Objectives
Even though frequent, it is not known how HIV infection and treatment impact in the consolidation by radiotherapy of non-Hodgkin diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DBCL). This article aim to assess that difference that HIV makes on radiation treatment.
Patients and methods
A retrospective cohort of all DBCL patients treated with chemotherapy and consolidative radiotherapy at a single institution between 2010 and 2018 was assessed. All patients had biopsy-proven lymphoma and were included if radiation was part of the treatment and had at least 6 months of follow-up or were followed until death.
Results
Three-hundred fifty-nine (359) patients were selected, with a median age at diagnosis of 57.7 years (13–90 years). Twenty-eight patients (7.8%) were HIV positive. Median follow-up was 48.0 months. Female patients were 51.3% and most had a good performance in the ECOG scale (78.8% are ECOG 0–1). Median overall survival was not reached, but mean OS was 50.1 months with 86 deaths. Median progression-free survival was 48.7 months. HIV infection had no impact on OS (p = 0.580) or PFS (p = 0.347) among patients treated with RT. HIV positive patients were more frequently staged only with CT (p > 0.05) with no impact on PFS (p = 0.191). No HIV positive patient received rituximab due to local policy restrictions and HIV positive patients were more prone to receive CHOP-like chemotherapy (p < 0.05), specially ones with etoposide (CHOEP). CHOP was associated with better survival (p = 0.015) in the overall population and in the HIV negative population (p = 0.002), but not in the HIV positive population (p = 0.982). RT toxicities were not overall more frequent in the HIV positive population (p = 0.567), except for fatigue (p < 0.05) and hematological toxicities (p = 0.022).
Conclusion
HIV status did not influence on survival when patients were treated with consolidative radiotherapy. HIV infection was a bias on our sample for staging methods and chemotherapy regimens choices. For HIV positive patients there was an increase in fatigue and hematological toxicities of any grade with radiation.
OBJECTIVES
To evaluate the results of radiotherapy (RT) for follicular lymphoma (FL) under different management scenarios.
METHODS
We retrospectively assessed consecutive patients with FL who had undergone irradiation between 2010 and 2018. All patients had biopsy-proven FL and were positron emission tomography-staged, although some (35.3%) were reassessed with computed tomography after treatment alone. Rituximab was only available to FL patients after 2016.
RESULTS
Thirty-four patients were selected, with a mean age at diagnosis of 61.6 years (34-89 years). The median follow-up duration was 49.4 months. Most patients were female (58.8%) and showed good performance on the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) scale (ECOG 0-55.9%). The mean overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival were 48.7 and 33.6 months, respectively, with four deaths reported. OS rates at 2 and 3 years were 94.1% and 91.2%, respectively. Four patients showed transformation into aggressive lymphomas and underwent rituximab-based systemic treatment. Transformation-free survival was 47.8 months, and all patients with transformed disease were alive at assessment. Five patients had in-field relapse, all of them also relapsed elsewhere, and the mean relapse-free survival time was 40.3 months. No median end points were reached on assessment.
CONCLUSION
FL is an indolent disease. Our findings show good outcomes for patients treated with radiation, with a low transformation rate and excellent management of relapsed disease. RT is an important part of these results.
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