Seminars in Hematology
Volume 40, Issue 2 , Pages 124-132, April 2003

Epstein-Barr virus-associated T-/natural killer cell lymphoproliferative diseases☆☆

Department of Laboratory Sciences, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, and the Department of Pediatrics, Angiogenesis and Vascular Development, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kanazawa University, Kanazawa, Japan; and the Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Toyama, Japan

Address correspondence to Akihiro Yachie, MD, PhD, 5-11-80 Kodatsuno, Kanazawa, 920-0942 Japan.

Abstract 

Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a ubiquitous virus that infects the majority of the world population by adulthood. The major target for infection is the B lymphocyte, and acute infection causes vigorous EBV-specific killer T-cell responses exemplified clinically by acute infectious mononucleosis (IM). EBV infection usually persists latently life-long without eliciting any clinical symptoms. Rarely, active EBV infection is prolonged, with abnormal expansions of EBV-infected T or NK cells, conditions collectively defined here as EBV-associated T/NK lymphoproliferative diseases. Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), chronic active EBV infection (CAEBV), NK lymphoma/leukemia, and T-cell lymphoma are entities included in this category. Hypersensitivity to mosquito bite (HMB) represents a unique syndrome characterized by expansion of EBV-infected NK cells in the peripheral circulation and within the inflammatory skin lesions induced by mosquito bites. Target cell specificity, defects in host immune responses, and strain differences of EBV may account for ectopic EBV infections and for the unique clinical presentations characteristic of each illness. Semin Hematol 40:124-132. © 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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 Supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan, and by a grant from the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan.

☆☆ 0037-1963/03/4002-0003$30.00/0

PII: S0037-1963(03)70004-3

Seminars in Hematology
Volume 40, Issue 2 , Pages 124-132, April 2003