Scientific Reports (Mar 2023)

MRI-based long-term follow-up of indolent orbital lymphomas after curative radiotherapy: imaging remission criteria and volumetric regression kinetics

  • Christian Hoffmann,
  • Christopher Mohr,
  • Patricia Johansson,
  • Anja Eckstein,
  • Andreas Huettmann,
  • Julia von Tresckow,
  • Sophia Göricke,
  • Cornelius Deuschl,
  • Christoph Poettgen,
  • Thomas Gauler,
  • Nika Guberina,
  • Sourour Moliavi,
  • Nikolaos Bechrakis,
  • Martin Stuschke,
  • Maja Guberina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-31941-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract We systematically analyzed the kinetics of tumor regression, the impact of residual lesions on disease control and the applicability of the Lugano classification in follow-up MRI of orbital non-Hodgkin lymphomas that were irradiated with photons. We retrospectively analyzed a total of 154 pre- and post-irradiation MRI datasets of 36 patients with low-grade, Ann-Arbor stage I, orbital non-Hodgkin lymphomas. Patients with restricted conjunctival involvement were excluded. Lymphoma lesions were delineated and volumetrically analyzed on T1-weighted sequences. Tumor residues were present in 91.2% of all cases during the first six months after treatment. Volumetric partial response rates (> 50% volume reduction) were 75%, 69.2%, and 50% at 12–24 months, 36–48 months and > 48 months after the end of treatment. The corresponding complete response (CR) rates according to the Lugano classification were 20%, 23.1% and 50%. During a median clinical follow-up of 37 months no significant differences in progression free survival (PFS) rates were observed between the CR and non-CR group (p = 0.915). A residual tumor volume below 20% of the pretreatment volume should be expected at long-term follow-up beyond one year after radiotherapy.