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Wah Cheuk

Bio: Wah Cheuk is an academic researcher from Tuen Mun Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lymphoma & B-cell lymphoma. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 57 publications receiving 6006 citations.


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TL;DR: This statement proposes a terminology scheme for the diagnosis of IgG4-related disease that is based primarily on the morphological appearance on biopsy, and advocates the use of strict criteria for accepting newly proposed entities or sites as components of the IgG 4- related disease spectrum.

2,041 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: John H. Stone, Arezou Khosroshahi, Vikram Deshpande, John K.Stone, Masayuki Takahira, Hisanori Umehara, George Webster, Motohisa Yamamoto, Eunhee Yi, Tadashi Yoshino, Giuseppe Zamboni, Yoh Zen, and Suresh Chari.
Abstract: John H. Stone, Arezou Khosroshahi, Vikram Deshpande, John K. C. Chan, J. Godfrey Heathcote, Rob Aalberse, Atsushi Azumi, Donald B. Bloch, William R. Brugge, Mollie N. Carruthers, Wah Cheuk, Lynn Cornell, Carlos Fernandez-Del Castillo, Judith A. Ferry, David Forcione, Gunter Kloppel, Daniel L. Hamilos, Terumi Kamisawa, Satomi Kasashima, Shigeyuki Kawa, Mitsuhiro Kawano, Yasufumi Masaki, Kenji Notohara, Kazuichi Okazaki, Ji Kon Ryu, Takako Saeki, Dushyant Sahani, Yasuharu Sato, Thomas Smyrk, James R. Stone, Masayuki Takahira, Hisanori Umehara, George Webster, Motohisa Yamamoto, Eunhee Yi, Tadashi Yoshino, Giuseppe Zamboni, Yoh Zen, and Suresh Chari

607 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An elevated serum titer of immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4), the least common of the 4 subclasses of IgG, is a surrogate marker for the recently characterized IgG4-related sclerosing disease, which affects predominantly middle-aged and elderly patients, with male predominance.
Abstract: An elevated serum titer of immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4), the least common (3% to 6%) of the 4 subclasses of IgG, is a surrogate marker for the recently characterized IgG4-related sclerosing disease. The syndrome affects predominantly middle-aged and elderly patients, with male predominance. The patients present with symptoms referable to the involvement of 1 or more sites, usually in the form of mass lesions. The prototype is IgG4-related sclerosing pancreatitis (also known as autoimmune pancreatitis), most commonly presenting as painless obstructive jaundice with or without a pancreatic mass. Other common sites of involvement are the hepatobiliary tract, salivary gland, orbit, and lymph node, but practically any organ-site can be affected, such as retroperitoneum, aorta, mediastinum, soft tissue, skin, central nervous system, breast, kidney, prostate, upper aerodigestive tract, and lung. The patients usually have a good general condition, with no fever or constitutional symptoms. Common laboratory findings include raised serum globulin, IgG, IgG4, and IgE, whereas lactate dehydrogenase is usually not raised. Some patients have low titers of autoantibodies (such as antinuclear antibodies and rheumatoid factor). The disease often shows excellent response to steroid therapy. The natural history is characterized by the development of multiple sites of involvement with time, sometimes after many years. However, the disease can remain localized to 1 site in occasional patients. The main pathologic findings in various extranodal sites include lymphoplasmacytic infiltration, lymphoid follicle formation, sclerosis and obliterative phlebitis, accompanied by atrophy and loss of the specialized structures of the involved tissue (such as secretory acini in pancreas, salivary gland, or lacrimal gland). The relative predominance of the lymphoplasmacytic and sclerotic components results in 3 histologic patterns: pseudolymphomatous, mixed, and sclerosing. Immunostaining shows increased IgG4+ cells in the involved tissues (>50 per high-power field, with IgG4/IgG ratio >40%). The lymph nodes show multicentric Castleman disease-like features, reactive follicular hyperplasia, interfollicular expansion, or progressive transformation of germinal centers, with the unifying feature being an increase in IgG4+ plasma cells on immunostaining. The nature and pathogenesis of IgG4-related sclerosing disease are still elusive. Occasionally, the disease can be complicated by the development of malignant lymphoma and possibly carcinoma.

426 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The lymphoid hyperplasia of IgG4-related sclerosing disease can provide a substrate for the emergence of lymphoma, and 3 cases of ocular adnexal lymphoma arising in IgG 4-related chronic scleroses dacryoadenitis, a phenomenon that has not been previously reported are reported.
Abstract: IgG4-related sclerosing disease is a recently recognized inflammatory lesion frequently involving pancreas, submandibular gland, lacrimal gland, and lymph node. We report 3 cases of ocular adnexal lymphoma arising in IgG4-related chronic sclerosing dacryoadenitis, a phenomenon that has not been previously reported. The patients presented with bilateral or unilateral ocular adnexal mass usually present for many years. One patient also had asymptomatic diffuse lymphadenopathy. Two patients had biopsy-proven IgG4-related chronic sclerosing dacryoadenitis before the current presentation, and 1 had systemic involvement by IgG4-related sclerosing disease as evidenced by increased IgG4+ cells in a prior nasopharyngeal biopsy. Two cases showed features of extranodal marginal zone lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid-tissue type (1 with large cell transformation) and 1 follicular lymphoma. Thus, the lymphoid hyperplasia of IgG4-related sclerosing disease can provide a substrate for the emergence of lymphoma. In addition, we report 3 cases of ocular adnexal extranodal marginal zone B-cell lymphoma that show sclerosing inflammation in the background and numerous IgG4+ monotypic plasma cells. In the absence of prior biopsies or information on serum IgG4 titer, it is unclear whether these cases represent lymphoma complicating IgG4-related sclerosing disease or de novo lymphoma. Nonetheless, these cases are distinctive in that the neoplastic cells express IgG4 (light chain restricted), whereas unselected cases of ocular adnexal lymphomas do not show IgG4 expression.

272 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The importance of recognition of the lymphadenopathic form of IgG4-related sclerosing disease lies in the remarkable response to steroid therapy, and the potential of mistaking the disease for lymphoma either clinically or histologically.
Abstract: IgG4-related sclerosing disease is a recently recognized syndrome characterized by mass-forming lesions in exocrine glands or extranodal tissues due to lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates and sclerosis, a raised serum IgG4 level and increased IgG4+ plasma cells in the involved tissues. We report the morph

259 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
19 May 2016-Blood
TL;DR: The revision clarifies the diagnosis and management of lesions at the very early stages of lymphomagenesis, refines the diagnostic criteria for some entities, details the expanding genetic/molecular landscape of numerous lymphoid neoplasms and their clinical correlates, and refers to investigations leading to more targeted therapeutic strategies.

5,321 citations

01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: This list includes tumours of undefined neoplastic nature, which are of uncertain differentiation Bone Tumours, Ewing sarcoma/Primitive neuroedtodermal tumour, Myogenic, lipogenic, neural and epithelial tumours, and others.

4,185 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This statement proposes a terminology scheme for the diagnosis of IgG4-related disease that is based primarily on the morphological appearance on biopsy, and advocates the use of strict criteria for accepting newly proposed entities or sites as components of the IgG 4- related disease spectrum.

2,041 citations

01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: Lymphedema is a common complication after treatment for breast cancer and factors associated with increased risk of lymphedEMA include extent of axillary surgery, axillary radiation, infection, and patient obesity.

1,988 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

1,948 citations