76 research outputs found
FDGâPET/CT after two cycles of RâCHOP in DLBCL predicts complete remission but has limited value in identifying patients with poor outcome â final result of a UK National Cancer Research Institute prospective study
The UK National Cancer Research Institute initiated a prospective study (UKCRNâID 1760) to assess the prognostic value of early fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)âpositron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) in diffuse large Bâcell lymphoma (DLBCL). In total, 189 patients with DLBCL treated with RâCHOP (rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone) had baseline and postâcycleâ2 PET (PET2) within a quality assurance framework. Treatment decisions were based on CT; PET2 was archived for central blinded reporting after treatment completion. The association of PET2 response with endâofâtreatment CT, progressionâfree (PFS) and overall survival (OS) was explored. The endâofâtreatment complete response rate on CT was 83·9%, 75·0%, 70·5%, 40·4% and 36·4% for Deauville score (DS) 1 (n = 34), 2 (n = 39), 3 (n = 46), 4 (n = 56) and 5 (n = 14) (P < 0·001); and 64·1% and 50·0% for the maximum standardised uptake value (âSUVmax) of â„66% (n = 168) and <66% (n = 21), respectively (P = 0·25). After a median 5·4 years of followâup, the 5âyear PFS was 69·4%, 72·8%, 76·7%, 71·2% and 47·6% by DS 1â5 (P = 0·01); and 72·6% and 57·1% by âSUVmax of â„66% and <66% (P = 0·03), respectively. The association with DS remained in multivariable analyses, and was consistent for OS. Early complete metabolic response (DS 1â3) at interim PET/CT after two cycles of RâCHOP in DLBCL was associated with a higher endâofâtreatment complete and overall response rate; however, only DSâ5 patients had inferior PFS and OS
Stage I-II nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma: a multi-institutional study of adult patients by ILROG
Nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL) is an uncommon histologic variant, and the optimal treatment of stage I-II NLPHL is undefined. We conducted a multicenter retrospective study including patients â„16 years of age with stage I-II NLPHL diagnosed from 1995 through 2018 who underwent all forms of management, including radiotherapy (RT), combined modality therapy (CMT; RT+chemotherapy [CT]), CT, observation after excision, rituximab and RT, and single-agent rituximab. End points were progression-free survival (PFS), freedom from transformation, and overall survival (OS) without statistical comparison between management groups. We identified 559 patients with median age of 39 years: 72.3% were men, and 54.9% had stage I disease. Median follow-up was 5.5 years (interquartile range, 3.1-10.1). Five-year PFS and OS in the entire cohort were 87.1% and 98.3%, respectively. Primary management was RT alone (n = 257; 46.0%), CMT (n = 184; 32.9%), CT alone (n = 47; 8.4%), observation (n = 37; 6.6%), rituximab and RT (n = 19; 3.4%), and rituximab alone (n = 15; 2.7%). The 5-year PFS rates were 91.1% after RT, 90.5% after CMT, 77.8% after CT, 73.5% after observation, 80.8% after rituximab and RT, and 38.5% after rituximab alone. In the RT cohort, but not the CMT cohort, variant immunoarchitectural pattern and number of sites >2 were associated with worse PFS (P 2 (P = .0006). OS for patients with stage I-II NLPHL was excellent after all treatments
The importance of uptake time in FDG imaging of patients with lymphoma
EANM guidance recommends 60 minute uptake for FDG oncology scans, however uptake increases in several tumours beyond 60 minutes. The aim of this study was to determine the time course of FDG uptake in common lymphoma types after injection and how this might affect imaging assessment
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