Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3334757 Surgical Pathology Clinics 2010 29 Pages PDF
Abstract

The plasma cell neoplasms are malignancies of the most terminally differentiated cells in B-cell ontogeny and are usually associated with the production of a monoclonal immunoglobulin molecule or M protein. These malignancies include tumors whose clinical manifestations are directly attributable to the end-organ damage induced by the dysregulated proliferation of neoplastic plasma cells. In contrast, disorders, such as primary amyloidosis, have a paradoxically low burden of neoplastic plasma cells, rendered highly pathogenic by the end-organ damage induced by deposition of the secreted paraprotein. In this article, discussion focuses on plasma cell myeloma. The molecular pathogenesis of plasma cell myeloma is reviewed and the diagnosis of the plasma cell neoplasms discussed.

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