Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH)
- Used to be called Histiocytosis X or Class I
- Dendritic cell origin and lineage (with Erdheim-Chester, JXG)
- Clinical presentation in children
- Skin
- Polymorphic
- Classic: recalcitrant seborrheic dermatitis with petechiae
- Elementary lesion: micropapule, sometimes purpuric, covered with a scaly crust or eroded
- “Erosive intertrigo with crusty edges” (Saurat)
- Crusted papules, vesiculopustules, erosions, nodules, petechiae or purpura
- Nails: oniycholysis, subungueal hyperkeratosis
- Extra-cutaneous
- Bone
- Areas of osteolysis → “punch-out” lesions
- Mainly cephalic and axial regions
- Pituitary
- Diabetes insipidus, bitemporal hemianopia, growth retardation
- Liver, spleen
- Hepatomegaly, hepatocellular insufficiency, portal hypertension
- Sclerosing cholangitis and biliary cirrhosis
- Hematopoietic, lymph nodes
- Anemia, thombocytopenia, leukopenia, macrophage activation syndrome
- Lung
- Reticulonodular infiltrate → cysts and nodules
- Dyspnea, cough, pneumothorax, pulmonary fibrosis → chronic respiratory failure and pulmonary arterial hypertension
- Gastrointestinal
- Polyps, extensive granulomatous lesions
- Significant clinical overlap, varied courses
- Abt-Letterer-Siwe disease (historical name)
- Hand-Schuller-Christian disease (historical name)
- Eosinophilic granuloma
- Hashimoto-Pritzker disease (historical name)
- Workup
- Biopsy
- Full physical exam, review of systems
- Skin, lymph nodes, ears, mouth, skeletal, (lungs), thyroid, liver, spleen, CNS
- CBC, LFT, electrolytes
- Bone marrow biopsy & aspiration if cytopenia
- Skeletal survey, CXR, US liver/spleen
- Endocrine labs, brain MRI if polyuria, polydipsia (diabetes insipidus)
- Risk stratification - determine indolent VS aggressive
- Monosystem disease
- Focal disease of bone, skin or lymph node
- Multifocal disease of skeleton or lymph nodes
- Multisystem disease
- Low risk - age over 2, without involvement of liver, spleen or hematopoietic system
- High risk - age under 2 and involvement of multiple organs, or age over 2 years and involvement of liver, spleen or hematopoietic system
- Pathology
- Langerhans cells in papillary dermis, bean-shaped nuclei, epidermotropism
- Admixed inflammatory cells, including mast cells
- Hashimoto-Pritzker: giant cells with eosinophilic or ground glass cytoplasm
- Histology and immunohistochemistry indistinguishable from “congenital self-healing reticulohistiocitosis”
- CD1a, CD207 (langerin), S100, MHC-II, peanut agglutinin positive
- Some BRAF-V600E mutation (PCR) → higher risk but therapeutic implications
- (Birbeck granules on electron microscopy obsolete)
- Saurat “the only absolute diagnostic criterion is the detection of Birbeck granules in more than 50% of the infiltrate cells or testing for langerin
- Treatment
- Treatment based on organ systems affected
- Localized skin disease
- Observation, topical steroids, topical antimicrobials, topical nitrogen mustard, PUVA, nbUVB, imiquimod, MTX, AZA, 6-MP, oral retinoids
- Follow closely for 5 years
- Localized bone lesions
- NSAIDs, IL steroids, curettage, XRT
- Multisystem disease
- Chemotherapeutics (vinblastine +/- other immunosuppressants like prednisone)
- If Risk organs: liver, spleen, bone marrow
- Cladribine and cytarabine
- Bone marrow or solid organ transplant
- Targeted BRAF inhibitors? Severe disease, low efficacy, many SEs
- ALL and myelodysplastic syndrome can precede LCH, AMLand ALL can follow it
- Advances/support - “Histiocyte Society”
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