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Aggressive lymphomas
Burkitt lymphoma and lymphoblastic lymphoma are highly aggressive lymphomas mostly occurring in children, adolescents, and young adults. They account for approximately 4–5% of all non-Hodgkin lymphomas in Western countries. These B-cell neoplasms were frequently grouped together in the past, due to their fast-growing clinical behavior, related to a short doubling time, and their frequent presentation as acute leukemia. Burkitt leukemia was formerly classified as a lymphoblastic leukemia with L3 morphology according to the FAB classification. However, the biological characterization, especially the immunophenotype of these lymphomas, showed that Burkitt leukemia/lymphoma and lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma correspond to radically different stages of lymphoid maturation, with a different cell of origin, justifying their classification as separate entities in the WHO classification: lymphoblastic lymphoma is a B- or T-cell precursor lymphoid neoplasm, while Burkitt lymphoma is a mature B-cell neoplasm. As with other subtypes of lymphomas, emerging data from gene expression profiling, next-generation sequencing, and related techniques help to define these entities more precisely and to better understand their pathogenesis in order to identify potential new rational therapeutic targets.