BMC Cancer (Apr 2021)

Nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma characteristics, management of primary and relapsed/refractory disease and outcome analysis: the first comprehensive report from the Middle East

  • Saad Akhtar,
  • M. Shahzad Rauf,
  • Yasser Khafaga,
  • Amani Al-Kofide,
  • Tusneem Ahmed M. Elhassan,
  • Mahmoud A. Elshenawy,
  • Juzer Nadri,
  • Ali Hassan Mushtaq,
  • Nasir Bakshi,
  • Mohammed Shamayel,
  • Suleiman Al-Sweedan,
  • Sohail Sarwar,
  • Irfan Maghfoor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-021-08074-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Background Nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL) is an uncommon variant of Hodgkin lymphoma. There is limited data on treatment, management of refractory and relapsed disease, and long-term outcome. Many registries or country-wide data reports are unable to provide detailed primary and subsequent management. We are reporting our observation on patient’s characteristics, management, and outcome. Methods This single-institution retrospective cohort analysis includes NLPHL patients seen from 1998 to July 2019. We used Fisher’s exact test, chi-square, and Kaplan-Meier (KM) method for various analyses. Results Two hundred patients were identified, (6.34% of all the HL). Male:female was 3:1. The median age at diagnosis was 22 years (4–79 years). Stage I-II in 145 (72.5%) cases. One hundred patients (50%) received chemotherapy, 68 (34%) chemotherapy + radiation therapy (RT); 87% of all chemotherapy was ABVD (adriamycin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine). Thirteen patients (6.5%) received RT alone and 16 (8%) had surgery alone. Complete response in 82%, partial response in 5.5% and progressive disease in 10.5%. The median follow is 60 months (5–246). Median 5 and 10 years overall survival (OS) is 94.8 and 92.4% (stages I-II, 97.7 and 97.7%, stage III-IV, 94.8 and 92.4%). Median event-free survival (EFS) is 62.3 and 54% respectively (stage I-II, 72 and 64%, stage III-IV, 36.4 and 18.2%). Stage I-II vs III-IV OS (p = < 0.001) and EFS (p = < 0.001) were significant. For stage I-II, 5 year EFS of chemotherapy + RT (83.3%) was superior to chemotherapy alone (60%, p = 0.008). Five year EFS for early favorable (80%), early unfavorable (60%), and advanced (36.4%) was significant (p = < 0.001). Eleven patients (5.5%) had high-grade transformation. Twenty-nine patients underwent HDC auto-SCT, all are alive (28 in remission). 25% of patients had pathologically proved nodal hyperplasia at some point in time. Conclusion OS of NLPHL is excellent and independent of treatment type. EFS is better for chemotherapy + RT than chemotherapy alone. Stem cell transplant in refractory / multiple relapses resulted in excellent disease control. There is a need to identify optimal treatment strategies accordingly to the risk stratification.