| Literature DB >> 2399569 |
A Di Marco1, E Aitini, A Rizzotti, A Grandinetti, F Campostrini, F Smerieri.
Abstract
Forty-one patients suffering from primary non-Hodgkin lymphomas of the digestive tract have been observed over a period of 15 years. The primary sites were: the stomach in 27 cases, the small bowel in 8, the ileocecal region in 5, and the mesentery in 1. Patients were staged according to the modified Ann Arbor staging system proposed by Mushoff (20). Four kinds of management were employed: 1) surgery alone; 2) surgery and radiotherapy; 3) surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy; 4) surgery and chemotherapy. One patient was treated by chemotherapy alone. Radiotherapy was administered postoperatively and chemotherapy after or during radiotherapy. Generally, 2 opposed fields largely encompassing the tumor area and lomboaortic nodes if necessary, up to 25-30 Gy to the midline, were employed, with a booster dose up to 40-45 Gy to the involved area. Total abdominal irradiation was never employed. No clear difference emerged in survival rate nor in relapse-free survival among the four subgroups, but patients who underwent complete resection fared better than incompletely resected patients. However, these two subgroups were not homogeneous. A clear difference in survival rate did not emerge between patients treated or not with postoperative chemotherapy, whereas patients who relapsed after complete remission or those who never had complete remission had a poor prognosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1990 PMID: 2399569 DOI: 10.1177/030089169007600415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tumori ISSN: 0300-8916