Litcius/Paper detail

Update on the Pathogenesis of Enteropathy-Associated T-Cell Lymphoma

Shahed Abdullah, Patricia Goa, Elisabeth Vandenberghe, Richard Flavin

2023Diagnostics14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

EATL is an aggressive T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma with poor prognosis and is largely localized to the small intestine. EATL is closely associated with coeliac disease (CD) and is seen mostly in patients originating from Northern Europe. Various factors are associated with an increased risk of developing EATL, such as viral infection, advanced age, being male, and the presence of the HLA-DQ2 haplotype. Clonal rearrangements in the TCR-β and γ genes have been reported in all EATL morphological variants with distinctive immunophenotypic characteristics. Although EATL can occur de novo, individuals with RCDII are at a higher risk of developing EATL. The cells of origin of EATL has been postulated to be normal small intestinal intraepithelial T-lymphocytes (IELs), and more recent evidence suggests a link between innate precursor IELs and EATL derived from refractory coeliac disease type II (RCDII). The immune microenvironment of mucosal cells within the small intestine enhances the process of neoplastic transformation of IELs into EATL. Cytokines such as IL-15 can activate and crucially deregulate the JAK-STAT signaling pathway by binding to receptors on the surface of IELs. Furthermore, mutations in the JAK/STAT pathway have been associated with RCDII-derived EATL.

Topics & Concepts

Intraepithelial lymphocyteCancer researchCoeliac diseaseBiologyNeoplastic transformationLymphomaImmunologyImmune systemCancerMedicineDiseaseInternal medicineGeneticsCarcinogenesisCeliac Disease Research and ManagementGalectins and Cancer BiologyT-cell and Retrovirus Studies