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Molecular diagnosis of Burkitt's lymphoma.

The New England journal of medicine (2006-06-09)
Sandeep S Dave, Kai Fu, George W Wright, Lloyd T Lam, Philip Kluin, Evert-Jan Boerma, Timothy C Greiner, Dennis D Weisenburger, Andreas Rosenwald, German Ott, Hans-Konrad Müller-Hermelink, Randy D Gascoyne, Jan Delabie, Lisa M Rimsza, Rita M Braziel, Thomas M Grogan, Elias Campo, Elaine S Jaffe, Bhavana J Dave, Warren Sanger, Martin Bast, Julie M Vose, James O Armitage, Joseph M Connors, Erlend B Smeland, Stein Kvaloy, Harald Holte, Richard I Fisher, Thomas P Miller, Emilio Montserrat, Wyndham H Wilson, Manisha Bahl, Hong Zhao, Liming Yang, John Powell, Richard Simon, Wing C Chan, Louis M Staudt
ABSTRACT

The distinction between Burkitt's lymphoma and diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma is crucial because these two types of lymphoma require different treatments. We examined whether gene-expression profiling could reliably distinguish Burkitt's lymphoma from diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma. Tumor-biopsy specimens from 303 patients with aggressive lymphomas were profiled for gene expression and were also classified according to morphology, immunohistochemistry, and detection of the t(8;14) c-myc translocation. A classifier based on gene expression correctly identified all 25 pathologically verified cases of classic Burkitt's lymphoma. Burkitt's lymphoma was readily distinguished from diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma by the high level of expression of c-myc target genes, the expression of a subgroup of germinal-center B-cell genes, and the low level of expression of major-histocompatibility-complex class I genes and nuclear factor-kappaB target genes. Eight specimens with a pathological diagnosis of diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma had the typical gene-expression profile of Burkitt's lymphoma, suggesting they represent cases of Burkitt's lymphoma that are difficult to diagnose by current methods. Among 28 of the patients with a molecular diagnosis of Burkitt's lymphoma, the overall survival was superior among those who had received intensive chemotherapy regimens instead of lower-dose regimens. Gene-expression profiling is an accurate, quantitative method for distinguishing Burkitt's lymphoma from diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma.