Haematologica (Jan 2017)

Mediastinal gray zone lymphoma: clinico-pathological characteristics and outcomes of 99 patients from the Lymphoma Study Association

  • Clémentine Sarkozy,
  • Thierry Molina,
  • Hervé Ghesquières,
  • Anne-Sophie Michallet,
  • Jehan Dupuis,
  • Diane Damotte,
  • Franck Morsschauser,
  • Marie Parrens,
  • Laurent Martin,
  • Peggy Dartigues,
  • Aspasia Stamatoullas,
  • Pierre Hirsch,
  • Bettina Fabiani,
  • Krimo Bouabdallah,
  • Maria Gomes da Silva,
  • Marie Maerevoet,
  • Camille Laurent,
  • Bertrand Coiffier,
  • Gilles Salles,
  • Alexandra Traverse-Glehen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2016.152256
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102, no. 1

Abstract

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Mediastinal gray zone lymphoma, B-cell lymphomas with intermediate features between classical Hodgkin lymphoma and primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma, have not been well described in the literature. We report the clinical characteristics and outcomes of a large retrospective series of 99 cases centrally reviewed by a panel of hematopathologists, with a consensus established for the diagnosis. Cases were defined as classical Hodgkin lymphoma-like morphology (64.6%) with primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma immunophenotype, primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma-like morphology (30.3%) with classical Hodgkin lymphoma or composite (5.1%) (synchronous occurrence of classical Hodgkin lymphoma and primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma). The median age was 32 years (13–83 years); 55% were women. Thirteen of 81 evaluable cases (16%) were Epstein-Barr virus-positive. Twenty-eight percent of patients presented primary refractory disease (progression under first-line treatment or relapse within one year). The 3-year event-free and overall survival rates were 63% and 80%, respectively. Patients treated with a standard regimen (RCHOP/ABVD) had worse event-free survival (P=0.003) and overall survival (P=0.02) than those treated with a dose-intensive chemotherapy (high-dose RCHOP/escalated BEACOPP). Rituximab added to chemotherapy was not associated with better event-free survival (P=0.55) or overall survival (P=0.88). Radiotherapy for patients in complete remission had no impact on event-free survival. In multivariate prognostic analysis, ECOG-PS and anemia were the strongest factors associated with a shorter event-free survival and overall survival, respectively. In conclusion, this report describes the largest series of mediastinal gray zone lymphoma. Our data suggest that a dose-intensive treatment might improve the outcome of this rare and aggressive disease.