CD30 (Ki-1)-positive anaplastic large cell lymphoma (CD30+ ALCL) is a morphologically and immunophenotypically distinct subset of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Although the presence of Epstein-Barr virus ...(EBV) has been well documented in a significant proportion of cases of Hodgkin's disease, another CD30+ malignancy, few studies have examined the association of EBV with CD30+ ALCL. These latter studies have produced conflicting findings. To further investigate the existence of a putative association of EBV with CD30+ ALCL, and whether this association, if present, shows geographic variation, we examined 34 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens from cases of CD30+ ALCL from the United States and Hong Kong. Immunophenotypically, 15 cases were of B lineage, 15 cases were of T lineage, one case expressed both B- and T-cell markers, and three were of null lineage. A highly sensitive in situ hybridization method was performed with use of an antisense oligonucleotide probe to the EBV-encoded RNA (EBER-1). EBV-RNA was identified in 3 of 14 CD30+ ALCL specimens from Hong Kong patients and in 1 of 20 from the American patients. The EBER-1 signal was present in all or virtually all of the tumor cell nuclei in the three EBV-RNA-positive CD30+ ALCL Hong Kong cases, but was only focally present in the single EBV-positive American case. The latent membrane protein-1 (LMP1) of EBV was identified in only one of the four positive cases, a Hong Kong case. Our results suggest that in contrast to Hodgkin's disease, EBV has no significant association with CD30+ ALCL.
A B-cell anaplastic large cell lymphoma, confirmed by immunohistochemistry and Southern blot immunoglobulin gene rearrangement analysis, contained neoplastic cells that were immunoreactive for ...cytokeratin using antibodies CAM 5.2, M20, MAK 6, and KS-B17.2. Bands corresponding to cytokeratin 18 and cytokeratins 18 and 8 were seen on Western blot immunoanalysis using antibodies KS-B17.2 and CAM 5.2. The lymph node also contained cytokeratin-positive extrafollicular fibroblastic reticulum cells. Although it is possible that the presence of cytokeratin in the cells of anaplastic large cell lymphoma represented phagocytosed filaments from the reticulum cells, it is more likely that the cytokeratins were synthesized by the malignant cells. The finding of cytokeratin in anaplastic large cell lymphoma, although infrequent, adds to the confusion in the diagnosis of this pleomorphic neoplasm.