cycles of COPAD
(COG-5961) chemotherapy
B Multiple extra-abdominal sites Prephase (COP) + four cycles
Non-resected Stage of chemotherapy (reduced
I, II, III, IV intensity arm)
Marrow < 25%
Blasts
No CNS disease
C Mature B- Cell ALL (> 25% Prephase (COP) + eight cycles
Blasts in Marrow) and/or CNS of chemotherapy (full
Disease intensity arm)
BFM Group R1 Completely resected Two cycles of chemotherapy
R2 Non-resected Stage I/II and Stage Prephase (COP) + four cycles
III with LDH < 500 IU/L of chemotherapy
(4 h methotrexate infusion)
R3 Stage III with LDH 500–999 IU/L Prephase (COP) + five cycles
Stage IV, B Cell ALL (> 25% of chemotherapy (24 h
Blasts) and LDH < 1,000 IU/L methotrexate infusion)
No CNS Disease
R4 Stage III, IV, B-Cell ALL with Prephase (COP) + six cycles
LDH > 1,000 IU/L of chemotherapy (24 h
Any CNS Disease methotrexate infusion)
Table 14.3 Chemotherapeutic agents used for pediatric patients with newly diagnosed Burkitt
lymphoma. Modified from the Physicians Data Query [68]
Phase Agents
COPAD Vincristine
Prednisone
Cyclophosphamide
Doxorubicin
COP Cyclophosphamide
Vincristine
Prednisone
Intrathecal methotrexate and hydrocortisone
COPADM1 Vincristine
Prednisone
Methotrexate
Folinic acid
Cyclophosphamide
Doxorubicin
Intrathecal methotrexate and hydrocortisone
COPADM2 Vincristine
Prednisone
Methotrexate
Folinic acid
Cyclophosphamide
Doxorubicin
Intrathecal methotrexate and hydrocortisone
(continued)
258 J. Armitage and D.W. Coulter
Table 14.4 Adult low- risk regimens. Modified from NCCN [69]
Regimen Agents
CALGB 9251 Cyclophosphamide
Prednisone
Ifosfamide
Methotrexate
Leucovorin
Vincristine
Dexamethasone
Doxorubicin or etoposide or cytarabine
Methotrexate IT
Cytarabine IT
Hydrocortisone IT
CODOX-M Cyclophosphamide
Doxorubicin
Vincristine
Methotrexate IT
Cytarabine IT
Methotrexate
± Rituximab
Dose adjusted EPOCH - R Etoposide
(Minimum three cycles with one additional cycle Prednisone
beyond CR) Vincristine
Cyclophosphamide
Doxorubicin
Methotrexate IT
Rituximab
HyperCVAD Cyclophosphamide
Vincristine
Doxorubicin
Dexamethasone
Methotrexate
Cytarabine
Rituximab
14 Therapeutic Approaches to Burkitt’s Lymphoma 259
Follow-up
The majority of patients who remain in remission for over 1 year can be classified
as cured of their disease. For patients enrolled on clinical trials, follow-up will be
determined by the recommendations of the protocol. To evaluate other patients,
definitions of response have been developed by the International Working Group
(IWG) and are outlined in Table 14.6 [41]. Although the recommendations list
18-Fluoro-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) as an evalua-
tion tool, this modality has not been proven to add benefit to the workup of Burkitt
260
Table 14.6 IWG definitions of response in patients diagnosed with non-Hodgkins Lymphoma. Although listed, FDG or PET are not usually completed in the
workup of patients with Burkitt lymphoma
Response Definition Nodal masses Spleen, liver Bone marrow
CR Disappearance of all (a) FDG-avid or PET positive prior to therapy; Not palpable, nodules Infiltrate cleared on repeat biopsy;
evidence of disease mass of any size permitted if PET negative disappeared if indeterminate by morphology,
(b) Variably FDG-avid or PET negative; regression immunohistochemistry should
to normal size on CT be negative
PR Regression of measurable ³50% decrease in SPD of up to 6 largest dominant ³50% decrease in SPD Irrelevant if positive prior to
disease and no new sites masses; no increase in size of other nodes of nodules (for single therapy; cell type should be
(a) FDG-avid or PET positive prior to therapy; one nodule in greatest specified
or more PET positive at previously involved site transverse diameter);
(b) Variably FDG-avid or PET negative; regression no increase in size of
on CT liver or spleen
SD Failure to attain CR/PR or (a) FDG-avid or PET positive prior to therapy; PET
PD positive at prior sites of disease and no new sites
on CT or PET
(b) Variably FDG-avid or PET negative; no change
in size of previous lesions on CT
Relapsed Any new lesion or increase Appearance of a new lesion(s) > 1.5 cm in any axis, >50% increase from New or recurrent involvement
disease by ³50% of previously ³50% increase in SPD of more than one node, nadir in the SPD of
or PD involved sites from or ³50% increase in longest diameter of a any previous lesions
nadir previously identified node > 1 cm in short axis
Lesions PET positive if FDG-avid lymphoma or
PET positive prior to therapy
CR complete remission, FDG [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose, PET positron emission tomography, PR partial remission, SPD sum of the product of the diameters, SD
stable disease, PD progressive disease
J. Armitage and D.W. Coulter
14 Therapeutic Approaches to Burkitt’s Lymphoma 261
Complications
Fig. 14.1 Treatment algorithm for patients presenting with acute tumor lysis syndrome
New Directions
Despite the vast improvement noted in outcomes from Dr. Burkitt’s first description
in 1958 to the present day, further understanding regarding mechanisms of treat-
ment failures and novel therapeutics are required. It has long been noted that patients
with elevated levels of lactate dehydrogenase, extent of disease, central nervous
system (CNS) disease at presentation, suboptimal response to a cytoreductive pro-
phase, and advanced age represent a cohort with a worse prognosis [28, 29, 57].
Recent investigations regarding the biology of Burkitt lymphoma have identified
other markers of poor prognosis. Deletions of 13q and gain of 7q [58], cellular
FLICE (FADD-like IL-1beta-converting enzyme)-inhibitory protein (c-FLIP) levels
[59] and minimal residual disease (MRD) detection by long-distance polymerase
chain reaction assay detecting the (8;14)(q24;q32) translocation and [60] have all
recently been identified as indicators of inferior outcome, possibly identifying sub-
groups of patients that may benefit from intensification of therapy [61].
Monoclonal antibodies and other biologic reagents continue to provide promise
as novel addition therapy for patients with Burkitt lymphoma. The addition of
the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab to existing treatment regimens such
as HyperCVAD has been found to be especially beneficial in older patients [62].
As discussed previously dose-adjusted EPOCH plus rituximab (DA-EPOCH-R)
has produced durable remissions with minimal toxicity in a number of adult patients,
and a confirmatory multicenter study is currently underway [39].
The anti-CD22 monoclonal antibody epratuzumab is also being studied as adjuvant
therapy. Studies of its use in several Burkitt lymphoma cell cultures have revealed
cytotoxicity [63]. Investigations into using epratuzumab concomitantly with rituximab
in Burkitt lymphoma cell lines have revealed possible synergy, but clinical trials are
still evolving [64].
Transcriptional regulation via epigenetic mechanism is yet another possible target
of future therapeutics. Histone deacetylase inhibitors such as depsipeptide have
recently been shown to have additive cytotoxicity when combined with standard
therapy in Burkitt lymphoma cell lines [65].
264 J. Armitage and D.W. Coulter
Conclusion
The treatment of Burkitt lymphoma has evolved over the last 50 years as further
understanding of the biological characteristics of the tumor has been obtained.
High intensity, short duration chemotherapy with CNS prophylaxis is now the stan-
dard of care, with special consideration of treatment toxicities such as acute tumor
lysis syndrome. Continued investigations regarding the biology of the tumor cells,
and attempts to reduce the intensity of chemotherapy while maintaining excellent
disease-free survival should continue the gains first obtained by Dr. Denis Burkitt
in the 1950s.
for pocket money, three of us set off to cover about 10,000 miles, visiting 57 hospitals in 10
countries of east, central and south Africa. I had two missionary doctors traveling with me,
Ted Williams and Cliff Nelson, chosen for their good company as well as their professional/
mechanical and other knowledge. This was, after all, my summer holiday [4].
The trip was done on a shoestring budget, which Denis made light of daily.
Indeed, the research grant for the project was a mere £25. “Of course, we’ll have the
hotel room without the bath. For a quid or two it’s a cinch to walk down the hall.”
Or, “Is a box of biscuits and a cup of tea in the car while we’re travelling okay with
you two again today instead of a fancy, expensive lunch?” His humour kept our
spirits buoyed up as well. We’ll never forget statements such as, “This must be the
safest ever safari in Africa. Here we are three doctors, each with our private stock of
medicines making a beeline from one hospital to the next”. Ted, after looking over
countless giant anthills, asked, “I wonder how many anthills there are in Africa?”
“Easy,” shot back Denis, “count the ants and divide by 50,000” [66].
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14 Therapeutic Approaches to Burkitt’s Lymphoma 267
Introduction
approximately 25% mortality rate, adult cases 50%, and geriatric cases 70% [6].
iBL typically involves the lymph nodes and bone marrow [9]. This subtype is fre-
quently observed in the setting of HIV infection and, unlike other HIV-related lym-
phomas, it is frequently observed in patients with CD4 counts over 200 cells/mL.
The three forms of BL are characterized from other NHL by histological analysis.
Features characteristic to BL include medium-sized cells with abundant, basophilic
cytoplasm, often containing lipid vacuoles; round nuclei with clumped chromatin
and multiple nucleoli, and a diffuse, monotonous pattern of infiltration. A “starry
sky” appearance has been described in BL because of a high proliferation rate of
tumor cells, frequent apoptosis, and numerous macrophages containing ingested
apoptotic debris from tumor cells. BL cells express surface IgM, BCL-6, CD19,
CD20, CD22, CD10, and CD79a and are negative for CD5, CD23, and TdT [10].
The molecular hallmark of BL is the ectopic expression of the MYC oncogene
due to reciprocal chromosomal translocations [11–14]. Eighty percent of BL cases
harbor t(8;14)(q24;q32) translocations, resulting in the juxtaposition of the MYC
gene on chromosome 8 with immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) enhancer elements
on chromosome 14, which drive c-Myc mRNA and protein production. In the
remaining 20% of BL cases, translocations occurring between chromosomes 2 and
8, t(2;8)(p12;q24), or chromosomes 8 and 22, t(8;22)(q24;q11), place MYC adjacent
to either k or l light chain (IgL) loci and enhancer elements, respectively. As heavy
chain and light chain loci are specifically active in mature B cells, MYC transcrip-
tion is favored in B cells harboring the translocation. MYC encodes the c-Myc tran-
scription factor, which was first discovered nearly 30 years ago as a cellular
homologue of the avian retroviral oncogene v-Myc [15]. Since then, c-Myc has
been recognized as one of the most commonly activated oncoproteins in human
cancers. Functions of genes in the c-Myc target gene network include the regulation
of cell cycle progression, proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis [16–18].
Under normal conditions, c-Myc is activated in response to mitogenic factors and is
repressed upon exposure to anti-proliferative signals. Overexpression of c-Myc
contributes to proliferation by inducing the activity of cyclins, while at the same
time repressing the activity of the cyclin inhibitor p27 [19].
Even though translocation of MYC is generally considered a hallmark for BL,
other genetic alterations contribute to lymphomagenesis. Overexpression of c-Myc
not only drives cells into the cell cycle, but also leads to apoptosis by activation of
the pro-death p53 pathway. Like other tumors, development of BL often occurs
upon disruption of one of the tumor suppressor pathways that normally induce
apoptosis in response to oncogenic stimuli. Indeed, mutation of the sequence encod-
ing the master tumor suppressor, p53, is frequently found in BL biopsies and cell
lines [20–22]. One study found that 41% of BL biopsies contained a P53 mutation
[23]. In addition, pro-survival signals can also be provided by other aberrantly acti-
vated oncogenes, such as RAS or BCL-2.
It should be noted that some studies have identified a very small number of BL
cases (<10% of sBL) that do not show any MYC translocation, yet still overex-
press c-Myc. This phenomenon has been linked to downregulation of miRNAs
that negatively regulate c-Myc mRNA translation [24, 25]. In contrast, cases of
BL with MYC translocations also show higher expression levels of these miRNAs.
15 Animal Models of Burkitt’s Lymphoma 271
This gives two distinct mechanisms by which BL cells may come to overexpress
c-Myc: (1) the translocation of MYC to an Ig locus, and (2) downregulation of
miRNAs which regulate translation of c-Myc mRNA.
Animal Models
Animal models are powerful tools for studying the contribution of known or candi-
date oncogenes to human diseases, and for studying the effectiveness of potential
therapeutics in a model system. Nonhuman primate models have been used to
understand the biology of EBV infection and lymphomagenesis and, more
specifically, to develop therapeutic strategies for use in humans. To model BL in the
mouse, several lineages of Myc transgenic mice have been generated, where c-Myc
expression can be restricted to the B-cell lineage using a B-cell-specific promoter
and enhancer. Transgenic animals have also been critical for studying the role of
EBV latent gene products in BL, as there is strong evidence for a causative or per-
haps cooperative viral role in the development of BL. Since EBV is a strict human
pathogen, its study is limited in vivo by the inability of mice to be infected with
EBV, and the lack of homology between EBV latent proteins and those of a related
herpes virus, Murid herpesvirus 68 (MHV68). To overcome these restrictions, trans-
genic mice expressing EBV latent proteins have been crossed with Myc transgenic
mice to generate models of EBV-associated BL, so that the relative contribution of
viral proteins to development and progression of BL-like can be assessed.
272 A. Vrazo et al.
Additionally, Myc and EBV-Myc mouse models have been used to test specific
inhibitors of the pathways deregulated in murine BL with the hope of future use in
humans. In addition, the recent generation of humanized mice, defined as
immunodeficient mouse strains reconstituted with human hematopoietic cells, has
provided a convenient model to recapitulate EBV infection in mice.
of infected tamarins [46]. Histological analysis found that these lymphomas were of
B cell origin of immunoblastic and follicular center cell types, demonstrating mono-
and oligoclonality. The EBV latency proteins LMP1, EBNA1, and EBNA2 were
detected, reiterating the similarity between EBV-associated lymphoproliferations
arising in humans and classifying these tumors as being more similar to post-transplant
lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) than a Burkitt’s-like lymphoma [47].
Based on the ability of EBV to induce lymphomas in cottontop tamarins, these
animals have been used to test the effectiveness of the EBV envelope glycoprotein
gp350/220 as a candidate vaccine to prevent EBV-associated lymphomas [47–51].
The candidate vaccine was sufficient to prevent lymphoma development, but not
EBV infection, as EBV gene products were detected at low levels in healthy lym-
phoid tissue of immunized animals, and antibodies to gp350/220 were raised, but
did not neutralize EBV.
The use of nonhuman primates to study EBV infection and associated lympho-
mas is feasible. However, there are a number of reasons why primates as models for
lymphoma have fallen out of favor since the 1980s. As discussed previously, not all
cottontop tamarins develop lymphoma unless inoculated with a high titer of virus,
and the kinetics of lymphoma development are not consistent. In addition, handling
and care of nonhuman primates can be cost prohibitive. Furthermore, cottontop
tamarins are a highly endangered species with a narrow natural habitat in northwest
Colombia [52]. These considerations and the evolution of molecular biology tech-
niques in the late 1980s led many researchers to use transgenic mice to investigate
the involvement of the MYC translocation and EBV gene products in the genesis of
BL. Currently, primates are still occasionally used to model the humoral response to
EBV infection and to EBV vaccine candidates [53].
Em-myc Mice
The first Myc transgenic mouse models were reported in 1985 [55, 56]. To mimic
the t(8:14) chromosomal translocation of MYC to the IgH locus detected in 80% of
274 A. Vrazo et al.
BL cases, the murine form of MYC was expressed as a minigene construct under the
control of the intronic enhancer region (Em) of the immunoglobulin heavy chain
(IgH) gene (Em-myc), or under the control of the SV40 promoter and the k light
chain enhancer region (Ek-SV-myc). The bone marrow of young (4–7 week) Em-myc
mice was dominated by large pre-B cells, and most abnormally, pre-B cells com-
posed almost 25% of splenic B cells, indicating a brief proliferative phase during
which time B-cell expansion was controlled by apoptosis [57]. Em-myc mice devel-
oped spontaneous aggressive tumors, with a median onset at 9 weeks and an aver-
age morbidity or mortality by 12 weeks with an overall tumor incidence of 86%
[58]. In the same study, the average morbidity or mortality of the Ek-SV-myc lin-
eage was 23 weeks, with tumor development in 35%. Massive lymph node enlarge-
ment and moderate enlargement of the spleen and thymus was observed, with
variable invasion of other tissues, such as the liver and large intestine. Although
heterogeneity in tumors was observed, most tumor cells were sIg− with IgL in the
germline conformation, although a small proportion (20%) were sIg+ and had rear-
ranged IgL genes [59]. Most tumor cells were monoclonal, suggesting a single cell
of origin for each tumor. These features lead to the classification of tumors arising
in Em-myc mice as lymphoblastic lymphoma with a leukemic component, based on
the composition of pre-B lymphocytes or a mix of pre-B/B lymphocytes, unlike the
more mature B-cell phenotype observed in human BL.
The short latent period for Em-myc tumors indicates that other mutations contribute
to tumorigenesis in this murine model of BL, in a similar fashion to human BL
where lesions in apoptotic pathways are critical for aiding Myc-induced lymphom-
agenesis. Disruption of the p53-ARF-MDM2 pathway occurs in approximately
80% of Em-myc tumors, similar to that observed in human BL [20, 60]. In addition,
the BCL-2 pro-survival family of proteins have been implicated in Myc-driven lym-
phomagenesis; Em-myc mice crossed with bcl-2 transgenic mice give rise to rapidly
developing tumors [61].
Em-myc mice have been used extensively as a model of BL-like tumor develop-
ment and therapeutics. The demonstration that Myc suppression can cause tumor
regression [62] has supported the development of therapeutic strategies targeting
Myc. However, the presence of leukemias and pre-/pro-B-cell origin indicates that
these tumors could present a murine analogue of acute lymphoblastic leukemia
rather than a BL analogue. Immature tumors may be a function of copy number,
with higher levels of Myc expression favoring immature tumors, and single copies
of Myc (such as those used in the Myc-YAC mice, discussed later) developing more
mature IgM+ tumors [63].
Igl-MYC Mice
Fig. 15.1 Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained section of tumoral lymph node of a l-MYC
transgenic mouse. A monotonous population of medium-sized tumoral lymphoid cells with high
proliferative activity and apoptotic activity is observed. The tumor cells are monomorphic with
round nuclei, multiple nucleoli, and basophilic cytoplasm. The “starry sky” appearance seen under
low power is due to scattered tingible body-laden macrophages ingesting debris of apoptotic tumor
cells (white arrow)
onset between 1 and 7 months, succumbing to mostly cervical lymph node tumors
at 17 weeks of age, on average [64–66]. Histologic analysis of Igl-MYC mice pre-
senting with lymphadenopathy showed the loss of normal architecture with a dense
infiltrate of monomorphic lymphocytes with many mitotic figures. Large numbers
of metallophilic macrophages imparted a “starry sky” appearance to tumor tissues
composed of nearly 100% B cells, similar to human BL. The tumor immunopheno-
type was also similar to human BL in that tumor cells expressed IgM, B220, CD19,
and CD43, and were negative for CD5, CD23, CD38, and T cell markers. Tumor
cells had rearranged IgL genes and were monoclonal, having developed from an
initial polyclonal population of B cells. Tumor cells were immature and had not
been selected by antigen, as identified by non-mutated V regions. Later studies indi-
cated a variable expression of sIgM on tumor cells of Igl-MYC mice, with ~60%
sIgM+ [67], indicating that lymphomagenesis in Igl-MYC mice requires coopera-
tion from other genetic lesions rather than altered BCR signaling (as discussed later
in the MYC-BCR model). In a similar manner to Em-myc tumors, 60% of Igl-MYC
tumors were found to contain p53 mutations [65].
The Igl-MYC model was the first murine model to demonstrate “starry sky”
tumor histology, similar to that seen in human BL (Fig. 15.1). One consideration
with the Igl-MYC model and the Em-Myc model is the multiplicity of transgene
copies per cell, as it is well known that increasing the gene dosage of oncogenes can
ameliorate and accelerate tumor development in a linear fashion. A second consid-
eration is that these translocations reproduce only one element of BL; either the IgH
Em translocation or the more rare IgL translocation.
276 A. Vrazo et al.
Myc-YAC Mice
A concern arising with the use of transgenic mice relying on heterologous enhancer
regions is that translocations of Myc into the region of a known Ig enhancer have
seldom been reported, and the position of the breakpoint in the predominant t(8;14)
translocation can vary. In addition, the types of BL generated in transgenic models
can vary phenotypically, which may be a function of the mouse strain or the trans-
gene construct. This variance of immature and mature B-cell tumors can, however,
be relevant in BL, as sporadic BL demonstrates a more mature follicular B-cell
phenotype, whereas endemic BL demonstrates an immature center cell phenotype.
To identify possible oncogene activation signals driving Myc expression in BL, a
220 kb region of the human IgH locus containing V, D, J, and C (m and d) was
cloned head to tail with a human MYC fragment isolated from the BL cell line Raji
into a yeast artificial chromosome (YAC). To overcome the issues with transgene
dosage, single copy clones were injected into BALB/c blastocysts to generate
chimeric mice, termed Myc-YAC mice. Tumor incidence was 100% in Myc-YAC
mice, with an onset at 6 weeks of age [63]. Splenomegaly was observed, although
tumor masses were generally detected in non-lymphoid regions, such as the skull,
the abdomen, and the chest. The location of tumors in the Myc-YAC model is remi-
niscent of BL detection at extranodal sites in humans, including the jaw, abdomen,
or central nervous system [2]. Tumor cells were generally pre-B-cell lymphomas
with a phenotype of B220+CD19+IgM+IgD+CD43+/− [68]. Tumor cells were clonal
and had rearranged VH(D)JH, but had not hypermutated VH, suggesting an early
origin of the malignant cells. Tumors in this model therefore may represent BL in
the leukemic phase of the disease. The Myc-YAC model was the first to give insight
that the regulation of translocated oncogenes may occur through Ig-specific enhanc-
ers located in the core region of the IgH locus. Concerns with the Myc-YAC
approach include the absence of the Ea enhancer, the unusual location of MYC in
the IgH locus, and the head-to-tail orientation of MYC to IgH, which is not observed
in human BL or mouse plasmacytomas.
iMycEm Mice
IgH-3¢E-myc Mice
The recognition that the 3¢ locus control region (LCR) downstream of the IgH locus
is active in human BL cells provided a rationale for developing a mouse model
expressing Myc under the control of the 3¢ LCR. The 3¢ LCR contains four B-cell-
specific transcriptional enhancers that are active over a long range during class-
switch recombination and terminal B-cell differentiation [71, 72]. To test whether
the 3¢ LCR played a role in BL, Wang and Boxer designed a truncated 3¢ enhancer
cassette by insertional targeting into the 5¢ region of the murine c-MYC locus [73].
Healthy IgH-3¢E-myc mice had a higher frequency of B220+CD19+ B cells in the
spleen, and an increase in a B220+IgM+IgDlow population. However, the frequency
of pro-B cells was not perturbed as in other Myc models. Premalignant B cells of
IgH-3¢E-myc demonstrated a growth advantage in vitro as shown by enhanced pro-
liferation, cell cycle progression, and apoptosis. Lymphadenopathy and splenom-
egaly were observed in mice from 10 to 12 months of age, and mean age at death
was 379 days for heterozygotes and 314 days for homozygotes. Tumor histology in
IgH-3¢E-myc demonstrated a “starry sky” appearance with medium-sized cells
with basophilic cytoplasm and round nuclei, and infiltration in lung, kidney, and
intestine was also observed. Most tumor cells displayed a mature B-cell phenotype
of IgM+CD19+B220+CD23−CD34−. Alterations in apoptotic pathways were also
observed in tumors from IgH-3¢E-myc mice, with an increase in BCL-XL, BCL-2,
and MDM2 protein, or stabilization of p53. In addition, the P2 to P1 Myc promoter
shift was observed in tumor cells. The long latent period for lymphoma onset may
be indicative of poor Myc expression due to the knock-in disrupting upstream or
downstream regulatory elements of Myc [74, 75]. However, the IgH-3¢E-myc model
was instrumental in indicating the importance of the 3¢ LCR of the IgH locus in the
modulation of Myc expression in BL.
The previous Myc models of BL discussed herein describe the use of different
schemes to mimic BL in the mouse, which resulted in the identification of the
278 A. Vrazo et al.
minimal IgH locus elements necessary to elicit Myc overexpression. In fact, this
region has been identified as being active in human BL and is always conserved on
the c-MYC-translocated chromosome in all forms of BL, unlike other IgH-derived
regions previously used as transgenes [72]. To avoid the long latencies observed
with IgH-3¢E-myc mice, Truffinet et al. [76] generated mice harboring a single copy
of a c-myc-3¢ IgH LCR transgene. In young transgenic mice, B-cell maturation was
normal, although immunoglobulin production was impaired. Disease onset mani-
festing as lymphadenopathy occurred at 12 weeks, and overall tumor incidence was
80% at 34 weeks of age, with a mean mortality at 23 weeks of age. The majority of
tumors developing in c-myc-3¢ mice were aggressive Burkitt’s-like lymphoblastic
B-cell lymphomas, although diffuse anaplastic plasmacytomas (B220−IgMlowCD138−)
were observed with longer latency periods. Histology of the Burkitt’s-like tumor
demonstrated a “starry sky” appearance, and tumor cells displayed a mature B-cell
phenotype of B220+IgM+IgD+CD43−CD138−. Tumor cells were clonal in origin, and
VH sequencing indicated that no hypermutation had occurred, but by contrast, AID
was expressed and had promoted hypermutation of sequences upstream of c-Myc
due to inclusion of the 3¢ IgH region. These mutations may have had a deleterious
effect on the ability of negative regulators of c-Myc to bind, resulting in the higher
protein levels of c-Myc detectable in the tumor cells [77].
Currently, these c-myc-3¢ “minilocus” mice are the closest reproduction to BL in
the mouse, as they contain the key features of human BL; tumors displaying a
mature phenotype driven by B-cell lineage-specific Myc deregulation promoted by
the 3¢ LCR of IgH. In addition, the generation of mature B-cell lymphomas in these
mice compared to previous models may be explained by the recent finding that the
3¢ IgH regulatory region is required for peripheral B-cell lymphomas, such as BL,
with translocations associated with class-switch recombination, such as the MYC
translocation [78]. The importance of the IgH regulatory region has been tested as a
therapeutic strategy in Myc-overexpressing tumors in vivo, and is discussed later.
Many B-cell lymphomas (BCLs), including BL, express a BCR such as IgM on the
cell surface. Forty years ago, it was proposed that antigen stimulation may contrib-
ute to the generation of B-cell lymphomas, and since then, several lines of evidence
have supported this hypothesis [79–81]. In some BCLs, the BCR has been selected
by antigen, or may bind a known pathogen, such as a viral antigen, or an autoantigen
in the context of autoimmunity [82, 83]. To explore whether constitutive or antigen-
activated BCR stimulation cooperated with MYC in the genesis of BL, Refaeli et al.
[84] used Em-myc mice and MMTV-rtTA/TRE-MYC mice. In the latter, the MYC
transgene is expressed in the B-cell lineage and is controlled by a tetracycline
responsive element, such that expression can be repressed by administration of
tetracycline or doxycycline [62]. These Myc transgenic mice were crossed to mice
expressing a transgenic mature BCR specific for the model antigen hen egg lysozyme
(HEL), and crossed to mice that expressed soluble HEL (sHEL) to provide an anti-
genic stimulus.
15 Animal Models of Burkitt’s Lymphoma 279
N-Myc, a cellular homolog of c-Myc, can substitute for c-Myc in certain cellular
functions as shown by targeted gene replacement experiments. N-Myc is required
during neurogenesis and is amplified in neuroblastoma. Despite the lack of N-myc
deregulation in BL, the finding that N-myc may regulate c-Myc provided a rationale
to assess the formation of lymphomas in N-myc transgenic mice. B-cell lymphomas
developed in mice transgenic for N-Myc under the control of the IgH enhancer Em
and either the N-Myc, SV40, or Ig VH promoter (Em-N-Myc mice) [86]. Here, onset
occurred as early as 10 weeks of age and tumors developed by 13–18 weeks on
average in the lineage with the highest expression of the Em-N-Myc transgene. Most
tumors were clonal and had rearranged IgM genes, with a minority also rearranging
Igk giving the tumors a pre-B and immature B-cell phenotype. Interestingly, c-Myc
was never upregulated in tumors and was nearly undetectable, suggesting that
N-Myc may negatively regulate c-Myc.
280 A. Vrazo et al.
The function of MYC point mutations described in human BL has also been studied
in mice. Retroviral vectors carrying the wild-type MYC gene, or the P57S and T58A
point mutations, were used to infect hematopoietic stem cells, which were then
reconstituted into immunodeficient host mice [87]. P57S and T58A were shown to
accelerate lymphomagenesis compared to wild-type MYC and were able to uncouple
apoptosis from proliferation by failing to induce the pro-apoptotic protein Bim.
Studies with these mice may be particularly important for the understanding of
Burkitt’s lymphoma development, in the context of mutated Myc.
Models of EBV-Associated BL
The association of EBV latency with BL has provided a rationale for exploration of
the role of the virus in lymphomagenesis. As EBV does not infect mice, and MHV68
encodes non-homologous latency proteins, crossing mice transgenic for an EBV
protein with a Myc model to study the involvement of EBV proteins in Myc tumori-
genesis has proved valuable in both understanding the mechanisms of EBV-induced
lymphomagenesis and the similarities and differences between latent protein func-
tion in humans and in mice.
EmEBNA1 Mice
EBV latent infection involves host cell immortalization, and a number of EBV pro-
teins have been hypothesized to be critical to this function. The viral protein EBNA1,
which tethers the viral genome to chromatin, is consistently expressed in BL.
EBNA1 may contribute to pathogenesis by inducing chromosomal instability
through induction of reactive oxygen species, leading to activated telomerase and
chromosomal translocations such as that of MYC [88–90]. In addition, EBNA1 can
induce Rag1 and Rag2 expression, which may further help facilitate the Ig-MYC
translocation [91, 92].
EBNA1 may also play a role in inducing aberrant proliferation in BL. The first
example of EBNA1 directly affecting cell proliferation came with the generation of
C57BL/6 mice transgenic for expression of EBNA1 under the control of the polyo-
mavirus promoter and the IgH enhancer region Em (EmEBNA-1 mice) [93]. The
expression of EBNA1 in two EmEBNA-1 lineages with varying EBNA1 expression
causes B-cell lymphomas with associated leukemias, with onset at 2 months of age
and mortality between 4 and 12 months. The lymphoma phenotype bears resem-
blance to the Em-myc tumors and was also representative of B cells at different
stages of development [55]. Bone marrow lymphocytes from the EmEBNA-1 mice
were shown to have a higher rate of proliferation and survival ex vivo as a result of
upregulating BCL-XL and MDM2 [94]. Interestingly, trisomy of chromosome 15
leading to Myc overexpression was observed in EmEBNA-1 tumors, suggesting a
cooperative role for Myc and EBNA1 in lymphomagenesis [95].
15 Animal Models of Burkitt’s Lymphoma 281
When crossed with Em-myc mice, EBNA1 did not significantly increase Myc-driven
lymphomagenesis from 63 days on average [95]. However, when crossed with Em-
N-Myc mice which have a longer latency of ~310 days, Em-N-Myc/EBNA1 mice
developed tumors significantly faster, at ~94 days [86, 95]. In these models, the
levels of EBNA1 were stable in the absence or presence of c-Myc or N-Myc, indi-
cating that EBNA1 did not act as an oncogene by upregulation, but instead cooper-
ated with Myc to accelerate lymphomagenesis. Based on the findings that
Em-EBNA1 transgenic tumors express increased BCL-XL and MDM2 protein
levels, the upregulation of these anti-apoptotic proteins by EBNA1 is a likely mech-
anism contributing to tumorigenesis in this model [94].
However, later studies indicated that the contribution of EBNA1 to lymphom-
agenesis in animal models may be strain-specific, as Kang et al. [96] developed
three lineages where EBNA1 was expressed in B cells of Friend leukemia virus B
(FVB) mice, and observed no acceleration in tumor development over non-trans-
genic mice. The variation in EBNA1-induced tumor development suggests that
EBNA1 may induce as-yet unrecognized strain-specific target genes to cooperate in
tumorigenesis. As previously discussed, EBNA1 also induces chromosomal insta-
bility by inducing reactive oxygen species [88–90]. Since EBV has been detected at
a high frequency along with the 1q chromosomal translocation in BL [97], EBNA1
transgenic mice on the C57BL/6 background may be useful for studies of EBV-
induced chromosomal aberrations contributing to lymphoma development.
LMP2A/l-MYC Mice
The EBV-encoded gene product LMP2A is expressed in B cells during latent infection
and is one of the few EBV gene products consistently detected in primary BL biopsies
[29, 98–100]. The presence of LMP2A in all forms of latency, as well as in disease,
emphasizes the importance of LMP2A expression in both latency and latency-
associated malignancies. LMP2A functions as a B-cell receptor (BCR) mimic by
constitutively associating with Lyn and Syk kinases through an immunoreceptor
tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) [101–104]. LMP2A protects human and
murine B cells from apoptosis by activating the Ras/Akt pathway and upregulating
anti-apoptotic molecules, including BCL-2 and BCL-XL through NF-kB [105–108].
Although LMP2A transgenic mice do not develop lymphoma, they display
altered B-cell signaling and development, such that in the absence of a functional
BCR, LMP2A signaling allows B cells to survive. These features taken together
with findings with a Myc model where the BCR was constitutively active indicate a
contributing role for BCR engagement in the development of BL [84]. The presence
of LMP2A in EBV-positive BL along with the Myc translocation may therefore
constitute a molecular mechanism underlying BL development, and has provided
rationale for the development of a murine model of LMP2A-positive BL to study
the role of LMP2A in lymphomagenesis.
LMP2A mice were crossed with Igl-MYC mice to generate LMP2A/l-MYC
double transgenic mice, which demonstrated splenomegaly from an early age, with
282 A. Vrazo et al.
LMP1/l-MYC Mice
varying incidence among lineages, with up to 42% of mice presenting with tumors
between 12 and 18 months, to 52% of mice over 18 months presenting with tumors.
Histology of LMP1-expressing tumors revealed B-cell follicular lymphomas (FL)
(B220+IgG+CD3−) in enlarged spleen with dissemination to liver, lungs, or cervical
lymph nodes. LMP1 lymphomas displayed evidence of clonal JH rearrangements,
which correlated with the expression of LMP1. Antiapoptotic and growth pathways
were also activated in LMP1 tumors, with overexpression of BCL-2, A20, and
c-Myc, as is common with most human FL. Later work indicated that pre-tumor
LMP1-expressing B cells from transgenic mice are phenotypically normal, but are
hyperproliferative in response to stimuli, suggesting a role for antigen stimulation
contributing to LMP1-driven tumors [129].
Mating LMP1 mice with Igl-MYC mice generated a greatly accelerated tumor
phenotype, resulting in tumor onset between 4 and 9 weeks of age. Tumors initially
presented as an enlarged spleen two- to fivefold larger than LMP1 or Myc trans-
genic spleen, with dissemination to cervical and mesenteric lymph nodes. Tumor
cells were of B-cell origin with an immature surface phenotype of B220+CD19+IgM
−
IgD−GL7+CD23−CD43+ (A. Vrazo, unpublished observations). LMP1/Igl-MYC
mice may be useful in evaluating the cooperation of these pathways in the early
stages of BL development, and in non-BL-like lymphomas, such as AIDS-associated
non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas, which frequently express both c-Myc and LMP1.
Em-EBER1/Em-myc Mice
EBV expresses two small non-coding RNAs, the EBV-encoded RNAs (EBERs),
which are highly conserved among primate homologues of EBV. EBER1 and EBER2
are 166- and 172-nucleotide single-stranded RNAs, respectively, and are the most
abundant RNA species in most EBV-infected cells and disease conditions. While
their function and mechanism of action is unclear, there is evidence for EBERs in
inducing the expression of cytokines such as IL-10, which can enhance B-cell growth
[130]. EBER1 is detected in primary BL biopsies as well as BL and lymphoblastoid
cell lines, which provides rationale for assessment of the contribution of EBER1 to
lymphomagenesis [131, 132]. A murine model expressing EBER1 under the immu-
noglobulin heavy chain intronic enhancer Em (Em-EBER1) was recently developed
which indicated that EBER1 is tumorigenic in vivo albeit with a long latency period
[133]. The Em-EBER1 model is the first demonstration that a non-coding viral gene
has oncogenic potential. Young Em-EBER1 mice have normal B220+ B-cell num-
bers, but EBER1 eventually promotes lymphoid hyperplasia and lymphomagenesis,
which presents as initial splenomegaly with mesenteric lymph node involvement.
Tumor incidence was 58% in the highest EBER1-expressing line of mice by 2 years
of age, and tumors were B220+ B-cell lymphomas with clonal IgH rearrangements,
or histiocytic sarcomas. Intriguingly, c-Myc was upregulated in several Em-EBER1
tumors, and activation of Myc target DNA sequences was also observed, suggesting
that EBER1 may function in BL tumorigenesis by cooperating with c-Myc.
284 A. Vrazo et al.
Based on the findings that the EBER1 promoter contains a Myc binding site that
may indicate the upregulation of EBER by c-Myc [134], Em-EBER1 mice were
crossed with Em-myc mice [133]. No acceleration of onset was observed, and tumors
that arose in Em-EBER1/Em-myc mice were phenotypically similar to Em-myc
tumors, with extensive lymph node involvement. In sum, the Em-EBER1 model will
be useful for studying the biology of EBER1 and the potential cross-regulation
between EBER1 and Myc.
Therapeutic Models
Modeling cancers such as Burkitt’s lymphoma in the mouse has been an effective
system to examine the etiology of cancer in vivo. As such, mouse models of cancer
represent valuable tools to examine the effectiveness of new therapeutics. To evalu-
ate the effectiveness of therapeutics targeted to gene products altered in BL or their
pathways, such as Myc or EBV LMP2A, immunocompetent transgenic models
have been used. For assessment of therapeutics against xenografts derived from
human BL cell lines, immunodeficient mice are primarily used, as they are unable
to reject the xenograft. Recently, advances in humanized immunodeficient mice
have resulted in mice engrafted with human hematopoietic systems, which can be
infected with EBV, permitting extensive analysis of lymphoma development and
progression. Given that mice have been historically refractive to EBV infection, the
advent of humanized mice is a large step in understanding the biology of EBV and
the mechanisms associated with BL tumorigenesis in an animal model.
Many immunocompetent mouse models of BL, including the transgenic mice dis-
cussed above, have been used to study the effectiveness of preclinical therapies,
including conditional oncogene inactivation, small drug molecules, and immuno-
therapeutic agents. Based on the observation that Myc-driven tumors often become
resistant to chemotherapeutics because of acquisition of mutations that impair BCL-
2-regulated apoptosis, small molecule antagonists of BCL-2 have been tested in Myc
models. The small molecule ABT-737 mimics BH3-only proteins, which are antago-
nists of the pro-survival BCL-2 family. ABT-737 was extremely effective with low-
dose cyclophosphamide against lymphomas transplanted into C57BL/6 recipients
derived from Em-myc or Em-myc/bcl-2 mice [135]. Tumor regression in this model
demonstrated that ABT-737 could be useful in human BL that overexpresses BCL-2
family proteins.
The inhibition of pathways constitutively activated by EBV gene products that
cooperate with Myc in lymphomagenesis has also been demonstrated using small
molecule inhibitors. A small molecule inhibitor of the mammalian target of rapamycin
15 Animal Models of Burkitt’s Lymphoma 285
Future Directions
Conclusion
The study of Burkitt’s lymphoma in humans has been traditionally hindered by the
availability of tumor tissues, the inhibitory effects of therapeutics on tumor growth,
and ethical concerns with human studies. Animal models have been crucial in
15 Animal Models of Burkitt’s Lymphoma 289
overcoming these constraints to better understand the biology, growth, and treatment
of BL (see Table 15.1 for a summary). Transgenic mice overexpressing Myc in B
cells to model the canonical t(8;14) translocation in human BL have greatly
improved our understanding of the mechanisms involved in lymphomagenesis, as
well the mechanism of MYC regulation by elements within the 3¢ locus control
region of the immunoglobulin enhancer. Transgenic Myc models have also
allowed the identification of additional genetic lesions occurring in BL, such as
290 A. Vrazo et al.
Acknowledgements The authors gratefully acknowledge the assistance of their colleagues and
funding sources (National Cancer Institute and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases) and apologize to those investigators whose contributions were not included in this chapter
due to space limitations.
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Chapter 16
Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About
Latent BL
Beverly E. Griffin
Denis Burkitt first published his research in “The British Journal of Surgery” in
1958. This went unnoticed. It was his article, co-written with Greg O’Conor,
“Malignant tumours in African children: A clinical syndrome” published in Cancer
in 1961, that made a mark in the medical world.
Irish by birth, Trinity by the Grace of God—A Life Celebrated. A Symposium,
Published by Trinity College, Dublin, 2011.
1. Burkitt D, A sarcoma involving the jaws in African children. Br J Surg, 218–223,
1958.
2. Burkitt D, O’ Conor. Malignant tumours in African children: A clinical syn-
drome. Cancer 14, 258–269, 1961.
3. Cancer in Africa. Clifford P, Linsell DA, Timms GL. 1968. E. Africa Med. J.
Nairobi:
(a) Cancer in Africa. Patterns of cancer distribution in Tanzania, Burkitt D,
Slavin G. 3, 13–17. Also, in the same volume.
(b) Epidemiological, anatomical, virological and serological observation of the
lymphomas of African Children, Dalldorf G, Bergamini F, Frost P, Couaux T.
17, 125–131.
(c) Notes on the hypothesis that mosquitoes may be concerned in transmission
of a causative agent in Burkitt’s tumour, McCrae AWR. 18, 133–141.
(d) Further membrane immunofluorescent studies on Burkitt’s lymphoma biopsy
cells and established tissue culture lines, Klein G, Clifford P. 20, 155–165.
(e) Burkitt’s tumour in the United States, Ziegler JL, Carbone PP, Berard CW,
Thomas LB. 28, 239–250.
(f) Cell Proliferation in Burkitt’s tumours, Cooper EH, Frank GL, Wright DH.
30, 259–263.
(g) Abstract: Survival of patients with Burkitt’s tumour in east and west Mengo
districts of Uganda, Morrow RH, Pike MC, 453–455.
4. (a) De-The G, Geser A, Day NE, Tukei PM, Williams EH et al. Epidemiological
evidence for causal relationship between Epstein–Barr virus and Burkitt’s
lymphoma from Ugandan prospective study. Nature 274, 756–761, 1978.
(b) Geser A, de The G, Lenoir G, Day NE, Williams EH. Final case reporting
from the Ugandan prospective study of the relationship between EBV and
Burkitt’s lymphoma. Int J Cancer 15, 397–400, 1982.
5. Wright D H. What is Burkitt’s Lymphoma and when is it Endemic? Blood, 93,
758, 1999.
6. Epstein–Barr Virus. Ed. E.S. Robertson, Caister Academic Press. Chapters 1 and
33, Norfolk. England.
(a) Epstein MA. The origins of EBV Research: Discovery and Characterization
of the virus. 1–14, 2005.
(b) Rickinson A. Epstein-Barr virus: Summary, Conclusions and a Forward
Look. 711–753, 2005.
Background
Burkitt’s lymphoma is a medical topic that requires a special interest. This disease—
largely of children—is not easily dealt with since it grows so rapidly, the fastest
proliferating human tumour. What is required is a combined effort in this field, as a
disease that should not be ignored but to be given increased focus and attention.
Although EBV has about 100 separate genes in order for it to replicate and survive,
these are not the genes that mainly support the tumour. Here, only a handful of
genes are required that, so far as we know, are mainly composed of the EBV Ebna1
(or EBNA1), and in some cases also of a lytically associated membrane gene (EBV
LMP1), two small RNAs not expressed for generating proteins, and recently just
being sorted out, is a group of small, virally coded RNAs, known as microRNAs
(miRNAs) which as yet are not well understood. The rest of the viral genes or other
factors not yet known to us act within the host cell to create “a malignancy”. What
is required for the growth of this virus in the host depends also on other EBV genes
that help maintain the virus and are expressed from a supercoiled circular viral
DNA, within the malignancy. This deals with how the virus replicates, and contin-
ues to function, but is retained apart from the tumour per se, as far as we know.
This may be part of the problem in understanding this tumour.
Lytic replication of EBV may lyse the infected cells and so destroy the tumour,
but the growth cycle of this virus may also contribute to its destruction on its own.
16 Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About Latent BL 303
Information existing in the supercoiled virus within a single cell implies that we
need more data from the virus, not merely the major genes required for replication
of the virus, but also about the latent virus causal for the entity, BL. It may be neces-
sary to separate out the malignancy from the alternative growth function of the
virus, and try to understand how we can distinguish the tumour functions from
the lytic component of the viral DNA. Table 16.1 shows the viral gene expression
patterns detected from frozen samples of BL biopsies from Africa.
This section of the summary takes in data from Kornberg and Baker, “DNA
Replication”, 1992 (Freeman and Co.), where EBV is briefly considered. First, EBV
has “distinct replication origins”. One, oriP, is responsible for maintaining the
genome in a latent extrachromosomal state (i.e. that seen in the infected tumour
cells) and the other, oriLyt, is responsible for amplification of the genome and prog-
eny production (i.e. replication) during the lytic growth phase. The two origins are
located quite separately, and apart, on the large double-stranded DNA genome.
They require distinct viral products for their activities, and do efficiently promote
different modes of replication. DNA synthesis from oriP is circle-to-circle, through
several intermediates, and during lytic replication long concatemers are generated,
indicative of a separate mechanism. These are then processed resulting in propaga-
tion of the latent circular, viral genome into new daughter cells, and linear dsDNA
packaged into progeny virions. EBV is unique in the efficiency with which it can
immortalize human B lymphocytes, and from 10% to 100% of infected peripheral
B cells yield progeny that proliferate indefinitely with EBV maintained in a latent
plasmid state.
Section 1
Turning to the heart of this subject, the major section of this chapter (approximately
95%) deals with references from 2005 and onward, and mainly with the tumour,
BL. An early version (see [1]) was used, in a web site shown for an American’s
tumour provided by the family, on his death from Burkitt’s. In [2], Vonka, used early
suggestions and includes both early and later tumours, as well as Burkitt’s argu-
ments that “soulless piling up of corroborative observations is of far less value for a
scientific program than is active effort to overthrow hypotheses and replaced them
by others”. This included Zur Hausen’s thoughts on Burkitt’s lymphoma which he
studied then in the 1980s. In [3], Kazembe et al. examined a population of 92
patients with BL in rural Malawi some 5 years after being treated and apparently
surviving the disease—73 patients were traced. Of these, 40% were alive, and
63.5% of surviving children identified had tumours only involving the head clini-
cally, and 21% with the abdomen involved. Obtaining long-term tumour informa-
tion of this sort seems rare, with most follow-up studies done mainly short term.
Patients on the whole are followed for 1 year after recovery, rather than for 5-year
survival. Turning to more recent information, Andrew Willy [4], a Glaxo/Smith/
Kline Chief executive states that “pharmaceutical companies have a moral obligation
304
Table 16.1 Viral gene expression in African BL biopsies . From Xue and Griffin [74]
EBNAI BARFI
Sample Qp Cp/Wp CSTs IR4 IR2 BARFI Lytic Latent BZLFI LMPI LMP2A LMP2B vIL-10
SD + + + + + + − − + − + + −
IB + − + + + + + − + − + − +
LC + + + + + + + − − − + − −
TJ + − + + + + + − + − +(W)a − −
GE + − + + + + + − − − + − −
BL-1b + − + + + + + + + + +(W)a − +
BL-2c + − + + − − − − − − − − −
BL-3 + − + + + + + − + + − − +
BL-4 + − + + +(W)a + − − − + − − −
BL-5 + − + + + + + − + + + + −
BL-6 + − + + + + + + + + + − −
BL-7 + − + + + + + − + + + − −
CC(control) − − − − − − − − − − − − −
Summary of EBV transcriptional expression in tumour samples (taken from freshly frozen material)
a
Weak
b
HIV
c
Probably not a BL
B.E. Griffin
16 Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About Latent BL 305
to conduct research and development into therapies for low-income countries”, noting
that the “financial returns are often limited”. BL does not appear on his list of
tumours, however. I did ask, and got a reply that “maybe yet they will change”.
He notes more promising results coming forth for the future of malaria prevention,
so maybe that will be a link for the future also, with regard to BL, to which malaria
is linked. Lastly in the 4th edition, of the WHO Classification of Tumors of
Haematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues, reviewed by Elaine Jaffe [5] in 2009.
She noted that there is a greater appreciation now of the borderlands between BL
and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and began to examine evidence of
this positive approach, distinguishing between these two cell types, as discussed
later here.
For more detailed reviews, two are specifically cited on BL (see [6, 7]). In the
more recent review, Bornkamm [6] uses BL as a “paradigm in cancer research”. He
also treats, briefly, the question of “other viral genes, and animal models”. Here, as
often discovered also by others, mouse models are not finding answers that apply to
this cancer in man. On the other hand, whereas BL affects most frequently young
children (aged 2–14), the disease of adults appear to follow a comparable course.
Thorley-Lawson and Allday raise many questions [7]. They are sceptical in feeling
that the development of BL becomes more enigmatic than involving only c-Myc,
EBV, and (even) malaria, but did not, I think, consider the role of HIV here (see
below). They have not decided, one thinks, whether the BL cell is more a germinal
centre, or a memory cell, or one or both. Boema et al. [8] include BL and DLBCL,
and gave attention to c-Myc at (8q24), but translocations with the secondary genes
coding for kappa light chain (IgK at 2p:12) or lambda light chain (IgL at 14:32), are
not really mentioned. Indeed, through the literature, only c-Myc at 8q24 receives
attention. This appears as a simple neglect, I think, but would we find other transposi-
tions with changes in BL at the sites on chromosomes 2 and 22, like that on 14?
The study by Lenses et al. [9] used a “middleman database” and defined a cytoge-
netic profile of “true BL”. No differences were observed between children and adults
in this work, nor in a “grey-zone” between the two Burkitt’s (BL and DLBCL). Even
with “gazing ahead” by reviewers, one is left with queries that may still be resolved,
and may even vary among geographical sites. In another study, Orem et al. [10] turn
to Africa, and report that both high incidence and mortality rates of BL are seen in
East Africa, largely within Uganda. Here, the evidence for a causal relationship
between EBV and BL in the endemic form is strong, but even malaria has not had a
conclusive population study, and other possible risk factors, such as low socio-
economic status, plant derivatives, pesticides, other infections, etc. are not yet con-
vincingly proven. The emergence of a distinct subtype of BL in HIV-infected cells
has, however, brought a new dimension where both HIV and BL are endemic. This
previously “unknown” combination in children may be relevant for BL. However,
they have been careful in making these general statements, until better proven. In the
final two papers here, one argues in favour of EBERs in the pathogenesis of Burkitt’s
lymphoma—with different roles for the two separate RNAs [10]—and a separate
study on sporadic paediatric and adult tumours sharing similar phenotypic and
genotype features [11]. Two separate studies are interesting, and may be relevant.
306 B.E. Griffin
Fig. 16.1 Schematic diagram of the life cycle of EBV in B cells. In the latent cycle in B lymphocytes,
viral gene expression is restricted to EBNAs and two small viral RNAs, EBER 1 and 2, and in
addition, as far as we know, copies of EBV latent proteins, LMP1 and 2 [14], at the left side here.
In some species, viral genes, as noted on the right side, are activated and expressed either sponta-
neous or chemically induce together with viral genes, and also micro-RNAs, as virion expression
and ultimately as lysis
Fig. 16.2 Two cases of J.304, with a BL involving the left maxilla, in a girl aged 9 years
(at the left) and then the same patient 1 week later, at right, having been treated with cyclophos-
phamide for 1 week, showing marked but incomplete remission. From Denis P. Burkitt, Possible
Relationships between the African Lymphoma and Acute Leukaemia. Research Fund, Third Guest
Lecture, London. Leukemia Research Fund, 1–28, 1967
thousands of African children dying from disease” which is indeed valid, and
needed. It should also be more highly publicized for greater recognition as a major
problem in oncology especially seen in children of the African continent.
Section 2
This section is tentatively divided into individual components that try to separate the
disease, BL, into individual components, e.g. c-Myc, Epstein–Barr virus, Malaria,
HIV, and other topics such as Bcl6 and Bcl2, ending with some comments such as
needs for better therapy and more attention. We apologize that many articles have
been deleted here but most are focused on developments since the last reviews in
2005. Reviews that precede this publication will have been covered in earlier ones.
Myc translocations are covered by pathways that include cell suicide or cancer, and
are found in many tumours [19]. The c-Myc variant (as opposed to its families
16 Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About Latent BL 309
males in 74%, and 26% female. This review is thorough, but records only expression
of EBER1 and 2, and EBNA1, and at least BART microRNA, in part (see below),
with no evidence about LMP-1 proteins, except in a few cases. They found a
higher association with HIV-1. Also, Bcl6 is expressed as a major component, and
is frequently discussed here as regards to the germinal center (GC) in BL, particu-
larly in latent cells. The frequency is higher in paediatric cases, and lower in the
South of Brazil.
In Malawi, East Africa, the cell type for children’s BL seems controversial. From
the recent paper on BL by Molyneux et al. [32], the cellular origin of the malig-
nancy is unclear, with some workers arguing that it arises from a germinal central
B-cell, while others are of the opinion that the tumour originates from a memory
cell. EBV persists for the lifetime of the healthy individual and is found among
young children, essentially 2–14 years of age. It is thought that this latent infection
expresses only EBNA-1 similar to eBL, or a few other antigens of the EBV virus.
In Africa, the tumour is noted essentially among the mainly rural population, and in
Malawi, as elsewhere in Africa, the lake regions are prone to this disease. In the
review in The Lancet [32], the observations on EBV-positive, compared to EBV-
negative BL, have raised the alternative that whereas BL arises from the memory
cells, maybe as a tumour BL originates from an earlier GC counterpart. This has not
really been resolved, nor has the explanation of the higher frequency among young
male children compared to females (approximately 2:1) been resolved. In most
studies of BL, the children involved can be divided into two age groups (ages 1 or
2–9, as the larger part, and 10 and above, a minor part). Again, these tumours are
almost always combined in studies. The two age groups have not really been clearly
distinguished, although cells in the two BL groups sometimes appear different in
terms of size and behaviour. In joint efforts, Italian/Ugandan studies have provided
new interest in BLs [33]. They effectively divided their study into the three groups
(endemic, sporadic and immunodeficiency-associated BLs), along with marker
studies, and divided genes and substrates as being related to cell cycle control,
B-cell receptor signalling, and tumour necrosis factor/nuclear factor kB pathways.
In their work, they found that all BLs were related to GC cells, but differed in other
findings, for example between eBLs, sBLs or IBLs, each type affecting different
populations and presenting with different features. Bcl6 is expressed as a major
component, and is frequently discussed here as regards germinal centre (GC) in BL,
particularly in latent cells. The authors found a consistent set of genes differentially
expressed in BL and normal B-cells, as a consequence of malignant transformation,
and programs were altered, including those related to immune response, cell cycle
regulations and BC-receptor signalling. They also offer novel evidence possibly
relevant for its classification and future treatment, with subtypes of cells significantly
different, suggesting different pathogenetic mechanisms and the role(s) of infec-
tious agents. They also were involved in micro-RNAs that will promise interest for
the future. It is an interesting study, and clearly needs follow-up. In the studies of
Tumwine et al. [34, 35], also involving some of the same collaborators, they initially
classify B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas using immunohistochemical markers to
correlate BL types and patient outcomes. In these papers, they have compared
16 Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About Latent BL 311
different tumours, and again, show BL essentially to behave differently from other
lymphomas (compared, e.g. with DLBMC), and they found the BLs to be Bcl-6 and
Bcl-2 negative (see below), with Mum1/IRF4 essentially negative, as opposed to the
Brazil study [31]. In a short study from China, on children’s BL in 65 of 74 lympho-
mas described as BL [36], they found results, as far as I can tell, like those from
[34, 35]. The children’s tumours are often associated with an aggressive clinical
behaviour and morphologic and immunohistochemistry behaviour differing little
from the Uganda studies. Interesting, however, is the finding for MUM1, reportedly
23% positive among the Chinese BLs, as opposed to the Uganda data. Takada in
earlier data on BL [37], and working on the Akata cells from Japanese materials,
found expression of EBNA1, EBER, BARF0 and LMP 2A, with absence of EBNA2
and LMP1. These cells have an activated c-Myc chromosome. As he points out, the
data show Akata to upregulate expression of Bcl-2 protein to protect cells from
c-Myc-induced apoptosis and allow c-Myc to exert its oncogenic functions. (It is
interesting to note that in this study Takada, in 2011, also notes a rare and extremely
“unfavourable type of lymphoma”, with translocations of both Bcl-2 and Myc. The
patient, a 67-year-old diagnosed with Burkitt-like lymphoma which was first respon-
sive to chemotherapy, then had a second relapse with a chemo-resistance and after
1 month, died. He had chromosomal t(14:18) and t(8:22) translocations, which has
not previously been detected.)
Two further studies, from the USA and Brazil [38, 39], are put forward as studies
of BL, but with slightly different findings from those of Ugandan BL (see also [31]).
The BLs were highly aggressive lymphomas with endemic, sporadic and
immunodeficiency-associated clinical variants. Classically, the immuno-phenotype
of BL has been considered to be essentially a GC type. Here, they studied 222 cases
of well-characterized BLs, with classic phenotype and c-Myc translocation, and
found 90 cases (40.5%) of MUM1/IRF4 (multiple myeloma 1/interferon regulation
factor 4 protein) positive. In their findings, MUM1 was found in the final histoge-
netic marker of the late-GC and post-GC cell, and the morphologic spectrum of
positive cell ranged from that of a centrocyte to that of a plasmablast/plasma cell
[38]. Mum1 is considered to be a key regulator of several steps in lymphoid/lym-
phoid and dendritic cell differentiation and maturation. It may be a promising target
for the treatment of some of these neoplasms [39].
I turn now to a report by Hesseling et al. [40] of a 15-day chemotherapy schedule
for resistant or relapsed endemic BL, where a 15-day chemotherapy schedule saved
36% of patients. In the same report predictors for mortality have recently also
included anti-retroviral therapy (ART), started from 2007. This review was pub-
lished in 2009, and perhaps it may continue with time [41]. Two studies that have
looked further into factors to contribute to BL pathogenesis that may suggest the
importance of this topic [42, 43], and another study on BL may indicate the impor-
tance of induction by HDAC (histone deacetylase inhibitors [44]). HDAC induction
has exhibited effects interacting with drug exposure, as evidenced by increased site-
specific histone acetylation. In the latter, where BL and lytically related diseases in
replication may co-exist in a tumour, it may provide sites for latently infected cells
to act, on their own, at the expense of the HDACs. In a small document, this review
312 B.E. Griffin
For more than 50 years scientists have been asking how P. falciparum malaria might
be associated with EBV and BL, and we turn to two reviews on this topic here [17, 18].
A more recent review of malaria by Sumba et al. [46] correlated malnutrition,
malaria and EBV. The identification of different levels of BL in nearby regions in
western Kenya led the authors to ask whether the incidence of the disease was asso-
ciated with factors such as malnutrition and malaria. They found that children with
the lowest antioxidant GP (glutathione peroxidase), an indicator of malnutrition,
had highest EBV viral loads and the highest incidence of malaria, consistent with
other studies that suggested correlation between malaria transmission intensities.
Further studies are needed to determine whether these GP levels or other malaria
biomarkers, as proposed [47] will have a role in the aetiology of BL. On the other
hand, 2,602 patient cases in Uganda, Ghana and Tanzania [48] were explored with
malaria biomarkers from these countries. Malaria was found to peak at 2 years of
age, and decreased sharply between 2 and 3, and were related with novel findings
correlated with BL, with age-specific pattern of locally prevalent malarial geno-
types of P. falciparum. The authors concluded that “malaria could be related with
onset of BL”. Elsewhere in W. Africa, the role of protective immunity to P. falci-
parum, in Ghana,1965–1994, was “unknown” [48], but confirmed for malaria anti-
bodies in 92% of the cases. In this study, the absorbent immunoassays showed lower
malaria antibodies than observed in children (aged up to 14) with BL. In a different
type of study, Yuan and colleagues [49] assayed 61 parasite lines against drug com-
pounds. Thirty-two reactive compounds were explored for growth inhibition of
malarial parasites against 33 strains of malaria. The compounds generated differen-
tial chemical phenotypes linked to wild-type or mutant alleles that could be proto-
nated at physiologic, or lower, pH. Their overall work focused on three limited
responses and were cited with loci and genes associated with drug responses, pro-
viding an “unknown but with a genetic basis” to better delineate the nature of drug
resistance in malaria. The compounds generated differential chemical phenotypes
linked to wild-type or mutant alleles that could be protonated at physiologic, or
lower, pH. Their overall work focused on three limited responses and were linked
with loci and genes associated with drug responses, providing an “unknown but
with a genetic basis” to better delineate the nature of drug resistance in malaria. This
interesting route has not yet been tried on BL, although with other tumours and
could be used now in cases of BL-resistant malignancies [50]. Finally, also in brief,
16 Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About Latent BL 313
a report on malaria in Zanzibar [51] examines how facilities and donors could be
made available to cope with the few thousand malaria cases they normally encounter,
focused overall on control of the disease. In Zanzibar, a British-American initiative
has provided bed netting to wipe out malaria on this island. Further, a group of
scientists in India, where BL is not common, has looked at peptide-based therapies as
offering the potential for non-genotoxic, genotypic-specific alternatives, or adjuvants,
centred on a range of traditional cancer treatments. Their list includes drugs that can
be generally useful. They have treated their studies as an “application in tumour
therapy”. Their concluding remarks are worth considering here also, in the African
situation of BL. Here, Bhutia and Maiti note [52] that the potential of peptides to serve
as anticancer drugs has re-energized the scientific community in the search for better
ways to combat tumours, allowing an appropriate drug to be delivered to a desired
location in sufficient quantities in a timely fashion, as noted previously for cyclophos-
phamide in BL. In one further study in Malawi, 185 out of 258 HIV-infected children
were alive, but recommended for anti-viral treatment in BL, identified here as WHO
stages III and IV [53]. This offers the possibility that some other novel tumour therapy
treatments might now ultimately be assessed in Africa for BL.
Further, a group of scientists in India, where BL is less common, has looked at
peptide-based therapies as offering the potential for non-genotoxic, genotypic-
specific alternatives, or adjuvants, and turned to a range of cancer traditional treat-
ments. BL is not common in India, but this list includes drugs that can be generally
useful. They have treated their studies as an “application in tumour therapy”. Their
concluding remarks are worth considering here also, in the African situation of BL.
Another question arises, on the role of the TLR9 gene in the relationship of
malaria to BL. First, BL patients with EBV are mainly seen in areas that are endemic
for malaria, bringing together the three related topics here on BL, where repeated
immune activation by malaria may be an important pathogenic factor for this malig-
nancy [18]. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are key players in innate immunity, and
B-cells express one of the marked Toll genes, TLR9 has special interests for BL.
The expression of TLR9 increases transformation rates of ex vivo EBV-infected
B-cells, and its effect on the EBV genome is now being actively studied. We cite
here three TLR9 papers [54–56], and related ones. The paper by Fathallah et al. [54]
shows that EBV suppresses by deregulating the transcript through LMP-1-mediated
NF-kB activation. In their work, they reveal a mechanism used by BL to highlight
the importance of the immune deregulation, as mediated by the tumour-inducing
virus of EBV. Their data show that in addition to its key role in cells, malaria trans-
forms EBV to synergize its gene, LMP1, in children living in malaria-endemic
areas. Chene and colleagues, working with BL from Uganda, in a series of papers,
show that EBV reactivation can be induced during malaria infections, and in itself
act as a causative factor for BL [55]. They argue that acute and chronic malaria infec-
tions produce induction of polyclonal activation in the B-cell and a dramatic increase
in levels of EBV in circulation. Considering a series of papers, working mainly on
BL from Akara and other cells, Zauner and Nadal [56] argue for manipulation of
host immune response towards favouring long-term survival of the virus, in its
latent form. Considering this fact, they also argue that the load of the virus is
314 B.E. Griffin
elevated, but that TLR9 might suppress the lytic virus and lead to B-cell transformation,
as an enforced latent gene expression. They further argue that TLR9 might allow EBV
to gain access to a memory B-cell pool. All three of these studies [54–56] make
ways of studying EBV with new ideas about therapy. In the last paper, Arama et al.
look at TLR responses, not just TLR9, in West African children in Mali [57]. They
focus on two different ethnic groups, one (the Fulani group) being better pro-
tected against P. falciparum malaria, as compared with a second, the Dogon (less
protected). They focus on dendritic cells (DCs) and conclude that DC and TLR
signalling may be important for the protective immunity against malaria, as observed
in the Fulani tribe. This seems “early days” for BL and malaria, but it may be a new
way forward in BL research.
“The globally coordinated efforts to strengthen health systems in Africa have been
impressive, especially for treatment of P. falciparum malaria” and “HIV-1 infec-
tions”. HIV-1 infection is associated with a 60-fold-increase of BL in adults in the
west (sBL), and the effect of HIV-1 on eBL is controversial, with most being HIV
negative [18]. Orem and colleagues [58], working in Uganda, stated that character-
istics of children with BL and HIV have not been described there before (in 2009).
Of 1,462 records of children at the Uganda Cancer Institute, 236 charts met the
eligibility criteria for BL, of whom 158 children were HIV-negative and 78 were
positive (61% male and 39% female, with mean age of 6.9 years). This finding is
similar to children in general in HIV rates in Uganda. Although their treatment also
suggested chemotherapy, most HIV+ children did not generally receive chemother-
apy or, if treated, this was mainly for facial BL. There is a clear need for better
characterization of children with BL to understand whether there is an HIV-related
BL alongside endemic BL. In Malawi, there are two studies on this topic, one in
2008, the other in 2010 [59, 60]. The earlier study noted that HIV plus malaria may
decrease the risk of BL, and the latter study [60] was unclear. They finally con-
cluded that the “impact of HIV on the risk of cancer…remains uncertain”. In South
Africa [61], the numbers were larger (1897) and there were differences in age and
tumour types. In all, DLBCL was the most frequent lymphoma and patients varied
accord to tumour type. For BL, patients between the ages of 20 and 49 were very
numerous, and there were more in the 0- to 9-year than the 10- to 19-year group, as
is typical for BL. Instead of reviewing young BL children, the assumption was that
these smaller children in SA generally reflected migration from east, central and
West Africa, where this disease may account for 70% of all child cancers [61].
In trying to find good samples outside Africa, they also looked among small
American samples [62], and these BLs (whether AIDS related, or not) comparing
BL and DLBCL. In the USA, they were able to differentiate between BL and
DLBCL using protein expression multiple markers [63], and could distinguish
between the groups by immunohistochemistry. Then, they asked would anything of
interest be found by analysing the entire HIV genome [64]? As used with RNA
16 Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About Latent BL 315
structure models, how does HIV-1 function in BL, and what could be reasonably
useful for analysis? They asked whether AIDS-related BL, under the Surveillance,
Epidemiology and End Results Programme (1973–2005), was useful [65]. They
observed peaks near ages 10, 40 and 70 years for males (for females, 10 and 70 only).
They noted that BL was a first indicator of AIDS onset, at least in the West. The
notion that BL may be multimodal is controversial in that BL is unlike other malig-
nancies, but is considered as isomorphic. However, paediatric and adult/geriatric
types may (indeed) have different risk factors. The risk of BL during 1980–1989 was
higher than later, when HIV infection with relatively higher CD4 lymphocyte counts
was observed in men. The risk may have exceeded those of women, or non-Hispanic
black men, in the USA. This study is the largest to assess age-specific incidence
among persons with AIDS. They argue that diagnosis or separation between HIV
relationships to age or CD4 lymphocyte counts may likely be random, and that low
CD4 lymphocyte counts may suggest functional CD4 to be required for BL to
develop. There were 456,635 males and the number of BL cases was 273, whereas
for females there were 33 of 111,230 subjects. The incidence for 1980–89 was 29.4%,
dropping down to 14.6% and 10.3% in 1990–95, and 18.8% in 1996–2005. It was
interesting to observe the bimodal peaks for BL at different ages and suggests effects
of non-cumulative risk factors at different ages.
In Africa, specific comprehensive cancer studies are only beginning to highlight
the cancer prevention and treatment programmes, particularly also associated with
AIDS-defining cancers (noted here as cervical cancer, Kaposi sarcoma and lym-
phoma). In reporting on the other “AIDS-defining” cancers, lymphoma and includ-
ing particularly cases from Nigeria and Uganda, Brower [65] comments that BL, in
particular, may even go undiagnosed and untreated. She suggested that this type of
lymphoma might particularly be combined in programmes dealing with preponder-
ance of 60% among BL patients. Others [66] propose current plans for a number of
treatment trials of lymphoma in Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya, and one of these has
now been reported [67], carried out in Uganda and Kenya. These were well docu-
mented. In terms of the subject patients and the fact that HIV is a real problem in East
Africa, patients were carefully chosen. From 149 patients with confirmed lymphoma
and positive HIV serology, 52 were enrolled and 49 ultimately received oral BL and
HIV treatment. The overall response rate was 78%, and 33% of patients survived
5 years. They concluded that the dose-modified oral chemotherapy had comparable
outcome (with others elsewhere) and is “pragmatic in sub-Saharan Africa”. The col-
laboration has been successful and may now focus on optimizing combination of
anti-retroviral therapy and chemotherapy. No doubt it has been worth continuing this
study. In time, one can decide how effective this is, and how to progress.
components of lytic, expressed DNA. Most of the genome expressed during the
latent cycle is involved with inhibition of the lytic cycle. In a surprising finding
[68], miRNAs are not needed to control the viral genome in exit from latency.
Rather, they indicate that miRNAs are associated with cellular transformation, and
rather than regulating viral genes of the lytic phase are involved with inhibition or
expression of the lytic cycle. EBV miRNA does not lead to increased activation as,
for example, with KSHV, HCV and CMV. All the EBV tumour types of miRNAs,
including Latency II-III, are largely associated with lytic infections, whereas
Latency I, for BL, may be primarily associated with EBNA1 (see Fig. 16.1). We
called attention to LMP1 and 2 for BL lymphoma in [14], in some cells. In the
review [69], it was notable that more and more clearly, several reports suggest an
interplay between virus and cellular mi-RNA involving several gene products. That
virus-mediated mi-RNA dysregulation may be involved in several malignancies
[70]. It has also come to attention that mi-RNA-9 is potentially relevant for malig-
nant transformation in BL cases with no detectable Myc translocation. Thus deregu-
lations of mi-RNA may be thus useful as a diagnostic tool, suggesting it as a novel
candidate for tumour cell markers [71]. Mi-RNA is predicted to target as many as
300 different human transcripts, just as a single-RNA may be targeted by multiple
mi-RNAs. Since mi-RNA expression is deregulated in several lymphomas, and
unique mi-RNA signatures have been identified for prognosis and response to ther-
apy, they become appealing as therapeutic targets. From previous and ongoing work
in lymphomas, it is evident that deregulation of mi-RNA expression is one of the
critical steps in pathogenesis of several lymphomas. Just as mouse variants as mod-
els for man have been shown as “not relevant to Burkitt’s lymphoma in the past”, in
mi-RNA of man, profiling can successfully classify various lymphomas into thera-
peutic outcomes or survival categories. These aspects of BL, at least in Africa, are
starting to look at new ways of assessing this disease, which may prove productive
for the future. We must now wait.
Interestingly, other malignancies show homogenous mi-RNA profiles entirely
distinct from BL and DLBCL. Differentially expressed mi-RNAs from these two
tumour classes, including mi-155, segregates 17 mi-RNAs from being down-regulated
in BL as compared with DLBCL, and 21 mi-RNAs showed a higher expression in
BL as compared with DLBCL involved with inhibition of the lytic cycle. In this data
set, the mi-RNAs can be separated using differences among the mi-RNAs. Mi-155
and four further mi-RNAs were down-regulated in DLBCL by RT-PCR. In different
types of Burkitt’s, eBL, sBL and HIV-BL within these variants, the “cut times” of
the different mi-RNAs detected variance among their expressions [72]. Overall,
molecular profiling of neoplasms is gaining increasing significance for the definition
and characterizations of established tumour entities, and for the identification of
new biological disease groups or subgroups. In summary, our analysis reveals that
BL differs from DLBCL by a strong and characteristic mi-RNA signature that is
enriched in mi-RNAs targeted on the NF-kB signalled pathway-associated mi-
RNAs. Similar studies overall were also described by Piccaluga [33]. In an early
study [73], Akao and colleagues found down-regulation of mi-143 and -145 RNAs in
16 Summary and Conclusion: Thinking About Latent BL 317
B-cell malignancies. Although their model was mainly colon cancer, 8/9 B-cell
lymphomas tested exhibited extremely low expression in human BLs. These could
be expected to reach tumours efficiently and be used as a drug delivery system.
They may differentiate B-cell malignant cells from normal cells, and contribute to
carcinogenesis in B-cell malignancies, by a novel mechanism.
In our own studies, Xue and Griffin [74] (and earlier work), complexities associ-
ated with expression of EBV lytic origins of DNA replication, were studied. We had
examined this region in two (145 and 102 bp) repetitive sequences in BL DNA, both
encoding basic proteins, to understand why lytic replication—necessary for viral
replication—and its controlling elements is so efficient. Studies uncovered a diverse
family of promoters for both EBV BHLF1 and LF3, only one of these, the first, prov-
ing sensitive to chemical inducting agents. The other, abutting the replication core
origin sequence of EBV, may play roles in the maintenance of viral latency. In this
publication, the sequences of EBV exposed long regions of various small open read-
ing frames (very long non-coding sequences) for subsequent work, possibly marking
the two regions for future studies, as well as the mi-RNAs from these two regions.
Section 3
There are suggestions for a number of cellular components that might fall into chapters
on BL. We select only a few of these at this time, briefly, for consideration.
This gene has been widely studied—but not necessarily with regard to BL. Blimp1
(or related to Blimp1a) is a transcription factor that is required for plasma cell dif-
ferentiation, and associated with the germinal centre. It is also known otherwise as
PRDMI gene [75, 76], whose loss contributes to lymphomagenesis by blocking
plasma cell differentiation. The intimate association between terminal differentia-
tion and EBV replication suggests that a switch from latency to lytic cycle is con-
trolled by factors that normally regulate plasma cell differentiation. In [75], a
striking overlap between the EBV LMP-1 gene and Blimp1a is shown between the
two genes in germinal centre B cells. This is more associated with DLBCL than
with childhood BL, but in tissue culture it is also identified in the latter as well. This
multifunctional and complicated gene, altered in numerous cells, is highlighted here
for the future, together also with the children’s disease. It is also associated with
deregulation of BCL6 [76], as below. One will need to know more about Blimp-1 in
childhood BL, in future. We have tried to look at this tumour in BL in African children,
in Malawi, but not yet found the materials that would help us in this study (see [16]).
We thus raise it for others to comment on.
318 B.E. Griffin
Bcl6
This protein is easily assessed both in childhood BL and other tumours related to
BL (see [16]). In GC cells, most BL tumours appear to express this marker. There
are two recent studies here that target cells controlling multiple pathways in normal
germinal centre B cells. This transcription repressor has emerged as a critical regu-
lator, and the B cells are selected based on the production of antibodies with high
affinity for the antigen [77, 78]. Bcl6 can repress various functions in cell biology,
including protection from DNA-induced apoptosis and inhibition of differentiation
into plasma cells. It is a valid marker for BL. A recent study [78] results in a set of
strictly defined biochemical and functional Bcl6 targets that have implication for
the understanding of its activity as a transcription factor and of its role as an onco-
gene in lymphomagenesis. Bcl6 is expressed in all GC-derived malignancies,
included BL, DLBCL, follicular lymphoma and a subset of Hodgkin lymphoma. Its
finding suggests a potential synergic therapeutic activity between molecules aimed
at inactivation of BCL6 and biologic agents leading to B-cell activation and differ-
entiation. Stat3 mediated regulation of Blimp1, coordinated with Bcl6 down-regu-
lation, acts to control human plasma cell differentiation [79]. In the single mouse
cells cited here [80], T-cells that rapidly terminated proliferation and up-regulation
of 1L-7 receptors, modulated Bcl6 response. The results suggest that because Bcl6
antibodies become low, after weeks of immunization, it is unclear how long Bcl6
remains in BL, over time. This is a topic; it seems, even now, for future work.
Bcl2
with the characterization of these tumours, except their being mainly from adults,
rather than for children. Indeed, in review [19], Bcl2 is noted occurring in memory
cells, but rarely is Bcl6 found there. On the other hand, Bcl6 is expressed as a major
component and is frequently discussed here as regards germinal centre (GC) in BL,
particularly in latent cells.
EBV Vaccine
In November this year (2011), four authors propose a vaccine target for cancer
prevention [84]. Infectious mononucleosis (IM) is marked as a key target for this,
although cancers that range in different parts of the world are noted for the role(s)
of tumours also associated with EBV. EBV-positive BL is the most common child-
hood tumour in equatorial African and, to some extent, also New Guinea. Of BL,
the number of cases attributable to EBV per year is given as 6,600 in less-developed
countries, as opposed to 100 cases in developed countries. They also note that the
immune systems of models is limited by EBV not generally being pathogenic for
animals, except for certain models like cotton-top monkeys or rhesus lymphocyto-
virus, that can be used for modelling candidate vaccines. On the basis of these
observations, and the phase 2 EBV gp350 vaccine trial for the prevention of IM, the
choice for EBV is limited. They thus propose a number of priorities (numbers 1–5)
that can be envisaged for future research plans. These programs are ways for look-
ing forward as regards BL, and the program for another EBV disease, found mostly in
adults, nasopharyngeal carcinoma. It is worth much consideration, and they present
the first positive plans for tumours associated with EBV.
In another recent development in 2011, Harold Varmus became head of the
National Cancer Institute in the USA. This means perhaps more resources will be
given to BL research and it will likely get better funding. One question asked him
recently [85] was “should NCI not be doing something about the cost of cancer
drugs?” and his reply was that “several of the drugs that are currently expensive, are
to come off patent and that will result in price reductions”, and “reducing the costs
of some things that could put…to use in poorer countries” where the opportunities
are still needed. For him, “some of them are truly low-hanging fruit and we ought to
be doing something about this”. Let us hope that the question is raised now with
alternative drugs needed. And some of them, such as HDAC, may be useful for
those children whose tumours need treatment, but this simple drug is still much too
expensive. We shall wait to see.
Acknowledgments The author thanks Drs. John Phillips, Pascale Kropf and Ms. S. van Noorden
for reading and considering this manuscript, and giving her relevant suggestions along the way.
She also thanks her colleagues for the (DVD) manuscript, “Surviving Burkitts” and to many peo-
ple in Malawi looking forward to the end of this malignancy which takes now away the lives of
many young children there. For the film (DVD) we thank especially Stephanie and Wade who
shared their son’s life to this film, Dr. E. Molyneux who also oversaw this film and looked after the
children, and finally a wonderful film producer, Alex Tweddle and his crew who produced this
320 B.E. Griffin
film, and my relations in the south of the USA and all friends who helped raise money for the film.
Last but not least, a long-time college friend from India, but in this film the children to whom he
has (and will continue) to support, with his efforts and his knowledge.
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Index
W Y
World Health Organization (WHO), 2, 24, 81, Yeast artificial chromosome (YAC), 276
131, 154 Yellow fever, 6
X
Xenopus laevis, 191