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Classification of malignant lymphoma subtypes in Korean patients: a report of the 4th nationwide study

Cited 6 time in Web of Science Cited 7 time in Scopus
Authors

Jung, Hye-Ra; Huh, Jooryung; Ko, Young-Hyeh; Jeon, Yoon Kyung; Yoon, Sun Och; Kim, Se Hoon; Yang, Woo Ick; Park, Geongsin; Kim, Jo Heon; Paik, Jin Ho; Han, Jae Ho; Cha, Hee Jung; Jang, Kyu Yun; Shin, Bong-Kyung; Kim, Young-A; Kim, Ji Eun; Choi, Yoo Duk; Park, Min Gyoung; Kim, Hee Kyung; Choi, Suk Jin; Kim, Bo Mi; Lee, Jong Sil; Chang, Hee-Kyung; Choe, Ji-Young; Min, Soo Kee; Eom, Dae Woon; Cho, Min-Sun; Yoo, Seol Bong; Kim, Wook Youn; Lee, Hyekyung; Choi, In Ho; Chong, Yo Sep; Lee, Hyang Im; Lee, Ho Jung; Lee, Seung-Sook; Kim, Hyun-Jung

Issue Date
2019-12
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Citation
Journal of Hematopathology, Vol.12 No.4, pp.173-181
Abstract
To determine the relative frequency and change of malignant lymphoma in Korea according to the 4th World Health Organization (WHO) classification and compare with previous reports. Between 2015 and 2016, 7737 new patients with malignant lymphoma were enrolled from 31 institutes, with their clinicopathologic information obtained, and evaluated for the relative frequency of lymphoma subtypes. The relative frequency of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) was 94.8%, and that of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) was 5.2%. B cell lymphomas accounted for 83.1% of all NHLs; T/natural killer (NK) cell lymphomas, 16.4%; and immunodeficiency-associated lymphoproliferative disorders, 0.5%. The most common NHL subtypes were diffuse large B cell (41.5%), extranodal marginal zone (MALT, 19.8%), follicular (7.5%), NK/ T cell (4.2%), and peripheral T cell lymphomas, not otherwise specific (PTCL, NOS, 3.4%). Nodular sclerosis was the predominant HL subtype (48.5%), followed by mixed cellularity (28.7%), lymphocyte-rich (6.8%), lymphocyte-depleted (1.5%), lymphocyte-predominant (2.8%), and unclassified HL (11.8%). Compared with a previous report, increased B cell lymphomas (77.6-83.1%) and slightly decreased NK/T cell lymphomas and PTCL were observed. The incidence of follicular lymphoma increased by more than 2.5-fold (2.9-7.5%). Incidence rates of newly diagnosed lymphomas were lower for HL and higher for extranodal NHL, MALT, and nasal type NK/T cell lymphomas in Korea than those in Western countries. A slight increase in the relative frequency of B cell lymphoma and a prominent increase in follicular lymphoma may be attributed to refined diagnostic criteria and Westernized disease patterns.
ISSN
1865-5785
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/191907
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12308-019-00369-5
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Paik, Jin Ho백진호
(기금)부교수
  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Medicine
Research Area Hematopathology, Head and Neck Pathology, Renal Pathology

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