Results
The authors present a series of seven cases collected from 2015 to 2022 at Montefiore Medical Center with unusual morphology, phenotype, or anatomic locations. The cases were diagnosed according to the 5th edition of the WHO Classification.4 Patient clinical information, anatomic sites, morphology and immunophenotype have been summarized in Table 1.5,6,7
Table 1: Description of the spectrum of cases of plasma cell neoplasms seen in our institute
Case | Age (years) | Sex | Anatomic sites | Morphology feature | Phenotype | Clinical history |
---|
1 | 57 | M | Bladder | Anaplastic morphology | Both kappa and lambda negative | Urinary bladder mass |
2 | 75 | F | Breast | Brush pen-like crystal inclusion | CD138+, MUM1+, lambda+ | Breast invasive ductal carcinoma |
3 | 65 | F | Thyroid | Anaplastic morphology | CD138+, CD43+, lambda+, P53+ | Thyroid mass |
4 | 72 | M | Bone marrow | Pseudo- rosette/glandular pattern | CD138+, MUM1-, keratin- | Status post stem cell transplant for MM |
5 | 72 | F | Bone marrow | Mixed classic and blastoid | CD138, dim and strong | IgA MM status post stem cell transplant |
6 | 68 | F | Bone marrow | Erythroid precursor morphology | CD38-, CD138+, MUM1+, kappa+ | Status post stem cell transplant for MM |
7 | 50 | M | Bone marrow | Classic plasma cell morphology | CD33+, CD117+, CD138+, kappa+ | Lytic bone lesion |
86 | 69 | M | Heart | Spindle cell morphology | CD138 negative | Right atrium mass |
97 | 9 | M | Blood, bone marrow | Normoblast and monocytoid morphology | CD138 negative, P53+ | Barth syndrome status post heart transplant |
105 | 85 | M | Bone marrow | Small lymphocyte like | CD20+, BCL1+, CD138+, kappa+ | Lytic bone lesion |
Case 1
A 57-year-old male patient presented with acute renal failure secondary to obstructive uropathy and was found to have a urinary bladder mass and retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy on both cystoscopy and imaging studies. A retroperitoneal needle core biopsy was performed initially; however, the biopsy was inadequate due to fibrosis and a severely crushed artifact. Rare spindle-shaped malignant cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm were observed, suggestive of a malignant neoplasm with a broad differential diagnosis that includes plasma cell neoplasm, sarcoma, melanoma, as well as poorly differentiated carcinoma. Several immunomarkers were attempted including plasma cell markers, skeletal muscle markers, and cytokeratin, which were not conclusive. Subsequently, the bladder mass was excised and showed a non-cohesive, pleomorphic, plasmacytoid cell infiltration. Such observation suggested a differential diagnosis of urothelial carcinoma with plasmacytoid differentiation or a plasma cell neoplasm. Immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry showed that the neoplastic cells were positive for syndecan-1 (CD138), B-cell antigen receptor complex-associated protein alpha chain (CD79a), Immunoglobulin G (IgG), and multiple myeloma-1 (MUM1); myoblast determination protein 1 (MyoD1) showed cytoplasmic staining, while negative for cytokeratin, immunoglobulin light chains kappa or lambda, and T or B cell markers (Fig. 1).
The key diagnostic challenge for this case was that the light chains tests were negative. Additionally, there were no bone lesions seen in imaging studies, nor serum monoclonal protein on electrophoresis, and MyoD1 showed cytoplasmic staining. Urothelial carcinoma with plasmacytoid differentiation can mimic plasma cell neoplasm morphologically, and CD138 is also usually positive, leading to further misdiagnosis. An extensive work-up was done to exclude poorly differentiated plasmacytoid variant urothelial carcinoma, which included cytokeratins and GATA-3 immunohistochemical stains, which were found to be negative.
The supportive immunohistochemical markers for plasma cell neoplasms showed positive for MUM-1 and CD79a. Additional lymphoid markers for T and B cells were negative. The final diagnosis of the case was plasma cell myeloma with negative immunoglobulin light chains.
Case 2
A 75-year-old female with a history of invasive ductal carcinoma of breast status at post-surgery and neoadjuvant therapy, presented one and a half years later with a new palpable mass near the original surgery site. Analysis of an additional lumpectomy specimen showed ductal carcinoma in situ and a nearby spindle-shaped lesion with longitudinal striation. The differential diagnosis included histiocytic lesion, muscular lesion, and plasma cell neoplasm. Immunohistochemical studies showed that the spindle cell lesion was positive for CD138, CD79a, MUM1, and lambda (Fig. 2). Therefore, the final diagnosis for the lesion was plasma cell neoplasm with longitudinal crystal inclusion.
Case 3
A 65-year-old female patient presented with a thyroid lesion measuring 2.6 cm at its largest dimension. Microscopically, there were two distinct populations of atypical cells. The first population was composed of poorly differentiated pleomorphic, discohesive cells, including cells with prominent nucleoli, irregular nuclear contours, some with multinucleation, and a small to moderate amount of cytoplasm admixed with more mature plasmacytoid cells. Such cells were dispersed in the nodule, infiltrating into the fibrous capsule (Fig. 3). The second population showed a microfollicular pattern with focal cytological features of enlarged clear nuclei, nuclear grooves, and occasional pseudo-inclusions. Based on the histomorphology of the two distinct populations, the differential diagnoses for the first population included anaplastic thyroid carcinoma, medullary thyroid carcinoma, melanoma, as well as hematopathological malignancies, including anaplastic large cell lymphoma, plasmablastic lymphoma, and plasmacytoma. Neoplastic cells were positive for CD138, leukosialin (CD43), MUM1, neural cell adhesion molecule (CD56), lambda, and tumor protein p53 (P53). Therefore, the final diagnosis was determined to be plasma cell neoplasm with anaplastic features for the first atypical population, whereas the second population showed features consistent with noninvasive follicular thyroid neoplasm with papillary-like nuclear features (NIFTP).
Case 4
A 72-year-old male patient with a history of plasma cell myeloma status at post-chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplant presented for routine follow-up. The bone marrow flow cytometry showed no clonal plasma cells. Microscopically, unusual multi-nucleated cells arranged in a pseudo-rosette or glandular pattern were identified. The differential diagnosis included metastatic neoplasms such as carcinoma and tumors of neural origin. The work-up immunophenotypes showed recurrent plasma cell neoplasms that were positive for CD138, MUM1, and kappa, as well as negative for lambda and cytokeratin AE1 / AE3 (AE1/AE3). Seemingly, the aberrant plasma cells did not survive the process of flow cytometry analysis (Fig. 4).
Case 5
A bone marrow sample was collected from a 72-year-old female with a history of plasma cell myeloma status at post-autologous stem cell transplant. The bone marrow biopsy showed variably cellular marrow with sheets of plasma cells with classic mature plasma cell cytomorphology (Fig. 5a, square box 1). However, a focal hypercellular area (Fig. 5a, square box 2) showed enlarged cells with pale nuclei, prominent nucleoli, and pinkish cytoplasm, suggesting secondary myeloid leukemia as a differential diagnosis. Further work-up by immunohistochemical stains showed that the two distinct populations were positive for CD138, but with a different intensity. The well-differentiated plasma cells had a strong CD138 stain, while the blast-like plasma cells had a weak stain. Cyclin D1 (BCL1) showed a similar staining pattern between the two populations. CD56 was strongly positive in the well-differentiated population but only focally dimly positive in the blast-like plasma cells (Fig. 5b-f). The case was diagnosed as a post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder with plasmacytic differentiation, compatible with plasma cell myeloma/plasma cell leukemia.
Case 6
A 68-year-old female with a history of plasma cell myeloma status post-treatment, including, isatuximab—an anti-cluster of differentiation 38 (CD38) monoclonal antibody—and a stem cell transplant presented for a routine follow-up. Flow cytometry study showed no CD38+/CD138+ plasma cells (Fig. 6). Bone marrow core biopsy showed no obvious classic plasma cells, but an erythroid precursor-like population with a round nuclear contour was noted. CD138 stain showed positivity on the erythroid precursor-like cells, which were also positive for MUM-1. Flow cytometry analysis showed cytoplasmic kappa+, CD38-, CD138+, and clonal plasma cells. The particulars of the case, therefore, underscore the importance of correlation with clinical history, particularly when monoclonal antibody treatments were utilized.
Case 7
A bone marrow sample was collected from a 50-year-old male patient who had a lytic bone lesion on imaging studies. Flow cytometry analysis of the bone marrow aspirate showed a siglec-3 (CD33)+, protein tyrosine phosphatase, receptor type, C (CD45)+, and proto-oncogene c-KIT (CD117)+ population, mimicking aberrant acute myeloid precursors, which was also the challenging part of the diagnosis. Additional positive markers included CD38, CD138, and cytoplasmic kappa. Morphologically, they were typical plasma cells with eccentric nuclei and clock-faced chromatin, and no immature blast morphology was noted (Fig. 7). Neoplastic plasma cells are usually negative for CD45 and may be positive for CD117.8 However, the combination of CD33, CD45, and CD117 positivity made the case challenging.
Discussion
Morphologically, plasma cells can display multiple faces. As reported in recent literature, they can appear as a signet ring, spindle, anaplastic, megakaryocyte-like, multi-nucleated or pseudorosette, as well as, myeloid blast or erythroid blast, monocytoid, and flower-like cells.9–11 Hussein et al, have described six categories of morphologic and phenotypic types of plasma cell myeloma: small cell, cleaved cell, monocytoid, pronormoblast-like, megakaryocytoid, and blastoid.3 Other non-plasmacytic neoplasms can also be a ‘wolf in sheep’s clothing’ mimicking plasma cell neoplasms, such as carcinoid neoplasm or carcinoma, and sarcoma. Another pitfall in diagnosing such cases is the small cell variant of plasma cells, in which the plasma cells are small, resembling lymphocytes. Diagnosis can be missed if there is no previous history and plasma cell markers are not included in the initial work-up along with the T and B-cell markers. The small cell type is usually positive for B-lymphocyte antigen CD20 (CD20) and BCL1, which can easily be mistaken for Mantle cell lymphoma.12 Knowing such mimics helps to reach a correct diagnosis and avoid delays in patient care. The authors have previously reported a case in an 85-year-old male presenting with multiple lytic bone lesions and showing small lymphoplasmacytic cells in a biopsy, which was initially misleading but positivity for CD38, CD138, kappa, CD20, and BCL1, and supported a diagnosis of the small cell variant over the initial assumption of Mantle cell lymphoma given the morphology, as well as, CD20 and BCL1 positivity.5
Histologically, plasma cell neoplasms show several varieties. To date, several histological patterns have been described namely, the follicular pattern, trabecular pattern, pseudo alveolar variant, lobular carcinoma-like variant, and intra-sinusoidal pattern of infiltration or those containing immunoglobulin inclusions, like nuclear inclusion known as Dutcher body and cytoplasmic inclusion known as Russell body.3,13 Sometimes unusual shaped inclusions are observed, such as those mimicking striated skeletal muscles as shown in Case 2 and which have been previously described in research.14–18
Phenotypically, the classic plasma cell neoplasms usually express CD38, CD138, MUM1, and cytoplasmic kappa or lambda.19 However, high-grade or anaplastic plasma cell neoplasms can show improper expression of other myeloid markers, such as CD33 as observed in Case 7, and even B-lymphoid markers, such as CD20, as well as, T-cell antigens like clusters of differentiation 4 (CD4) and keratins.20 Besides aberrantly gaining other lineage markers, plasma cell neoplasms can show abnormal loss of markers, such as CD38, CD138, and cytoplasmic light chain(s) such as Case 1, which makes diagnosis more challenging.3,21 The authors have previously reported a case of anaplastic myeloma which presented as an atrial mass in the heart, cluster of differentiation 3 (CD3), CD20, and CD138 were negative in an initial immunohistochemical work-up. However, these anaplastic cells were positive for MUM1, as well as lambda restricted and in addition, flow cytometry also showed a small clonal, CD38 positive and CD138 negative population.6
CD138 is a cell adhesion marker, which is a transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan.22,23 As indicated by its name, the neoplastic plasma cells once mobilized to peripheral blood, can lose CD138, and enter blood circulation causing plasmacytic leukemia, subsequently regaining the CD138 in some cases.24 Therefore, when reviewing the peripheral blood flow cytometry for aberrant plasma cell involvement, it is important to pay attention to CD138 negative cells. The authors encountered a case of a 9-year-old male, a post-heart transplant with Barth syndrome (rare X-linked disorder), who presented with hyperviscosity symptoms and serum protein electrophoresis that showed a monoclonal population. The peripheral blood showed leukocytosis with plasmacytoid cells, positive for MUM1, kappa, and P53, as well as negative for CD138. The case was diagnosed as plasma cell leukemia due to the high percentage of plasma cells in the peripheral blood.7 Depending on CD138 for diagnosis of plasma cell neoplasm can also raise some other challenges, such as differential diagnosis of Plasmablastic lymphoma. The latter are usually positive for CD138, negative for both CD3 and CD20, in addition to being associated with EBV infection.25 Plasmablastic lymphoma can rarely be negative for CD138.26 Non-hematological malignancies can also be positive for CD138, especially in carcinomas, such as plasmacytoid urothelial carcinoma.27 Therefore, the morphology and additional plasma cell markers such as CD38, MUM1, and CD79a are needed to reach the final diagnosis, especially when it is a poorly differentiated or high-grade plasma cell neoplasm.
Currently, many immunotherapeutic agents, like monoclonal antibodies, are used in the treatment of lymphomas and myeloma. Knowing a patient’s targeted antibodies is key to making a diagnosis. In Case 6, the patient received anti-CD38 (isatuximab) treatment, thus leading to the loss of CD38 in the relapsed plasma cell population.28 Without knowing the clinical medication, the plasma cells are gated according to the population with double positivity for both CD38 and CD138, which leads to an error. Not all patients who receive anti-CD38 treatment lose CD38 expression.
Some non-hematopoietic neoplasms, such as carcinoma and melanoma, can mimic plasma cell myeloma. Being aware of such mimics, especially during examining frozen sections can help in guiding tissue triage, or considering the additional ancillary studies which will be needed. MUM1 or interferon regulatory factor 4 (IRF4) is a transcription regulatory factor involved in the development of both B and T cell immunity. It can be expressed in many types of cells and neoplasms, such as plasma cell neoplasms, post germinal center or activated B cell lymphoma including plasmablastic lymphoma, aberrant mature T cell lymphoma, classic Hodgkin lymphoma, and non-hematopoietic neoplasms, like PEComas.29 For patients with a history of plasma cell neoplasm, status post-treatment with routine bone marrow follow-up biopsy sample, the authors strongly recommend adding additional plasma cell markers such as MUM1, PRDM1, CD79a or aberrant markers such as CD56, OX-2 membrane glycoprotein (CD200), cluster of differentiation 28 (CD28), CD117, CD20, and CD52. Immunoglobulin light or heavy chains can also be helpful. The relapsed plasma cell neoplasm can be patchy, and a flow cytometry sample may not contain the neoplastic cells, or similar to Case 4, the neoplastic cells may be scattered, or not be well-preserved enough to survive the process of flow cytometry analysis. Therefore, additional plasmacytic markers performed on the bone marrow or tissue core are necessary to identify residual or early relapsed plasma cell neoplasm.