Of 498 patients with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL), 30 showed secondary central nervous system (CNS) involvement. Of these 30 patients, 26 had high-grade malignancy and 21 lymphoblastic lymphoma, mainly convoluted (n = 8) or Burkitt (n = 6) type according to the Kiel classification. In half of the 30 patients, CNS involvement was associated with progressive lymphoma. Bone marrow involvement was found in half of the patients before or at the time of the diagnosis of CNS involvement, which was 12 months (mean) after the diagnosis of NHL. Eight patients received CNS prophylaxis. Results of treatment for CNS involvement are poor (mean survival time from CNS involvement: 3.5 months). The Kiel classification allows good identification of patients at high risk of CNS lymphoma: systematic CNS prophylaxis is indicated only in the convoluted and Burkitt types. An efficient prophylaxis must be found and results must be confirmed by other studies.
A clinically homogeneous population of patients who presented with lymphoblastic lymphoma of convoluted nuclear type was isolated using a histopathological criterion that can easily be applied by trained pathologists. This disease type preferentially affects young male patients, in over half of whom there is initial mediastinal involvement. There is a tendency for the disease to become leukemic and to invade the central nervous system. In spite of heavy chemotherapy and early neuromeningeal prophylaxis, the prognosis is poor.
Thirty patients aged older than 70 years formed 6.9% of all cases of previously untreated Hodgkin's disease seen in Bordeaux Cancer Center over a 20‐year period. The subtype of mixed cellularity was predominant in this age group (P = 0.00035). One patient received no treatment; 20 patients received primary chemotherapy (14 polychemotherapy); all but 2 of the 18 patients in clinical Stages I or II received radical radiotherapy. Median survival for all patients is 15 months. In five cases the treatment could be held responsible for death. Eleven patients died of Hodgkin's disease within a 36‐month period. Five patients are alive and the nine other patients died from other causes. The disease‐free survival figures showed that one third of the patients could be considered as cured.
Between 1973 and 1977, 48 patients less than 65 years old with non-Hodgkin's malignant lymphoma (NHML) of poor prognosis (+/- high grade malignancy, +/- clinical stages III or IV, +/- first or repeated relapse) were included in a prospective clinical trial. After complete remission (CR), obtained with chemotherapy and radiotherapy, patients were randomized to receive bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) or no further therapy. BCG was administered in weekly scarifications up to 3 years. Forty-three patients are assessable. Twenty-four patients have relapsed: nine out of 21 in the BCG group, and 15 out of 22 in the control group. There is a significant difference in favor of the BCG group in disease-free survival (P = .03). Twenty-one patients have died, 18 from NHML: seven in the BCG group, and 11 in the control group. There is a significant difference in favor of the BCG group for overall survival at 10 years (P = .05). A multivariate analysis points out BCG as a significant prognostic factor. Adjuvant BCG may improve particularly disease-free survival and overall survival for patients with clinical stages I and II or intermediate- and high-grade malignancy. These results suggest that in patients less than 65 years old with NHML of poor prognosis, BCG may significantly increase disease-free survival and overall survival.
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