Health Dictionary Find a Doctor

Diffuse large B cell lymphoma classification

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sowminya Arikapudi, M.B,B.S. [2] Anila Hussain, MD [3]

Overview

Diffuse large B cell lymphoma may be classified based on location into nodal and extranodal disease and based on pathological and clinical features.

Classification

Classification Based on Location

Diffuse large B cell lymphoma may be classified based on location:

Classification Based on Pathological and Clinical Features

According to the updated WHO classification, diffuse large B cell lymphoma may be classified based on pathological and clinical features into the following:

Diffuse large B cell lymphoma, not otherwise specified

  • Molecular subtypes: GCB subtype, about 60%; ABC subtype, about 25–30%; unclassifiable, about 10–15%; new molecular entities recently characterized
Diagnostic features

Diffuse proliferation of medium or large lymphoid B cells typically expressing CD19, CD20, CD22, CD79a, PAX5, and surface or cytoplasmic immunoglobulin; molecular techniques (e.g., GEP) or IHC-based algorithms recommended to classify subtypes

Clinical Features and Outcome
  • Nodal presentation is the most common and 30–40% of cases are primary extranodal

Other Large B Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) type

T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B cell lymphoma (rare)

Primary diffuse large B cell lymphoma of the central nervous system (rare)

  • Typically ABC subtype; frequent loss of HLA class I/II; frequent mutation of MYD88
  • Exclusively in CNS or intraocular region, rare systemic involvement; poor prognosis; specialized treatment with CNS-penetrating agents, with or without radiation therapy, required; targeted therapies under investigation

Primary Cutaneous DLBCL, Leg type (rare)

EBV-positive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, NOS (rare)

EBV-positive mucocutaneous ulcer (rare)

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma associated with chronic inflammation (rare)

Lymphomatoid granulomatosis (rare)

Large B-cell lymphoma with IRF4 rearrangement (rare)

Primary mediastinal (thymic) large B-cell lymphoma (around 6% of large B-cell cases)

Intravascular large B-cell lymphoma (rare)

ALK-positive large B-cell lymphoma (rare)

Plasmablastic lymphoma (rare)

HHV8-positive diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (rare)

Primary effusion lymphoma (rare)

High-grade B-cell lymphoma

  • High-grade B-cell lymphoma with MYC and BCL2 and/or BCL6 rearrangements or both (doublehit or triple-hit lymphoma) (4–8% of large B-cell cases)
  • Variable morphology, including DLBCL, B-cell lymphoma unclassifiable (with features intermediate between DLBCL and Burkitt lymphoma), and blastoid features; MYC and BCL2 and/or BCL6 rearrangements, detected by FISH
  • Frequently aggressive clinical presentation; higher risk of CNS involvement; poor prognosis; consider more intensive immunochemotherapy regimens, such as DA-EPOCH-R

High-grade B-cell lymphoma, NOS (rare)

B-cell lymphoma, unclassifiable


Template:WikiDoc Sources

© 2026 MyEClinic – IFTM Institut für Telematik in der Medizin GmbH