| Literature DB >> 19958356 |
Alexandra Smith1, Eve Roman, Debra Howell, Richard Jones, Russell Patmore, Andrew Jack.
Abstract
The Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN) was established in 2004 to provide robust generalizable data to inform clinical practice and research. It comprises an ongoing population-based cohort of patients newly diagnosed by a single integrated haematopathology laboratory in two adjacent UK Cancer Networks (population 3.6 million). With an emphasis on primary-source data, prognostic factors, sequential treatment/response history, and socio-demographic details are recorded to clinical trial standards. Data on 8131 patients diagnosed over the 4 years 2004-08 are examined here using the latest World Health Organization classification. HMRN captures all diagnoses (adult and paediatric) and the diagnostic age ranged from 4 weeks to 99 years (median 70.4 years). In line with published estimates, first-line clinical trial entry varied widely by disease subtype and age, falling from 59.5% in those aged <15 years to 1.9% in those aged over 75 years - underscoring the need for contextual population-based treatment and response data of the type collected by HMRN. The critical importance of incorporating molecular and prognostic markers into comparative survival analyses is illustrated with reference to diffuse-large B-cell lymphoma, acute myeloid leukaemia and myeloma. With respect to aetiology, several descriptive factors are highlighted and discussed, including the unexplained male predominance evident for most subtypes across all ages.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19958356 PMCID: PMC3066245 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2141.2009.08010.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998
Fig 1Cancer registrations United Kingdom, 2005.
Diagnostic characteristics: Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008
| Neoplasm (ICD–O3) | Total | Males (%) | Median age at diagnosis (years) | First Line treatment trial entry (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm (9960/3) | 750 | 40·1 | 71·2 | 0·3 |
| Chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm with myelofibrosis (9961/3) | 55 | 61·8 | 73·9 | – |
| Hypereosinophilic syndrome (9964/3) | 9 | 44·4 | 55·5 | – |
| Systemic mastocytosis (9741/3) | 8 | 25·0 | 62·5 | – |
| Refractory anaemia with ringed sideroblasts (9982/3) | 96 | 62·5 | 77·4 | – |
| Refractory anaemia with excess blasts (9983/3) | 220 | 68·2 | 75·1 | 9·5 |
| Refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia (9985/3) | 193 | 73·1 | 75·9 | – |
| AML not otherwise specified (NOS) (9861/3 9895/3) | 462 | 52·6 | 71·4 | 32·3 |
| AML with core binding factors (9871/3 9896/3) | 28 | 64·3 | 42·9 | 53·6 |
| AML – probable therapy-related (9920/3) | 26 | 38·5 | 71·0 | 7·7 |
| AML with | 10 | 30·0 | 17·9 | 70·0 |
| APML t(15;17)(q22;q11–12) (9866/3) | 44 | 52·3 | 38·5 | 52·3 |
| Systemic marginal zone lymphoma (9699/3) | 296 | 56·8 | 72·2 | 4·1 |
| Extranodal marginal zone lymphoma (9699/3) | 94 | 46·8 | 68·9 | – |
| Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (9680/3) | 1085 | 52·6 | 70·2 | 4·5 |
| Mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (9679/3) | 13 | 53·8 | 31·7 | – |
| T-cell or natural killer cell large granular lymphocytosis (9831/3) | 40 | 52·5 | 72·7 | 2·5 |
| T-cell prolymphocytic leukaemia (9834/3) | 10 | 30·0 | 78·3 | – |
| Peripheral T-cell lymphoma – common; unspecified (9702/3) | 49 | 63·3 | 68·6 | – |
| Mycosis fungoides (9700/3) | 28 | 71·4 | 64·7 | – |
| Primary cutaneous CD30 positive T-cell (9718/3) | 23 | 43·5 | 52·3 | – |
| Anaplastic large cell lymphoma of T/null type (9714/3) | 18 | 66·7 | 55·6 | 5·6 |
| Angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (9705/3) | 16 | 31·3 | 74·0 | – |
| Enteropathy-type T-cell lymphoma (9717/3) | 10 | 50·0 | 62·8 | – |
| Extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type (9719/3) | 9 | 44·4 | 61·6 | – |
| Nodular sclerosis classical Hodgkin lymphoma (9663/3) | 262 | 48·9 | 37·0 | 5·7 |
| Mixed cellularity classical Hodgkin lymphoma (9652/3) | 91 | 54·9 | 60·0 | 5·5 |
| Lymphocyte-rich classical Hodgkin lymphoma (9651/3) | 7 | 85·7 | 56·6 | 14·3 |
Fig 2Age and sex distribution: Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008.
Fig 3Population age and sex structure of the Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN) region (bars) compared to the UK as a whole (lines), 2001.
Average annual rates (95% confidence intervals) per 100 000 within the HMRN region 2004–2008, and estimated annual numbers for the UK as a whole*
| Total | Males | Females | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neoplasm | Rate (95% CI) | Estimated UK annual cases | Rate (95% CI) | Estimated UK annual cases | Rate (95% CI) | Estimated UK annual cases |
| All diagnoses | 58·5 (57·3–59·8) | 33 376 | 66·3 (64·4–68·3) | 18 602 | 51·2 (49·6–52·9) | 14 774 |
| Chronic myeloid leukaemia | 1·0 (0·8–1·1) | 566 | 1·2 (1·0–1·5) | 350 | 0·7 (0·5–0·9) | 216 |
| Myeloproliferative neoplasm | 5·8 (5·4–6·2) | 3286 | 4·9 (4·4–5·5) | 1391 | 6·6 (6·0–7·2) | 1895 |
| Chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia | 0·5 (0·4–0·7) | 297 | 0·7 (0·5–0·9) | 192 | 0·4 (0·3–0·6) | 105 |
| Myelodysplastic syndromes | 3·6 (3·3–3·9) | 2018 | 5·1 (4·6–5·7) | 1417 | 2·2 (1·8–2·5) | 602 |
| Acute myeloid leukaemia | 4·0 (3·7–4·3) | 2274 | 4·3 (3·8–4·8) | 1202 | 3·7 (3·3–4·2) | 1073 |
| Precursor B-lymphoblastic leukaemia | 1·0 (0·8–1·1) | 560 | 1·0 (0·8–1·3) | 291 | 0·9 (0·7–1·1) | 269 |
| Monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis | 2·7 (2·4–3·0) | 1551 | 3·0 (2·6–3·4) | 835 | 2·5 (2·1–2·8) | 716 |
| Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia | 5·9 (5·5–6·3) | 3311 | 7·5 (6·9–8·2) | 2094 | 4·3 (3·8–4·8) | 1218 |
| Marginal zone lymphoma | 2·7 (2·5–3·0) | 1552 | 3·1 (2·7–3·5) | 858 | 2·4 (2·1–2·8) | 695 |
| Hairy cell leukaemia | 0·3 (0·3–0·5) | 203 | 0·5 (0·4–0·7) | 154 | 0·2 (0·1–0·3) | 49 |
| Monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance | 6·2 (5·8–6·7) | 3544 | 7·3 (6·6–7·9) | 2023 | 5·3 (4·8–5·8) | 1521 |
| Plasma cell myeloma | 6·1 (5·7–6·6) | 3459 | 7·2 (6·6–7·8) | 1998 | 5·2 (4·6–5·7) | 1461 |
| Plasmacytoma | 0·5 (0·4–0·6) | 277 | 0·6 (0·5–0·9) | 180 | 0·3 (0·2–0·5) | 97 |
| Follicular lymphoma | 3·1 (2·8–3·4) | 1800 | 3·0 (2·6–3·4) | 840 | 3·3 (2·9–3·7) | 960 |
| Mantle cell lymphoma | 0·7 (0·6–0·9) | 395 | 0·9 (0·7–1·2) | 249 | 0·5 (0·4–0·7) | 146 |
| Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma | 7·7 (7·3–8·2) | 4371 | 8·3 (7·7–9·0) | 2326 | 7·1 (6·5–7·7) | 2045 |
| Burkitt lymphoma | 0·4 (0·3–0·5) | 222 | 0·6 (0·5–0·8) | 176 | 0·2 (0·1–0·3) | 46 |
| Lymphoproliferative disorder NOS | 1·8 (1·6–2·1) | 1025 | 2·0 (1·7–2·4) | 557 | 1·7 (1·4–2·0) | 468 |
| Precursor T-lymphoblastic leukaemia | 0·3 (0·2–0·4) | 173 | 0·4 (0·3–0·6) | 113 | 0·2 (0·1–0·3) | 60 |
| T-cell leukaemia | 0·4 (0·3–0·5) | 204 | 0·4 (0·2–0·5) | 100 | 0·4 (0·2–0·5) | 104 |
| T-cell lymphoma | 1·1 (0·9–1·3) | 639 | 1·3 (1·1–1·6) | 372 | 0·9 (0·7–1·2) | 267 |
| Lymphocyte predominant nodular Hodgkin | 0·3 (0·2–0·4) | 185 | 0·4 (0·3–0·6) | 134 | 0·2 (0·1–0·3) | 50 |
| Classical Hodgkin lymphoma | 2·5 (2·3–2·8) | 1463 | 2·7 (2·3–3·1) | 752 | 2·4 (2·1–2·8) | 711 |
Estimated by applying HMRN sex and age (5-year strata) specific rates to equivalent UK strata (Census Dissemination Unit & Office for National Statistics, 2009).
Not otherwise specified.
Fig 4Sex rate ratios: Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008.
Fig 5Age at diagnosis distributions: Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008.
Fig 6Kaplan–Meier survival estimates for (A) AML patients by ICD-O-3 subtype and (B) for AML not otherwise specified (NOS) patients according to FLT3 length mutation status: Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008.
Fig 7International Prognostic Index (IPI) derivation from components in diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL): Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008. (ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group).
First-line trial recruitment distributed by age and diagnosis: Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008
| Age (years) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 0–14 | 15–29 | 30–44 | 45–59 | 60–74 | 75+ | ||
| All Diagnoses | Total | 8355 | 158 | 242 | 451 | 1380 | 3098 | 3026 |
| Trial (%) | 7·2 | 59·5 | 24·0 | 14·2 | 9·6 | 6·4 | 1·9 | |
| Precursor B-lymphoblastic leukaemia | Total | 137 | 73 | 15 | 17 | 13 | 14 | 5 |
| Trial (%) | 68·6 | 89·0 | 86·7 | 52·9 | 46·2 | 7·1 | 0 | |
| Precursor T-lymphoblastic leukaemia | Total | 43 | 18 | 13 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Trial (%) | 55·8 | 83·3 | 61·5 | 0 | 50·0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Acute myeloid leukaemia | Total | 570 | 18 | 37 | 53 | 89 | 169 | 204 |
| Trial (%) | 34·4 | 61·1 | 73·0 | 64·2 | 55·1 | 34·9 | 7·8 | |
| Plasma cell myeloma | Total | 876 | – | – | 14 | 144 | 352 | 366 |
| Trial (%) | 13·7 | – | – | 35·7 | 21·5 | 16·5 | 7·1 | |
| Chronic myeloid leukaemia | Total | 137 | – | 8 | 19 | 46 | 42 | 22 |
| Trial (%) | 11·0 | – | 0 | 13·3 | 17·4 | 11·9 | 0 | |
| Mantle cell lymphoma | Total | 100 | – | – | – | 11 | 42 | 47 |
| Trial (%) | 8·0 | – | – | – | 18·2 | 11·9 | 2·1 | |
| Burkitt lymphoma | Total | 54 | 15 | 6 | 5 | 10 | 12 | 6 |
| Trial (%) | 7·4 | 0 | 33·3 | 20 | 0 | 0 | 16·7 | |
| Classical Hodgkin lymphoma | Total | 360 | 16 | 98 | 76 | 53 | 70 | 47 |
| Trial (%) | 5·8 | 0 | 7·1 | 5·3 | 7·6 | 5·7 | 4·3 | |
| Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma | Total | 1098 | 9 | 19 | 67 | 206 | 416 | 381 |
| Trial (%) | 4·5 | 11·1 | 5·3 | 4·5 | 8·7 | 5·5 | 0·8 | |
| Other haematological malignancies | Total | 4980 | 9 | 46 | 197 | 806 | 1978 | 1944 |
| Trial (%) | 1·5 | 22·2 | – | 3·1 | 1·6 | 2·2 | 0·5 | |
Fig 8Myeloma patient pathway of two patients: Haematological Malignancy Research Network (HMRN), 2004–2008.