Two recent reports of the same combination chemotherapy program, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, etoposide, methotrexate, cytarabine, vincristine, bleomycin, and prednisone (ProMACE-CytaBOM), in similar subsets of patients with advanced-stage aggressive-histology lymphoma used two different methods to report the actual dose-intensity (DI) data. One method treats DI as a property of a particular cycle of treatment within the entire population that received that cycle. The other treats DI as a characteristic of a particular patient's entire treatment course. We have applied both methods to the same set of data and provide evidence that the latter method is preferable for at least two reasons: (1) it more accurately reflects actual DI by clearly incorporating the duration of the actual treatment course and, thus, can be used to compare the administration of same or related regimens to distinct patient populations; and (2) it allows assignment of a numerical value to an individual patient's treatment course or a group of patients' treatment courses such that DI can be examined for its impact on treatment outcome just like any other prognostic factor. The observed differences in treatment outcome between the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) and National Cancer Institute (NCI) studies are not clearly related to differences in distribution of clinical prognostic factors in the two study populations. The differences in methods of reporting DI prohibit evaluation of the influence of dose-related variables on outcome in the two studies. Adoption of a standard method of calculating and reporting DI data would facilitate evaluation of the prognostic significance of DI.
When patients with aggressive lymphoma present with intraabdominal disease, a stable residual mass is frequently detected radiographically at the time of the clinical complete remission. To discern the optimal management for this clinical problem, we reviewed 241 patients with aggressive lymphoma treated at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) from 1977 to 1986. Seventy-two/241 patients (30%) had an abdominal mass at diagnosis and 29/72 (40%) were left with a radiographically detectable residual mass at clinical complete remission. The likelihood of a residual mass was much higher for patients with bulky disease (P2 less than .0003) (two-tailed test [P2]). Twenty-nine patients had radiologically stable residual masses after therapy, and of 22 (76%) with pathologic evaluations, 21 had negative specimens (95%) and one was positive (5%). None of the patients with negative pathologic evaluation has relapsed in the abdominal site (median follow-up, 31 months). Seven patients were observed clinically without laparotomy: five are alive, without evidence of disease, at 2 to 9 years; two relapsed with disseminated disease within 2 months of chemotherapy. Initial tumor size and size of the residual mass did not correlate with residual disease, since residual masses identified by radiographic examination did not usually harbor viable lymphoma cells. Aspiration cytology was negative for residual tumor in 15/16 cases. One negative result was not confirmed at laparotomy, presumably due to sampling error. The one positive aspiration was followed by a negative laparotomy, possibly due to subsequent tumor necrosis. Restaging laparotomy has a low yield. In most patients with aggressive lymphoma who have otherwise completely responded to carefully administered full-dose combination chemotherapy, stable residual abdominal masses can be closely followed clinically without surgical exploration.
Patients with Hodgkin's disease of the lymphocyte-depleted subtype (LDHD) have been said to have a poor prognosis. However, reports of this subtype are complicated by the fact that the histologic diagnosis of LDHD is often not straightforward, and its distinction from aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) can be difficult. We have reviewed our patients with LDHD at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in light of an additional decade of experience with neoplastic and non-neoplastic conditions mimicking Hodgkin's disease. Of 198 patients who received MOPP (mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone) treatment at the NCI for Hodgkin's disease between 1964 and 1976, 43 (22%) were originally classified as LDHD. The initial diagnostic biopsies from 39 of these patients were reviewed and revealed ten with NHL, nine with LDHD, and 13 with nodular sclerosing Hodgkin's disease of the lymphocyte-depleted subtype (NSLD). The other seven patients had Hodgkin's disease without a lymphocyte-depleted component. The NHL patients were further subclassified as diffuse, large-cell (two cases) and large-cell, immunoblastic (eight cases). The pathologic review was done without knowledge of clinical features which were examined after review in the three major subgroups. Of ten patients with NHL, only three had a complete remission (CR), and median survival was 7 months. Nine of the NHL patients presented with features that are unusual for patients with Hodgkin's disease, such as bulky abdominal disease, epitrochlear lymphade-nopathy, or hypercalcemia. CRs were attained by 67% and 85% of patients in the LDHD and NSLD groups, respectively: median survival had not been reached in either group with a median of 14 years of follow-up. Lymphocyte-depleted Hodgkin's disease, adequately treated, is in our limited group of patients no worse than other histopathologic subtypes of Hodgkin's disease. The erroneous inclusion of patients with high-grade NHLs into this subtype of Hodgkin's disease may be one reason for earlier literature reports of its more aggressive nature. The diagnosis of LDHD should be made cautiously, particularly in patients with clinical features that are unusual for Hodgkin's disease at presentation.
Clinical and histopathologic material from 151 cases of diffuse mixed, diffuse histiocytic, and diffuse undifferentiated non-Burkitt's lymphomas have been reviewed to determine the factors that predict long- term survival. Median survival of all patients was 34 mo with 43% alive at 70 mo. Factors associated with a poor prognosis include: male sex, constitutional symptoms, advanced stage, bone marrow involvement, huge (greater than 10 cm) abdominal masses with gastrointestinal involvement, hepatic involvement, hemoglobin greater than 12 g/dl, or serum LDH greater than 250 U. The best prediction of a given patient's survival was defined by a set of four variables, which includes sex, symptoms, bone marrow status, and the presence or absence of a huge abdominal mass with gastrointestinal involvement. In contrast, classification of these patients according to the histopathologic categories of Rappaport of Strauchen did not define patient groups with significant differences in survival, nor did these categories correlate with the previously described clinical factors. Knowledge of the distribution of these prognostic factors in any clinical trial is needed before therapeutic results can be compared. In addition, such data may define subsets of patients for whom current therapy is inadequate and conversely those patients for whom current therapy yields excellent long-term survival.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.