4.3 Article

Round-robin testing for LMO2 and MYC as immunohistochemical markers to screen MYC rearrangements in aggressive large B-cell lymphoma

Journal

VIRCHOWS ARCHIV
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00428-023-03584-9

Keywords

Lymphomas; Large B-cell lymphoma; MYC; LMO2; FISH

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Aggressive large B-cell lymphomas (aLBCL) comprise a group of lymphomas with diverse biological features. A previous study showed a strong association between the profile CD10 positive/LMO2 negative expression and the presence of MYC rearrangements (MYC-R) in aLBCL, indicating good intralaboratory reproducibility. In this study, external reproducibility was evaluated and found to have high agreement among observers. The utility of LMO2 as a useful and reproducible marker to screen MYC-R in aLBCL was confirmed.
Aggressive large B-cell lymphomas (aLBCL) include a heterogeneous group of lymphomas with diverse biological features. One of the approaches to the diagnosis of aLBCL is based on the identification of MYC rearrangements (MYC-R), in addition to BCL2 and BCL6 rearrangements by genetic techniques, mainly fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Because of the low incidence of MYC-R, the identification of useful immunohistochemistry markers to select cases for MYC FISH testing may be useful in daily practice. In a previous work, we identified a strong association between the profile CD10 positive/LMO2 negative expression and the presence of MYC-R in aLBCL and obtained good intralaboratory reproducibility. In this study, we wanted to evaluate external reproducibility. To evaluate whether LMO2 can be a reproducible marker between observers 50 aLBCL cases were circulated among 7 hematopathologists of 5 hospitals. Fleiss' kappa index for LMO2 and MYC were 0.87 and 0.70, respectively, indicating high agreement between observers. In addition, during 2021-2022, the enrolled centers included LMO2 in their diagnostic panels to evaluate prospectively the utility of the marker, and 213 cases were analyzed. Comparing LMO2 with MYC, the group of CD10 positive cases showed higher specificity (86% vs 79%), positive predictive value (66% vs 58%), likelihood positive value (5.47 vs 3.78), and accuracy (83% vs 79%), whereas the negative predictive values remained similar (90% vs 91%). These findings place LMO2 as a useful and reproducible marker to screen MYC-R in aLBCL.

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