| Literature DB >> 34758074 |
Elise A Olsen1, Sean Whittaker2, Rein Willemze3, Lauren Pinter-Brown4, Francine Foss5, Larisa Geskin6, Lawrence Schwartz7, Steven Horwitz8, Joan Guitart9, John Zic10, Youn H Kim11, Gary S Wood12, Madeleine Duvic13, Wei Ai14, Michael Girardi15, Alejandro Gru16, Emmanuella Guenova17, Emmilia Hodak18, Richard Hoppe19, Werner Kempf20, Ellen Kim21, Mary Jo Lechowicz22, Pablo Ortiz-Romero23, Evangelia Papadavid24, Pietro Quaglino25, Mark Pittelkow26, H Miles Prince27, Jose Antonio Sanches28, Makoto Sugaya29, Maarten Vermeer3, Jasmine Zain30, Robert Knobler31, Rudolf Stadler32, Martine Bagot33, Julia Scarisbrick34.
Abstract
The number of patients with primary cutaneous lymphoma (PCL) relative to other non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHLs) is small and the number of subtypes large. Although clinical trial guidelines have been published for mycosis fungoides/Sézary syndrome, the most common type of PCL, none exist for the other PCLs. In addition, staging of the PCLs has been evolving based on new data on potential prognostic factors, diagnosis, and assessment methods of both skin and extracutaneous disease and a desire to align the latter with the Lugano guidelines for all NHLs. The International Society for Cutaneous Lymphomas (ISCL), the United States Cutaneous LymphomaConsortium (USCLC), and the Cutaneous Lymphoma Task Force of the European Organization for the Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) now propose updated staging and guidelines for the study design, assessment, endpoints, and response criteria in clinical trials for all the PCLs in alignment with that of the Lugano guidelines. These recommendations provide standardized methodology that should facilitate planning and regulatory approval of new treatments for these lymphomas worldwide, encourage cooperative investigator-initiated trials, and help to assess the comparative efficacy of therapeutic agents tested across sites and studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34758074 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2021012057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476