BACKGROUND: Central nervous system (CNS) involvement in mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is uncommon, and the manifestations and natural history are not well described. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We present the data on 57 patients with MCL who developed CNS involvement, from a database of 1396 consecutively treated patients at 14 institutions. RESULTS: The crude incidence of CNS involvement was 4.1%, with 0.9% having CNS involvement at diagnosis. Blastoid histology, B-symptoms, elevated lactate dehydrogenase, Eastern Cooperative Group performance status ≥2 and a high Mantle Cell Lymphoma International Prognostic Index score were enriched in the cohort with CNS involvement, and the presence of ≥1 of these features defined a high-risk subset (an actuarial risk of CNS involvement 15% at 5 years) in a single-institution subset. The median time to CNS relapse was 15.2 months, and the median survival from time of CNS diagnosis was 3.7 months. The white blood cell count at diagnosis <10.9 × 10⁹/l, treatment of CNS involvement with high-dose anti-metabolites, consolidation with stem cell transplant and achievement of complete response were all associated with improved survival. CONCLUSIONS: In MCL, CNS involvement is uncommon, although some features may predict risk. Once manifest outlook is poor; however, some patients who receive intensive therapy survive longer than 12 months.
BACKGROUND: Central nervous system (CNS) involvement in mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is uncommon, and the manifestations and natural history are not well described. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We present the data on 57 patients with MCL who developed CNS involvement, from a database of 1396 consecutively treated patients at 14 institutions. RESULTS: The crude incidence of CNS involvement was 4.1%, with 0.9% having CNS involvement at diagnosis. Blastoid histology, B-symptoms, elevated lactate dehydrogenase, Eastern Cooperative Group performance status ≥2 and a high Mantle Cell Lymphoma International Prognostic Index score were enriched in the cohort with CNS involvement, and the presence of ≥1 of these features defined a high-risk subset (an actuarial risk of CNS involvement 15% at 5 years) in a single-institution subset. The median time to CNS relapse was 15.2 months, and the median survival from time of CNS diagnosis was 3.7 months. The white blood cell count at diagnosis <10.9 × 10⁹/l, treatment of CNS involvement with high-dose anti-metabolites, consolidation with stem cell transplant and achievement of complete response were all associated with improved survival. CONCLUSIONS: In MCL, CNS involvement is uncommon, although some features may predict risk. Once manifest outlook is poor; however, some patients who receive intensive therapy survive longer than 12 months.
Entities:
Keywords:
central nervous system; mantle cell lymphoma; prognosis
Authors: Simon Rule; Martin Dreyling; Andre Goy; Georg Hess; Rebecca Auer; Brad Kahl; Nora Cavazos; Black Liu; Shiyi Yang; Fong Clow; Jenna D Goldberg; Darrin Beaupre; Jessica Vermeulen; Mark Wildgust; Michael Wang Journal: Br J Haematol Date: 2017-08-18 Impact factor: 6.998
Authors: Preetesh Jain; Shaojun Zhang; Rashmi Kanagal-Shamanna; Chi Young Ok; Krystle Nomie; Graciela Nogueras Gonzalez; Omarya Gonzalez-Pagan; Holly A Hill; Hun Ju Lee; Luis Fayad; Jason Westin; Loretta Nastoupil; Frederick Hagemeister; Wendy Chen; Onyeka Oriabure; Maria Badillo; Changying Jiang; Yao Yixin; Shaoying Li; Guilin Tang; C Cameron Yin; Keyur P Patel; Leonard Jeffrey Medeiros; Ranjit Nair; Sairah Ahmed; Swaminathan P Iyer; Selvi Thirumurthi; Richard Champlin; Guofan Xu; Pan Tinsu; David Santos; Ruiping Wang; Guangchun Han; Jianhua Zhang; Xingzhi Song; Sattva Neelapu; Jorge Romaguera; Andy Futreal; Christopher Flowers; Nathan Fowler; Linghua Wang; Michael L Wang Journal: Blood Adv Date: 2020-03-24