Summary
Burkitt lymphoma is a rare, highly aggressive B-cell lymphoma that is most common in children and adolescents. It is classified into three variants, each with different epidemiological and clinical characteristics. Presentation is typically dramatic, with a rapidly growing mass that spreads systemically. Gastrointestinal tract involvement is common, especially in the sporadic variant. Management includes systemic chemoimmunotherapy, with a remission rate of 90% in children and adolescents.
Classification
Burkitt lymphoma is classified into three variants, each with different epidemiological and clinical characteristics. [1][2][3]
-
Sporadic variant
- Mostly affects children and adolescents, and adults > 70 years old. [3]
- Variant that most commonly affects the GI tract.
- May be associated with EBV infection, especially in older adults
-
Endemic variant
- Mostly affects children and adolescents
- 95–100% of patients have EBV infection; infection with Plasmodium spp. is also common. [3]
-
Immunodeficiency-associated variant
- Mostly affects adults
- Commonly associated with HIV infection or EBV infection
Epidemiology
- Burkitt lymphoma accounts for up to 50% of all childhood lymphomas, depending on the variant. [3]
- The sporadic and endemic variants most commonly affect children and adolescents; the immunodeficiency-associated variant typically affects adults. [1][3]
- The endemic variant occurs in equatorial Africa and Papua New Guinea. [3]
Burkitt lymphoma is most common in children and adolescents. [3]
Epidemiological data refers to the US, unless otherwise specified.
Etiology
- Derived from germinal center B cells [1][2]
- t(8;14) leads to overactivation of the C-MYC gene and transcription. [1][2]
Clinical features
Presentation is typically dramatic, with a rapidly growing mass that spreads systemically. [1][2][3]
-
GI tract involvement may occur in all variants (most common in the sporadic variant)
- Rapidly growing large masses, commonly in the ileocecal region
- Bowel obstruction
-
Systemic involvement
- Peritoneum
- Thyroid
- Breasts
- Kidney
- Ovaries, testicles
- Lymphnodes and bone marrow (especially in the immunodeficiency-associated variant))
- CNS
-
Complications
- Tumor lysis syndrome
- Hemorrhage, necrosis
- Intestinal perforation
Differential diagnoses
- Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
- Other high-grade B-cell lymphomas with MYC translocations, e.g.:
- Mantle cell lymphoma
- Precursor B-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma
The differential diagnoses listed here are not exhaustive.
Diagnosis
General principles [3]
- Obtain initial laboratory studies (e.g., CBC, LDH, viral serologies).
- Staging of non-Hodgkin lymphomas is required for all patients.
- Diagnosis is confirmed with histopathological studies.
- See "Diagnosis of non-Hodgkin lymphoma" for more information.
Histopathology [1][2][3]
A large-bore core needle or surgical biopsy is required; findings are similar across the three variants of Burkitt lymphoma.
- Diffuse infiltrate of monomorphic, medium-sized B cells
- Round nuclei with vesicular chromatin and multiple basophilic nucleoli
- Basophilic cytoplasm
- Ki-67 index ∼ 100% [1][3]
- Multiple tingible body macrophages ("starry sky" pattern)
Immunohistochemistry [1][2][3]
- Positive markers
-
Negative markers
- BCL-2
- CD5
- CD23
Cytogenetics
- MYC t(8;14) in ∼ 75% of tumors [1][3]
- May not be detected with standard fluorescence in situ hybridization
Management
Emergency management is often required due to the high rate of complications. [3]
- Systemic chemoimmunotherapy: combination regimens (e.g., cyclophosphamide, rituximab, methotrexate) based on patient risk
- CNS prophylaxis: in patients with features of high-risk tumors (e.g., patients with ECOG PS ≥ 2, ↑ LDH, tumor size ≥ 7 cm)
- Management of complications (e.g., management of tumor lysis syndrome).
- See also "Treatment of non-Hodgkin lymphoma."
Burkitt lymphoma can be cured in ∼ 90% of children and adolescents. [3]