This is a retrospective study of Hodgkin's disease in children less than 15 years of age who were registered at Tata Memorial Hospital in India from January 1985 through December 1990. Clinicopathologic characteristics and response were evaluated in 147 patients and survival was calculated in 187. There were 126 boys and 21 girls (6:1). All patients were treated with combination chemotherapy and involved field radiotherapy. The COPP schedule was given to 108 patients. COPP/ABVD to 33, and ABVD to 6. Ninety-three patients (63%) had stage I or II disease and 54 (37%) had stage III or IV disease. B symptoms were observed in 65 patients (56%) and bulky disease in 40 (27%). Histologically, the most common subtype was mixed cellularity, seen in 95 patients (65%). Complete response was observed in 136 (89%), partial response in 6 (4%), and there were 4 treatment-related deaths. Relapse has been observed in 11%. Seven-year actuarial survival was 73% and event-free survival was 64%. Median survival has not yet been reached, with a median follow-up of 36 months.
This suggests that empirical antibiotic therapy needs to be changed on the basis of the age of the patient. It also appears that combination therapy is essential for the empirical treatment of infections in elderly patients with cancer.
During 1984-1986, a total of 128 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were treated with an induction-consolidation regimen consisting of doxorubicin, vincristine, cytosine-arabinoside, and prednisolone. One hundred two (80%) patients belonged to high-risk group. The complete remission rate for all the patients was 91%. The event-free survival at 5 years was 32.0% +/- 23%. On multivariate analysis the event-free survival and disease-free survival was not altered by age, sex, WBC count, platelet count, LDH level, and surface phenotype. Infection due to prolonged marrow aplasia was a common complication, leading to mortality of 8 patients during induction and 33 patients during first remission. The relapse rate has been 36% (42 patients). The predominance of high-risk ALL in the Indian population underscores the need for intensive therapy. Improved supportive care during induction and remission seems essential to decrease therapy-related mortality, leading to improved survival.
The use of empirical antibiotic combinations in the treatment of febrile neutropenic patients has decreased complication-related mortality in cancer patients. We have analyzed retrospectively 499 consecutive episodes of fever in 432 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia over a 5-year period. We have compared various antibiotic combinations used empirically in our study. Of the febrile episodes, 92% were neutropenic. The most common site of clinical documentation was the lung. The most common pathogen isolated in our setting was Pseudomonas aeruginosa (27.27%). The overall response rate to first-line empirical antibiotic combination was seen in 61.92%, the best results being with ceftazidime and amikacin combination (65.69%). A uniform antibiotic policy resulted in a decrease in mortality, with the number of deaths decreasing significantly in the 1989 to 1991 era (P = 0.00000003). The other contributing factors were an improvement in the supportive care with a reduction in length of hospital stay during induction. Our fungal isolates demonstrated 11 patients with documented fungal infection with a positive outcome in 8 patients.
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