| Literature DB >> 26610571 |
Jean A Yared1, Amy S Kimball2.
Abstract
Adult T cell leukemia-lymphoma is a rare disease with a high mortality rate, and is challenging for the clinician. Early allogeneic stem cell transplant can confer durable remission. As novel therapeutic agents become available to treat T cell malignancies, it is increasingly important that medical oncologists, hematologists, and hematopathologists recognize and accurately diagnose adult T cell leukemia-lymphoma. There is no uniform standard of treatment of adult T cell leukemia-lymphoma, and clinical trials remain critical to improving outcomes. Here we present one management approach based on the recent advances in treatment for adult T cell leukemia-lymphoma patients.Entities:
Keywords: ATL; ATLL; HTLV-1; adult T cell leukemia-lymphoma; allogeneic; antiviral treatment; chemotherapy; transplantation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26610571 PMCID: PMC4695893 DOI: 10.3390/cancers7040893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
The Shimoyama Classification.
| Acute ^ (Leukemic) | ATL Lymphoma | Chronic Unfav * | Chronic Fav | Smoldering | Pre-ATL | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-HTLV-1 Ab | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| Circulating ATL cells | + | - | + | + | + | + |
| Lymphocytosis (ALC > 4000) | Variable | No | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Circulating abnormal lymphocytes | Variable | ≤1% | Variable | Variable | ≥5% or <5% if ATL lesion(s) in the skin and/or lung | |
| LDH | Variable | Variable | <2× ULN, or * | normal | ≤1.5 ULN | normal |
| Calcium level | Variable | Variable | <11.0 | normal | normal | normal |
| Rash | Variable | Variable | Variable | Variable | Variable | No |
| Lymphadenopathy | Variable | >1.5 cm | Variable | Variable | No | No |
| Organomegaly | Variable | Variable | Mild | Mild | No | No |
| BUN | >ULN | NL | ||||
| Albumin | <LLN | NL | ||||
| CNS involvement | +/− | +/− | No | No | No | No |
| Bone lesions | +/− | +/− | No | No | No | No |
| Ascites | +/− | +/− | No | No | No | No |
| Pleural effusion | +/− | +/− | No | No | No | No |
| GI tract | +/− | +/− | No | No | No | No |
^ Acute type ATL is an exclusion diagnosis after ruling out other types of ATL; * Unfavorable Chronic subtype is distinguished from favorable by at least one of: high LDH, high BUN or low albumin.
Baseline evaluation of newly diagnosed ATL patient.
| Physical Examination including full skin exam and assessment of adenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly |
| PET/CT |
| Skeletal survey (for assessment of bone lytic lesions) |
| ECHO or MUGA (to rule-out cardiac involvement and before initiating anthracycline-based chemotherapy) |
| CBC with differential |
| Chemistry panel including Calcium (assessment of hypercalcemia) |
| Peripheral blood smear (for assessment of circulating lymphocytes with “flower-like” nuclei) |
| LDH, uric acid |
| HTLV-1 quantitative DNA PCR |
| Troponin |
| HLA typing |
| CMV serology |
| G6PD |
| Bone marrow aspirate, biopsy, and cytogenetics |
| Transplantation evaluation |
Figure 1ATL treatment algorithm.