Histiocytosis Syndromes: Overview - Cell Chaos Crew
- Group of rare disorders: characterized by ↑ proliferation & accumulation of histiocytes (macrophages or dendritic cells).
- Classification based on cell lineage:
- Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH): CD1a+, S100+, Langerin (CD207)+. Most common.
- Non-Langerhans Cell Histiocytoses (Non-LCH): e.g., Juvenile Xanthogranuloma (JXG), Rosai-Dorfman disease.
- Malignant Histiocytoses.

⭐ Birbeck granules (tennis-racket appearance on Electron Microscopy) are pathognomonic for Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH).
Histiocytosis Syndromes: LCH - Bone's Bizarre Battle
- Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH): Clonal proliferation of Langerhans cells, characterized by Birbeck granules (tennis-racket appearance on Electron Microscopy).
- Immunophenotype: CD1a+, S100+, Langerin (CD207)+.
- Commonly associated with BRAF V600E mutation (~50%).
- Clinical Forms:
- Unifocal (Eosinophilic Granuloma): Solitary, lytic bone lesion (skull, femur); may affect skin, lung. Best prognosis.
- Multifocal Unisystem (Hand-Schüller-Christian Disease): Classic triad: lytic bone lesions (skull), diabetes insipidus, exophthalmos. (📌 HAnd: Skull lesions, DI, Exophthalmos).
- Multifocal Multisystem (Letterer-Siwe Disease): Aggressive; infants < 2 years. Features: skin rash (seborrheic-like), hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, fever, cytopenias. Poorest prognosis.
- Treatment: Varies by extent; observation, curettage, steroids, chemotherapy (e.g., vinblastine, prednisone).

⭐ Birbeck granules, appearing as tennis-racket shaped intracytoplasmic organelles on electron microscopy, are pathognomonic for Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH).
Histiocytosis Syndromes: HLH - Cytokine Storm Troopers
HLH: Life-threatening hyperinflammation. Uncontrolled lymphocyte/macrophage activation → cytokine storm (↑IFN-γ, TNF-α). Due to impaired NK/CD8+ T cell function.
- Types:
- Primary (Familial): Genetic (e.g., PRF1, UNC13D, STX11)
- Secondary: Infections (EBV, CMV), malignancy (lymphoma), autoimmune (SLE, JIA).
- Diagnosis (HLH-2004, ≥5/8 criteria):
- Fever ≥38.5°C
- Splenomegaly
- Cytopenias (≥2 lines): Hb <9 g/dL, Platelets <100x10⁹/L, Neutrophils <1.0x10⁹/L
- Hypertriglyceridemia (fasting, ≥3 mmol/L) OR Hypofibrinogenemia (≤1.5 g/L)
- Hemophagocytosis (bone marrow/spleen/lymph nodes)
- ↓/absent NK cell activity
- Ferritin ≥500 µg/L
- Soluble CD25 (sIL-2R) ≥2400 U/mL
- Treatment: Suppress inflammation (steroids, etoposide, cyclosporine A), treat underlying cause. Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT) for familial/refractory cases.

⭐ Markedly elevated ferritin (often >10,000 µg/L) is a highly characteristic, though not solely diagnostic, finding in HLH supporting rapid investigation and intervention.
Histiocytosis Syndromes: Non-LCH Rarities - Rare Cell Rebels
- Juvenile Xanthogranuloma (JXG)
- Benign; commonest non-LCH.
- Skin: Yellow-brown papules/nodules.
- Micro: Touton giant cells.
- Usually spontaneous regression.
- Rosai-Dorfman Disease (RDD) (Sinus Histiocytosis with Massive Lymphadenopathy)
- Painless, massive cervical lymphadenopathy.
- Micro: Emperipolesis (lymphocytes within histiocytes).
- Markers: S100+, CD68+, CD1a-.
- Erdheim-Chester Disease (ECD)
- Rare, multi-systemic; older adults.
- Symmetric osteosclerosis of long bones (painful).
- BRAF V600E mutation common.

⭐ Rosai-Dorfman Disease is characterized by emperipolesis - the presence of intact lymphocytes within the cytoplasm of S100-positive histiocytes an important diagnostic feature for MCQs.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- LCH: Characterized by Birbeck granules (tennis-racket) on EM; CD1a & S100 positive.
- Most common LCH site: bone (skull); presents with lytic lesions.
- Hand-Schüller-Christian triad: lytic bone lesions, diabetes insipidus, exophthalmos.
- BRAF V600E mutation is common in LCH.
- HLH: Life-threatening cytokine storm; features include fever, splenomegaly, cytopenias.
- Key HLH diagnostic markers: ↑ ferritin, ↑ sCD25, ↓ NK cell activity, hypertriglyceridemia.
- HLH can be primary (genetic) or secondary (e.g., infections, malignancy).
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