| Literature DB >> 33923026 |
Birgit Burkhardt1, Mary Taj2, Nathalie Garnier3, Veronique Minard-Colin4, Volkan Hazar5, Karin Mellgren6, Tomoo Osumi7, Alina Fedorova8, Natalia Myakova9, Jaime Verdu-Amoros10, Mara Andres11, Edita Kabickova12, Andishe Attarbaschi13, Alan Kwok Shing Chiang14, Eva Bubanska15, Svetlana Donska16, Lisa Lyngsie Hjalgrim17, Jacek Wachowiak18, Anna Pieczonka18, Anne Uyttebroeck19, Jelena Lazic20, Jan Loeffen21, Jochen Buechner22, Felix Niggli23, Monika Csoka24, Gergely Krivan25, Julia Palma26, G A Amos Burke27, Auke Beishuizen21, Kristin Koeppen1, Stephanie Mueller1, Heidi Herbrueggen1, Wilhelm Woessmann28, Martin Zimmermann29, Adriana Balduzzi30, Marta Pillon31.
Abstract
Despite poor survival, controversies remain in the treatment for refractory or relapsed pediatric non-Hodgkin lymphoma (r/r NHL). The current project aimed to collect international experience on the re-induction treatment of r/r NHL, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), risk factors associated with outcome, and to suggest treatment recommendations. Inclusion criteria were (i) refractory disease, disease progression or relapse of any NHL subtype except anaplastic large cell lymphoma, (ii) age < 18 years at initial diagnosis, (iii) diagnosis in/after January 2000. Data from 639 eligible patients were evaluable. The eight-year probability of overall survival was 34 ± 2% with highly significant differences according to NHL subtypes: 28 ± 3% for 254 Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia, 50 ± 6% for 98 diffuse large B-cell lymphomas, 57 ± 8% for 41 primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphomas, 27 ± 3% for 177 T-lymphoblastic lymphomas, 52 ± 10% for 34 precursor-B-cell lymphoblastic lymphomas and 30 ± 9% for 35 patients with rare NHL subtypes. Subtype-specific factors associated with survival and treatment recommendations are suggested. There were no survivors without HSCT, except in few very small subgroups. Conclusions: There is an urgent need to further improve survival in r/r NHL. The current study provides the largest real-world series, which underlines the role of HSCT and suggests treatment recommendations.Entities:
Keywords: children and adolescents; refractory and relapsed non-Hodgkin lymphoma; stem cell transplant
Year: 2021 PMID: 33923026 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13092075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639