Cancers (Jan 2024)

Prognostic Impact of Serum β<sub>2</sub>-Microglobulin Levels in Hodgkin Lymphoma Treated with ABVD or Equivalent Regimens: A Comprehensive Analysis of 915 Patients

  • Theodoros P. Vassilakopoulos,
  • Maria Arapaki,
  • Panagiotis T. Diamantopoulos,
  • Athanasios Liaskas,
  • Fotios Panitsas,
  • Marina P. Siakantaris,
  • Maria Dimou,
  • Styliani I. Kokoris,
  • Sotirios Sachanas,
  • Marina Belia,
  • Chrysovalantou Chatzidimitriou,
  • Elianna A. Konstantinou,
  • John V. Asimakopoulos,
  • Kyriaki Petevi,
  • George Boutsikas,
  • Alexandros Kanellopoulos,
  • Alexia Piperidou,
  • Maria-Ekaterini Lefaki,
  • Angeliki Georgopoulou,
  • Anastasia Kopsaftopoulou,
  • Kalliopi Zerzi,
  • Ioannis Drandakis,
  • Maria N. Dimopoulou,
  • Marie-Christine Kyrtsonis,
  • Panayiotis Tsaftaridis,
  • Eleni Plata,
  • Eleni Variamis,
  • Gerassimos Tsourouflis,
  • Flora N. Kontopidou,
  • Kostas Konstantopoulos,
  • Gerassimos A. Pangalis,
  • Panayiotis Panayiotidis,
  • Maria K. Angelopoulou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16020238
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 2
p. 238

Abstract

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The significance of serum beta-2 microglobulin (sβ2m) in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is controversial. We analyzed 915 patients with HL, who were treated with ABVD or equivalent regimens with or without radiotherapy. Sβ2m levels were measured by a radioimmunoassay (upper normal limit 2.4 mg/L). Sequential cutoffs (1.8–3.0 by 0.1 mg/L increments, 3.5 and 4.0 mg/L) were tested along with ROC analysis. The median sβ2m levels were 2.20 mg/L and were elevated (>2.4 mg/L) in 383/915 patients (41.9%). Higher sβ2m was associated with inferior freedom from progression (FFP) at all tested cutoffs. The best cutoff was 2.0 mg/L (10-year FFP 83% vs. 70%, p = 0.001), which performed better than the 2.4 mg/L cutoff (“normal versus high”). In multivariate analysis, sβ2m > 2.0 mg/L was an independent adverse prognostic factor in the whole patient population. In multivariate overall survival analysis, sβ2m levels were predictive at 2.0 mg/L cutoff in the whole patient population and in advanced stages. Similarly, sβ2m > 2.0 mg/L independently predicted inferior HL-specific survival in the whole patient population. Our data suggest that higher sβ2m is an independent predictor of outcome in HL but the optimal cutoff lies within the normal limits (i.e., at 2.0 mg/L) in this predominantly young patient population, performing much better than a “normal versus high” cutoff set at 2.4 mg/L.

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