Cancer Medicine (Jan 2023)

The epidemiology and prognosis of patients with primary gastric T‐cell lymphoma in the SEER program

  • Minyue Zhang,
  • Fei Xiao,
  • Meisi Lin,
  • Mengping Chen,
  • Jian Hou,
  • Honghui Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.4936
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 84 – 98

Abstract

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Abstract Background Primary gastric T‐cell lymphoma (PG‐TCL) is a rare hematological malignancy with few data reported. The objective of this study is to investigate the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, and survivals of PG‐TCL. Methods Totally, 164 patients with PG‐TCL from 1975 to 2016 extracted from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program (SEER) database were analyzed. Kaplan–Meier method was applied to plot overall survival (OS) and cancer‐specific survival (CSS). The prognostic factors of OS and CSS were explored by Cox proportional hazard regression. Nomograms were constructed to predict survival possibilities. Results The age‐adjusted incidence rate of PG‐TCL was 0.0091 per 100,000 person‐years and increased with age. The median age at onset was 65 years old with male predominance. The major histological type was peripheral T‐cell lymphoma, NOS (63.4%). The 1‐, 2‐, and 5‐year OS were 45.5%, 34.7%, and 23.5%, respectively while the 1‐, 2‐, and 5‐year CSS were 47.4%, 37.3%, and 29.6%, respectively. Multivariate Cox analysis demonstrated that age at diagnosis, use of chemotherapy, and radiotherapy were the independent prognostic factors for OS. Chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy could significantly improve patients' OS compared with chemotherapy alone. Moreover, age at diagnosis and use of chemotherapy were also the independent prognostic factors for CSS. Nomograms for PG‐TCL were developed to predict 1‐, 2‐, and 5‐year OS possibilities. The predictability of nomograms was verified by high concordance index and good agreement with the predicted value in calibration plots. Conclusion PG‐TCL is a rare neoplasm with low incidence. Patients with PG‐TCL generally exhibited poor prognosis. Use of chemotherapy plus radiotherapy was associated with favorable OS.

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