Types and grades of non-Hodgkin lymphoma
There are many different groups and types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL).
Doctors find out your type by looking at lymphoma cells under a microscope. Knowing your type means they can plan the best treatment for you.
Doctors group different types of NHL together depending on how they develop or how they behave. They look at several different factors including:
the type of white blood cell affected (B cell lymphocyte or T cell lymphocyte)
how fast the cells grow (grade)
what the cells look like under the microscope
The name of your type of NHL might also depend on where the lymphoma starts in your body.
Understanding how doctors group (classify) the different types of NHL can be difficult. There are more than 60 subtypes of NHL.
Various systems for classifying lymphomas into groups have been used over the years. The latest is the World Health Organisation classification of 2022. We give a simple description of the groups in this section.
Your doctor finds out which type of NHL you have by removing part, or all of a lymph node, and sending it to the laboratory. This is called a biopsy. A specialist doctor (pathologist) examines it under a microscope.
The pathologist examines the cells to see:
the type of cell affected (B cell or T cell)
the grade of your NHL (how fast it grows)
what the cells look like under a microscope
which proteins (markers) are on the surface of the lymphoma cells (immunohistochemistry)
whether there are certain gene changes in the lymphoma cells (cytogenetics and molecular analyisis)
Read more about tests to diagnose NHL
Lymphomas develop from a type of white blood cell called lymphocytes. Doctors group NHL depending on which type of lymphocyte it starts in. There are two types of lymphocytes:
B-cell lymphocytes - B-cell lymphoma develops from an abnormal B-cell lymphocyte
T-cell lymphocytes - T-cell lymphoma develops from an abnormal T-cell lymphocyte
The most common types of B-cell lymphoma are:
diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL)
follicular lymphoma (FL)
Less common types include:
marginal zone lymphomas
lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (Waldenström’s macroglobulinaemia)
mantle cell lymphoma
burkitt lymphoma
primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma
small lymphocytic lymphoma
Types of T-cell lymphoma include:
anaplastic large cell lymphoma
peripheral T-cell lymphoma
primary skin (cutaneous) lymphoma
angioimmunoblastic lymphoma
Doctors sometimes put NHL into 2 groups, depending on how quickly they are likely to grow and spread. This is the grade. The 2 groups are low grade and high grade.
The grade of your NHL affects your treatment plan.
Low grade NHL tends to grow very slowly. Doctors call them indolent lymphomas. Follicular lymphoma is the most common type of low grade lymphoma.
Read about the different types of low grade lymphomas
High grade NHL tends to grow more quickly than low grade NHL. Because they grow quickly your doctor might call your lymphoma an aggressive type. Diffuse large B cell lymphoma is the most common type of high grade NHL.
Read about the different types of high grade NHL
In the laboratory a looks at the cells under a microscope to see if they are:
large or small
grouped together in structures called follicles (follicular type) or spread out (diffuse type)
Low grade NHL tends to have small cells that are grouped together.
For example, follicular lymphoma cells usually develop in clumps called ‘follicles’. It is a low grade lymphoma.
And diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) cells are larger than normal, healthy B cells. The abnormal cells are spread out (diffuse) rather than grouped together. It is a high grade lymphoma.
Remember some people might use the word diffuse to describe NHL that is widespread in the body. This is not the same as the type of NHL called diffuse large B cell lymphoma.
You can get NHL just about anywhere in your body. This is because the lymphatic system runs through your whole body. It most often starts in the lymph nodes and can affect several groups of lymph nodes around your body.
NHL can also begin outside the lymph nodes. Doctors call this primary extranodal lymphoma. For example NHL can start in the stomach or bowel.
Your treatment still depends on the type of lymphoma cells. So if diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) starts in your stomach, you have DLBCL treatment. This is different to stomach cancer treatment.
NHL can also start in your brain or spinal cord. We have separate pages of information about NHL in different parts of your body.
Last reviewed: 21 Feb 2024
Next review due: 21 Feb 2027
There are many different types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Doctors also give NHL a grade, depending on how quickly it is likely to grow.
The stage tells you about the number and places in your body that are affected by lymphoma. There are 4 stages for NHL. Or doctors describe it as either early or advanced stage.
Your treatment depends on the type and stage of your NHL. Common treatments include chemotherapy, targeted and immunotherapy drugs, radiotherapy and a stem cell transplant.
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) is a cancer of the lymphatic system. There are more than 60 different types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. They can behave in very different ways and need different treatments.

About Cancer generously supported by Dangoor Education since 2010. Learn more about Dangoor Education
Search our clinical trials database for all cancer trials and studies recruiting in the UK.
Meet and chat to other cancer people affected by cancer.
Questions about cancer? Call freephone 0808 800 40 40 from 9 to 5 - Monday to Friday. Alternatively, you can email us.