3 research outputs found
Evaluation of two prognostic indices for adult Tācell leukemia/lymphoma in the subtropical endemic area, Okinawa, Japan
Aggressive adult Tācell leukemia/lymphoma (ATL) has an extremely poor prognosis and is hyperendemic in Okinawa, Japan. This study evaluated two prognostic indices (PIs) for aggressive ATL, the ATLāPI and Japan Clinical Oncology Group (JCOG)āPI, in a cohort from Okinawa. The PIs were originally developed using two different Japanese cohorts that included few patients from Okinawa. The endpoint was overall survival (OS). Multivariable Cox regression analyses in the cohort of 433 patients revealed that all seven factors for calculating each PI were statistically significant prognostic predictors. Threeāyear OS rates for ATLāPI were 35.9% (lowārisk, n = 66), 10.4% (intermediateārisk, n = 256), and 1.6% (highārisk, n = 111), and those for JCOGāPI were 22.4% (moderateārisk, n = 176) and 5.3% (highārisk, n = 257). The JCOGāPI moderateārisk group included both the ATLāPI lowā and intermediateārisk groups. ATLāPI more clearly identified the lowārisk patient subgroup than JCOGāPI. To evaluate the external validity of the two PIs, we also assessed prognostic discriminability among 159 patients who loosely met the eligibility criteria of a previous clinical trial. Threeāyear OS rates for ATLāPI were 34.5% (lowārisk, n = 42), 9.2% (intermediateārisk, n = 109), and 12.5% (highārisk, n = 8). Those for JCOGāPI were 22.4% (moderateārisk, n = 95) and 7.6% (highārisk, n = 64). The lowārisk ATLāPI group had a better prognosis than the JCOGāPI moderateārisk group, suggesting that ATLāPI would be more useful than JCOGāPI for establishing and examining novel treatment strategies for ATL patients with a better prognosis. In addition, strongyloidiasis, previously suggested to be associated with ATLārelated deaths in Okinawa, was not a prognostic factor in this study