Mihaljević B, Jancić-Nedeljkov R, Sretenović M, Milivojević G, Janković S, Petrović M
Institute of Haematology, Clinical Centre of Serbia, Belgrade.
Srp Arh Celok Lek. 1998 Sep-Oct;126(9-10):345-8.
The Working Formulation Classification (for clinical use) divides non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), according to the nature of the disease and response to therapy into the low, medium and high risk lymphomas. Although these subgroups include different pathohistological types of NHL, they are considered sufficiently homogenous for joint therapy planning [1]. The first generation protocol (CHOP) managed to achieve complete remission (CR) in 50-55% of patients with 30-35% of survival rate [2]. A large four-branch comparative study of SWOG group compared CHOP as the first generation protocol with the third generation protocols ProMACE CytaBOM, m-BACOD and MCOD-D. The results have shown a similar CR and survival rates, so that CHOP is considered a gold standard for the treatment of aggressive NHL [6]. In the light of individual reports stating a high CR rate in the treatment of aggressive NHL by ProMACE CytaBOM [3-5] we present our experience and observations related to the use of this protocol.
Over the period from 1991 through May 1996 at the Department of Lymphoproliferative Diseases, Institute of Haematology, Clinical Centre of Serbia in Belgrade, we treated 25 patients with pathohistologic evidence of medium to high risk lymphomas, where cases of lymphoblast lymphoma and Burkit's lymphoma were excluded. The median follow-up was 27 months (maximum 63 months).
Four of 25 patients were > 60 years. Three of these died. Pathohistological analysis revealed that of 20 cases of medium risk aggressive lymphoma five had diffuse, small cleaved cells, 7 had diffuse mixed and 8 diffuse centroblast cells. Although diffuse NHL with small cleaved cells is classified into clinically indolent lymphomas, two of five patients were in the fourth clinical stage, and three of five patients had a large tumorous mass. In the high risk group five patients had immunoblast lymphoma. Karnofsky index was high in 20/25. According to Ann Arbor criteria 19/25 patients were in IVCS and 7/25 had a large tumour mass. Most patients had clinical symptoms (21/25). Extranodal localization was confirmed in 19 patients. Bone marrow and hepatic infiltrations were most common: 9 and 6 patients, respectively. Eleven patients had a single extranodal localization, while 8 had 2 or more. The median follow-up was 27 months (maximum 63 months), and 21/25 (84%) patients responded to therapy (CR + PR). Complete remission was achieved in 14 patients (56%), and PR in 7 (28%) patients. In the CR group two died, and relapse developed in one after 28 months. In 11 cases CR is maintained. The average duration of CR was 16 months (3-38 months), and PR was maintained for 6 months (20 months in one case). The average survival was 24.5 months (range 3-53).
The fact that a half of adult patients with disseminated aggressive NHL can be cured with combined chemotherapy is the major oncological achievement in the last 20 years. The protocol combines 4-8 drugs, and the joint report of the SFOG group for lymphoma in over 1200 patients with lymphoma has shown that the second and third generation protocols are not more effective than the standard CHOP or CHOPBleom protocols [6]. The optimum therapeutic protocol in the treatment of aggressive lymphoma is still unpredictable due to the fact that it is inadequate to compare the results of individual institutions with the results of collaborative groups; there is also a significant difference in the prognostic factors in different research groups; there is no sufficient complete and published results that suggest the lower CR than the original reports (which may be related to the evaluation of tumour and remission). There are not sufficient data on the incidence of secondary carcinoma and leukaemia [1]. The decision on the therapy should be based on two lines of information: those related to each particular patient (age, associated diseases) and those related to the tumour (large mass, immunophenotyping, cytoge
工作方案分类(用于临床)根据疾病性质和对治疗的反应将非霍奇金淋巴瘤(NHL)分为低、中、高风险淋巴瘤。尽管这些亚组包括不同病理组织学类型的NHL,但它们被认为在联合治疗计划中具有足够的同质性[1]。第一代方案(CHOP)在50 - 55%的患者中实现了完全缓解(CR),生存率为30 - 35%[2]。SWOG组的一项大型四分支比较研究将第一代方案CHOP与第三代方案ProMACE CytaBOM、m - BACOD和MCOD - D进行了比较。结果显示CR率和生存率相似,因此CHOP被认为是治疗侵袭性NHL的金标准[6]。鉴于个别报告称ProMACE CytaBOM治疗侵袭性NHL的CR率较高[3 - 5],我们介绍我们使用该方案的经验和观察结果。
1991年至1996年5月期间,在贝尔格莱德塞尔维亚临床中心血液学研究所淋巴增殖性疾病科,我们治疗了25例有中高风险淋巴瘤病理组织学证据的患者,其中排除了淋巴母细胞淋巴瘤和伯基特淋巴瘤病例。中位随访时间为27个月(最长63个月)。
25例患者中有4例年龄大于60岁。其中3例死亡。病理组织学分析显示,20例中风险侵袭性淋巴瘤患者中,5例为弥漫性小裂细胞型,7例为弥漫性混合型,8例为弥漫性中心母细胞型。尽管伴有小裂细胞的弥漫性NHL被归类为临床惰性淋巴瘤,但5例患者中有2例处于临床IV期,5例患者中有3例有大的肿瘤肿块。高风险组中有5例患者为免疫母细胞淋巴瘤。25例患者中有20例卡诺夫斯基指数较高。根据安阿伯标准,25例患者中有19例处于IV期,25例中有7例有大的肿瘤肿块。大多数患者有临床症状(25例中有21例)。19例患者证实有结外定位。骨髓和肝脏浸润最为常见,分别有9例和6例患者。11例患者有单个结外定位,而8例有2个或更多。中位随访时间为27个月(最长63个月),25例患者中有21例(84%)对治疗有反应(CR + PR)。14例患者实现了完全缓解(56%),7例患者实现部分缓解(PR,28%)。CR组中有2例死亡,1例在28个月后复发。11例患者维持CR状态。CR的平均持续时间为16个月(3 - 38个月),PR维持6个月(1例为20个月)。平均生存期为24.5个月(范围3 - 53个月)。
半数播散性侵袭性NHL成年患者可通过联合化疗治愈,这是过去20年主要的肿瘤学成就。该方案联合使用4 - 8种药物,SFOG组关于1200多名淋巴瘤患者的联合报告显示,第二代和第三代方案并不比标准CHOP或CHOP - Bleom方案更有效[6]。由于将个别机构的结果与协作组的结果进行比较是不够的;不同研究组的预后因素也存在显著差异;没有足够完整和已发表的结果表明CR低于原始报告(这可能与肿瘤评估和缓解评估有关);关于继发性癌和白血病的发病率没有足够的数据[1]。治疗决策应基于两方面信息:与每个特定患者相关的信息(年龄、相关疾病)和与肿瘤相关的信息(大肿块、免疫表型、细胞遗传学……)(原文此处不完整)