True Histiocytic Lymphoma (Monocytic Sarcoma)

Abstract
The clinical, histological, immunophenotypic, and genotypic characteristics of two cases of cutaneous genuine histiocytic lymphoma are described. Both cases presented as cutaneous lesions. Both patients remain alive and free of disease at 26 and 10 months after the diagnosis and after having been treated with polychemotherapy. Neither peripheral blood nor bone marrow infiltration was detected in either case. Histological and immunophenotypic examination showed dense, diffuse dermic infiltrates of mononuclear cells with positive macrophage-associated markers (CD11c, CD68), and negative T- or B-cell-associated antigens. A germline configuration of both T-cell receptor and immunoglobulin genes was observed in gene rearrangement studies. Although most of the cases that have been diagnosed as histiocytic lymphoma or malignant histiocytosis in the past turned out to be B- or T-large-cell lymphomas, a small number of cases (two in our consecutive series of 350 cases) show characteristics of monocyte-macrophage tumors. We stress the importance of the CD68 marker in the diagnosis of true histiocytic lymphoma, suggest a therapeutic approach based on similarities with monocytic leukemia, and propose the use of the term monocytic sarcoma for this clinicopathological presentation.