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Diagnostic approach to prevascular (anterior) mediastinal lymphomas: when thoracic pathology meets hematopathology.

Lymphomas are among the most common malignant tumors occurring in the anterior/prevascular mediastinum. Their diagnoses can be challenging in small biopsies, the current most common method of sampling of an anterior mediastinal mass. Because the initial clinical and/or imaging impression may not be that of lymphoma, these specimens may first be evaluated by cytopathologists, surgical pathologists, and thoracic pathologists rather than hematopathologists. Therefore, it is crucial for this group of pathologists to have a practical diagnostic approach to these neoplasms, know their common diagnostic pitfalls, and their main differential diagnoses. This is important because the diagnosis of lymphoma carries significant therapeutic implications (chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy and not surgical resection). Similarly, securing and properly triaging a sample at the time of tissue collection will translate into direct patient benefit since a subset of lymphomas (T-lymphoblastic lymphoma) may present exclusively as an anterior mediastinal mass and the tissue obtained from this site may be the only one available to evaluate prognostic markers and potential targetable molecular alterations. Once a proper initial diagnostic work-up has been performed, a case can be transferred to a hematopathologist for assistance with a refined diagnosis. In this review, we focus on the practical diagnostic approach to the most common prevascular/anterior mediastinal lymphomas with an emphasis on the findings in small biopsies and provide best practice tips for case triage.

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