| Literature DB >> 34635964 |
Stefano Chiaravalli1, Andrea Ferrari2, Luca Bergamaschi2, Nadia Puma2, Giovanna Gattuso2, Giovanna Sironi2, Olga Nigro2, Virginia Livellara2, Elisabetta Schiavello2, Veronica Biassoni2, Marta Podda2, Cristina Meazza2, Filippo Spreafico2, Michela Casanova2, Monica Terenziani2, Roberto Luksch2, Maura Massimino2.
Abstract
Langerhans cell histiocytosis is rare in adults, and most of what we know about its diagnosis and treatment comes from pediatric studies. We report clinical findings and results of treatment in a retrospective series of 63 consecutive adult patients (18-76 years old), treated at our pediatric unit from 1990 to 2020 using the same approach as for children. Patients were classified as having single-system disease (SS-LCH) in 41 cases, which was unifocal in 34 of them and multifocal in 7, or multisystem disease (MS-LCH) in 17 and primary pulmonary (pLCH) in 5. Twenty patients also had diabetes insipidus. A "wait and see" strategy was recommended after biopsy/surgery for patients with unifocal SS-LCH. Systemic treatment was proposed for cases of SS-LCH involving "special sites" or with multifocal disease, and in cases of MS-LCH. EFS and OS for the cohort as a whole were 62.2% and 100%, respectively, at 5 years and 52.5% and 97.6% at 10 years. Three patients died due to the damage caused by the multiple therapies administered. The rate of disease reactivation was high (affecting 40% of cases), with several reactivations over the years despite multiple lines of treatment. Though clinical history of LCH may differ between adults and children, in the absence of specific, tailored protocols, clinical approach to adult cases may draw on pediatric experience. Patients with limited disease have a good prognosis without any need for systemic therapy. Potentially greater toxicity in adults of systemic treatments generally used in pediatric setting should be borne in mind.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Langerhans cell histiocytosis; Multimodal treatment; Prognostic factors
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34635964 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-021-04694-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673