We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Risk‐dependent curability of radiotherapy for elderly patients with early‐stage extranodal nasal‐type NK/T‐cell lymphoma: A multicenter study from the China Lymphoma Collaborative Group (CLCG).
- Authors
Chen, Bo; Zhu, Su‐Yu; Shi, Mei; Su, Hang; Wang, Ying; He, Xia; Xu, Li‐Ming; Yuan, Zhi‐Yong; Zhang, Li‐Ling; Wu, Gang; Qu, Bao‐Lin; Qian, Li‐Ting; Hou, Xiao‐Rong; Zhang, Fu‐Quan; Zhang, Yu‐Jing; Zhu, Yuan; Cao, Jian‐Zhong; Lan, Sheng‐Min; Wu, Jun‐Xin; Wu, Tao
- Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to determine the curability of early‐stage extranodal nasal‐type NK/T‐cell lymphoma (NKTCL) in response to radiotherapy and non‐anthracycline‐based chemotherapy in elderly patients. Methods: In this multicenter study from the China Lymphoma Collaborative Group (CLCG) database, 321 elderly patients with early‐stage NKTCL were retrospectively reviewed. Patients received radiotherapy alone (n = 87), chemotherapy alone (n = 59), or combined modality therapy (CMT, n = 175). Patients were classified into low‐ or high‐risk groups using four prognostic factors. Observed survival in the study cohort vs expected survival in age‐ and sex‐matched individuals from the general Chinese population was plotted using a conditional approach and subsequently compared using a standardized mortality ratio (SMR). Results: Radiotherapy conveyed a favorable prognosis and significantly improved survival compared to chemotherapy alone. The 5‐year overall survival (OS) and progression‐free survival (PFS) were 61.2% and 56.4%, respectively, for radiotherapy compared with 44.7% and 38.3%, respectively, for chemotherapy alone (P < 0.001). The combination of a non‐anthracycline‐based chemotherapy regimen and radiotherapy significantly improved PFS compared to combination of an anthracycline‐based chemotherapy regimen and radiotherapy (71.2% vs 44.2%, P = 0.017). Low‐risk patients following radiotherapy (SMR, 0.703; P = 0.203) and high‐risk patients who achieved PFS at 24 months (SMR, 1.490; P = 0.111) after radiotherapy showed survival equivalent to the general Chinese population. Conclusions: Our findings indicate a favorable curability for this malignancy in response to radiotherapy and non‐anthracycline‐based chemotherapy, providing a risk‐adapted follow‐up and counsel scheme in elderly patients. Radiotherapy and new chemotherapy regimens convey a favorable prognosis in a large cohort of 321 elderly patients with early‐stage NKTCL. Low‐risk patients following radiotherapy and high‐risk patients who achieved progression‐free survival at 24 months after radiotherapy exhibited survival equivalent to that of the general Chinese population.
- Subjects
COMBINED modality therapy; OLDER patients; RADIOTHERAPY safety; RADIOTHERAPY; PROGRESSION-free survival; EXTRANODAL NK-T-cell lymphoma
- Publication
Cancer Medicine, 2018, Vol 7, Issue 12, p5952
- ISSN
2045-7634
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/cam4.1849