Specht Lena
Department of Oncology, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Blegdamsvej 9, 2100, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Hematology, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Blegdamsvej 9, 2100, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Curr Treat Options Oncol. 2016 Jan;17(1):4. doi: 10.1007/s11864-015-0377-x.
Radiation therapy (RT) is one of the most effective agents available in the treatment of lymphomas. However, it is a local treatment, and today, with systemic treatments assuming a primary role for induction of response, RT is primarily used for consolidation. For advanced stage lymphomas, the indications for the use of RT have been questioned and debated, and proper randomized evidence is sparse. RT has significant long-term side effects, and the very extended RT fields of the past yielded unacceptable toxicity in many patients. Modern advanced imaging and conformal RT techniques now enable treatment of larger and anatomically more challenging target volumes with much less radiation to normal tissues and consequently much lower risks of long-term complications. The modern concept of involved site radiation therapy (ISRT) has now been accepted as standard in lymphomas. In advanced Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), RT to residual disease and/or initial bulk benefits some patients, depending on the chemotherapy regimen used. The more intensive the chemotherapy regimen, the fewer patients benefit from RT. In advanced aggressive non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), most of the evidence comes from the most common type, the diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). In patients treated with modern immunochemotherapy, RT to initial bulky disease or extralymphatic involvement is beneficial. For both HL and aggressive NHL, RT to residual masses after systemic treatment is of benefit. The role of PET in the evaluation and indication for RT to residual masses has not been tested in randomized trials. In advanced indolent NHL, very low dose RT offers excellent palliation with very few side effects. Modern RT in advanced lymphomas warrants further evaluation in randomized trials.
放射治疗(RT)是治疗淋巴瘤最有效的手段之一。然而,它是一种局部治疗方法,如今,随着全身治疗在诱导缓解方面发挥主要作用,RT主要用于巩固治疗。对于晚期淋巴瘤,RT的使用指征一直受到质疑和争论,且缺乏适当的随机对照证据。RT具有显著的长期副作用,过去广泛的放疗野在许多患者中产生了难以接受的毒性。现代先进的成像技术和适形放疗技术现在能够治疗更大且解剖结构更具挑战性的靶区,同时对正常组织的辐射更少,因此长期并发症的风险也更低。现代受累部位放射治疗(ISRT)的概念现已被接受为淋巴瘤的标准治疗方法。在晚期霍奇金淋巴瘤(HL)中,根据所使用的化疗方案,对残留病灶和/或初始大包块进行RT对部分患者有益。化疗方案越强,从RT中获益的患者越少。在晚期侵袭性非霍奇金淋巴瘤(NHL)中,大多数证据来自最常见的类型,即弥漫性大B细胞淋巴瘤(DLBCL)。在接受现代免疫化疗的患者中,对初始大包块疾病或结外受累部位进行RT是有益的。对于HL和侵袭性NHL,全身治疗后对残留肿块进行RT均有益处。PET在评估残留肿块RT的指征方面的作用尚未在随机试验中得到验证。在晚期惰性NHL中,极低剂量RT能提供极佳的姑息治疗,且副作用极少。晚期淋巴瘤的现代RT值得在随机试验中进一步评估。