This paper reports the case of a patient with a composite lymphoma consisting of nodular sclerosing Hodgkin's disease and peripheral T-cell lymphoma. The Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells harboured the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and displayed a type II EBV latency (LMP1(+)/EBNA2(-)), whereas the neoplastic T-cells were EBV-negative. Four years later, the patient presented with a relapse of the peripheral T-cell lymphoma. In situ hybridization revealed numerous EBV-carrying lymphocytes, which were shown to be polyclonal B-cells with a latency III pattern of EBV gene expression (LMP1(+)/EBNA2(+)). This observation suggests that impairment of EBV-specific immunity in the micro-environment of T-cell lymphomas may facilitate the outgrowth of EBV-carrying B-lymphocytes and emphasizes the importance of determining the phenotype of EBV-infected cells, particularly when studying T-cell lymphomas. The results further suggest that the HRS cells and neoplastic T-cells were of different clonal origins. The detection of EBV-carrying cell populations admixed with the neoplastic T-cells at primary presentation and at relapse raises the possibility that the growth of the T-cell lymphoma was dependent on the presence of such cells.
Copyright 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.