CD8-positive T-cell lymphoproliferative disorder of the uterus: a new subtype of indolent extranodal T-cell neoplasm?

A 51-year-old female with menorrhagia was found to have a cervical polyp. Polypectomy and endometrial curettage showed an atypical lymphoid infiltrate. Hysterectomy was performed, showing extensive myometrial infiltration by small, cytologically bland CD3-positive αβ T cells with a non-activated cytotoxic phenotype and a low proliferative rate. PCR showed clonal TCR-β gene rearrangement. Lymph nodes were uninvolved. PET-CT was negative. A diagnosis of CD8-positive T-cell lymphoproliferative disorder (T-LPD) was made. At 6 months, the patient was asymptomatic with a negative repeat PET-CT. A critical recent advance in the classification of lymphoid neoplasms is the recognition of indolent extranodal T-LPDs, including those of the gastrointestinal tract (T-cell and NK-cell types) and skin (small/medium CD4-positive and acral CD8-positive). However, T-LPDs of the uterus are rare. Two indolent T-LPDs of the uterus have been reported, both showing a CD8-positive, nonactivated cytotoxic phenotype, low proliferative rate, and clonal TCR rearrangement. Neither developed systemic disease nor recurrence. The etiology of indolent T-LPDs and their relationship to overt T-cell lymphomas remain poorly understood. T-LPDs of the uterus may arise from effector memory T-cells that establish long-term, tissueresident immunologic memory following exposure to fetal extravillous trophoblastic cell alloantigens during a previous pregnancy. Neither our patient nor the 2 previously reported had a current pregnancy or a known recent infection or toxic exposure, and the event(s) triggering evolution into T-LPD are unknown. Indolent T-LPDs can be encountered at new and unusual extranodal sites; knowledge of their clinicopathological features will help avoid unnecessary cytotoxic chemotherapy and improve understanding of this group of disorders.

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