Lymphoma and Viruses

Posted On 2022-10-24 09:49:31

The relationship between human viruses and lymphoma aetiology and pathogenesis is both fascinating and complex. This special series will comprehensively cover the spectrum of unique clinicopathological lymphoma entities in which viruses are aetiologically implicated. This series aims to provide an updated overview of the most clinically and scientifically important data and to offer future perspectives.

Editorial on Lymphoma and Viruses
Preface: virus-associated lymphomas
Christopher P. Fox, Claire Shannon-Lowe

Review Article on Lymphoma and Viruses
Epstein-Barr virus-associated lymphoproliferative disorders in immunosuppressed patients
David M. Burns, Sridhar Chaganti

The contribution of ebv to the pathogenesis of classical hodgkin lymphoma
Katerina Vrzalikova, Matthew Pugh, Lucia Mundo, Paul Murray

Reframing Burkitt lymphoma: virology not epidemiology defines clinical variants
Rosemary Rochford

Overview of the current treatment strategy in extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma: from diagnosis to recurrence
Sang Eun Yoon, Seok Jin Kim, Won Seog Kim

Narrative review of chronic active EBV infection—advances in clinical management
Akihisa Sawada, Masami Inoue

From pathobiology to targeted treatment in Epstein Barr virus related T cell and Natural Killer cell lymphoproliferative diseases
Alexander Glover, Claire Shannon-Lowe

Adoptive cellular immunotherapy for Epstein-Barr virus-associated lymphoproliferative disease
Birte Wistinghausen, Hema Dave, Catherine M. Bollard

HIV-associated lymphoma—advances in clinical management
Jahanzaib Khwaja, James Edward Burns, Nadia Ahmed, Kate Cwynarski

Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma—pathobiology and implications for modern clinical management
Lucy Cook, Aileen Rowan, Charles Bangham

Disclosure
The series “Lymphoma and Viruses” was commissioned by the editorial office, Annals of Lymphoma without any sponsorship or funding. CPF and CSL served as the unpaid Guest Editors for the series.