| Literature DB >> 25150257 |
Stefan K Barta1, Xiaonan Xue2, Dan Wang2, Jeannette Y Lee3, Lawrence D Kaplan4, Josep-Maria Ribera5, Albert Oriol5, Michele Spina6, Umberto Tirelli6, Francois Boue7, Wyndham H Wilson8, Christoph Wyen9, Kieron Dunleavy8, Ariela Noy10, Joseph A Sparano2.
Abstract
While the International Prognostic Index is commonly used to predict outcomes in immunocompetent patients with aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, HIV-infection is an important competing risk for death in patients with AIDS-related lymphomas. We investigated whether a newly created prognostic score (AIDS-related lymphoma International Prognostic Index) could better assess risk of death in patients with AIDS-related lymphomas. We randomly divided a dataset of 487 patients newly diagnosed with AIDS-related lymphomas and treated with rituximab-containing chemoimmunotherapy into a training (n=244) and validation (n=243) set. We examined the association of HIV-related and other known risk factors with overall survival in both sets independently. We defined a new score (AIDS-related lymphoma International Prognostic Index) by assigning weights to each significant predictor [age-adjusted International Prognostic Index, extranodal sites, HIV-score (composed of CD4 count, viral load, and prior history of AIDS)] with three risk categories similar to the age-adjusted International Prognostic Index (low, intermediate and high risk). We compared the prognostic value for overall survival between AIDS-related lymphoma International Prognostic Index and age-adjusted International Prognostic Index in the validation set and found that the AIDS-related lymphoma International Prognostic Index performed significantly better in predicting risk of death than the age-adjusted International Prognostic Index (P=0.004) and better discriminated risk of death between each risk category (P=0.015 vs. P=0.13). Twenty-eight percent of patients were defined as low risk by the ARL-IPI and had an estimated 5-year overall survival (OS) of 78% (52% intermediate risk, 5-year OS 60%; 20% high risk, 5-year OS 50%). Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25150257 PMCID: PMC4222464 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2014.111112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941