Improved survival in patients with
early stage low-grade follicular lymphoma treated with radiation : A
Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database analysis
Thomas J. Pugh, Ari Ballonoff. Cancer. Volume 116, Issue 16, pages 3843–3851, 15 August 2010
External beam radiation therapy (RT) is
the standard treatment for stage I-II, grade 1-2 follicular
lymphoma. Because of an indolent natural history, some
advocate alternative management strategies, including
watchful waiting for this disease. The relative improvement
in outcomes for patients treated with and without RT has
never been tested in randomized trials. The Surveillance,
Epidemiology, and End Results database was queried for
adult patients with
stage I-II, grade 1-2 follicular lymphoma diagnosed
from 1973 to 2004. Retrievable patient data included age,
sex, race, stage, extranodal disease, and treatment with RT
within the first year after diagnosis. Actuarial overall
survival (OS) and disease-specific survival (DSS) were
analyzed.
RESULTS:
A total of 6568 patients were identified.
DSS at 5, 10, 15, and 20 years in the RT group was 90%, 79%,
68%, and 63% versus 81%, 66%, 57%, and 51% in the no RT
group (hazard ratio [HR], 0.61).
OS at 5, 10, 15, and 20 years in the RT group was 81%, 62%, 45%, and 35% versus 71%, 48%, 34%, and 23% in patients not receiving RT (HR, 0.68). On multivariate analysis, upfront RT remained independently associated with improved DSS (P < .0001, Cox HR, 0.65) and OS (P < .0001; Cox HR, 0.73). Lymphoma was the most common cause of death (52%). Only 34% of patients received upfront RT. CONCLUSIONS:
Upfront RT was associated with improved DSS and OS compared
with alternate management approaches, a benefit that
persisted over time. This benefit suggests that
watchful waiting with administration of salvage therapies on
progression/relapse do not compensate for inadequate initial
definitive treatment. Although it is the standard of care
for this disease, RT for early stage low-grade follicular
lymphoma is greatly underused in the US population;
increased use of upfront RT could prevent thousands of
deaths from lymphoma in these patients. Cancer 2010.
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