About one-half of all Burkitt lymphoma (BL) patients are younger than 40 years, and one-third belong to the adolescent and young adult (AYA) subset, defined by an age between 15 and 25–40 years, based on selection criteria used in different reports. BL is an aggressive B-cell neoplasm displaying highly characteristic clinico-diagnostic features, the biologic hallmark of which is a translocation involving immunoglobulin and c-MYC genes. It presents as sporadic, endemic, or epidemic disease. Endemicity is pathogenetically linked to an imbalance of the immune system which occurs in African children infected by malaria parasites and Epstein–Barr virus, while the epidemic form strictly follows the pattern of infection by HIV. BL shows propensity to extranodal involvement of abdominal organs, bone marrow, and central nervous system, and can cause severe metabolic and renal impairment. Nevertheless, BL is highly responsive to specifically designed short-intensive, rotational multiagent chemotherapy programs, empowered by the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab. When carefully applied with appropriate supportive measures, these modern programs achieve a cure rate of approximately 90% in the average AYA patient, irrespective of clinical stage, which is the best result achievable in any aggressive lymphoid malignancy to date. The challenges ahead concern the following: optimization of management in underdeveloped countries, with reduction of diagnostic and referral-for-care intervals, and the applicability of currently curative regimens; the development of lower intensity but equally effective treatments for frail or immunocompromised patients at risk of death by complications; the identification of very high-risk patients through positron-emission tomography and minimal residual disease assays; and the assessment in these and the few refractory/relapsed ones of new monoclonals (ofatumumab, blinatumomab, inotuzumab ozogamicin) and new molecules targeting c-MYC and key proliferative steps of B-cell malignancies.
We conclude that CD4+ cell count at day +30 is a predictive factor for EBV DNAemia and may help identify patients requiring closer monitoring. Although only 3% of patients progressed to PTLD and were all successfully managed, EBV reactivation was associated with higher TRM, mainly because of infections.
The objective of this study was to determine risk factors and outcomes of infections by multidrug-resistant gram-negative (MDR GN) bacteria in 241 recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). The cumulative incidence of infections was 10.5% (95% CI, 12.0% to 25.8%), with 57% of infections occurring during the period of severe neutropenia (neutrophil count < .1 × 10/L). In multivariate analysis, allogeneic transplant and colonization with MDR GN bacteria at admission to the transplant unit were significantly associated with an increased risk of infection. Although we observed neither transplant-related mortality (TRM) nor deaths due to infections by MDR GN bacteria after autologous transplant, in the allogeneic setting a significant difference was reported in terms of overall survival (OS) and TRM between patients who developed infections and those who did not (1-year OS, 39% versus 68%; 1-year TRM, 42% versus 19%). In multivariate analysis, refractory disease and development of grades III to IV graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) were factors that affected both TRM and OS, whereas occurrence of infections by MDR GN pathogens significantly reduced OS. We conclude that eligibility to allogeneic HSCT in MDR GN bacteria carriers should be carefully evaluated together with all other factors that independently influence outcome (disease status, donor, and GVHD risk).
Brentuximab vedotin in combination with extended field radiotherapy as salvage treatment for primary refractory Hodgkin lymphoma To the Editor:Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is a B-cell derived lymphoid malignancy that accounts for about 10% of all lymphomas. Despite most of patients being cured by modern regimens of chemotherapy and radiotherapy (RT), nearly 20% show primary refractoriness or relapse after initial remission. In these cases second-line chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) consolidation leads in nearly 50% of patients to a long lasting remission.For patients with HL relapsed/refractory (R/R) to more than two lines of therapy, there is no standard approach and prognosis is generally dismal. Therapeutic options include palliative chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and transplant procedures. More recently, Brentuximab Vedotin (BV), an anti-CD30 monoclonal antibody conjugated with Auristatin, showed therapeutic activity in 75% of patients with HL R/R to ASCT, with 35% complete response (CR) and median progression-free survival (PFS) of nearly 6 months [1]. Limited data are available regarding the combination of BV with chemotherapeutic agents while, the combination of BV with RT has not been reported so far.A 45-year-old male, with no significant comorbidities, was referred at our Centre on August 2013 for onset of multiple lympho-adenopaties (size varying from 2 to 7 cm and involving bilateral the cervical area and the right axillary) associated with fever, night sweats, fatigue, mild cough, and mild skin itching. Total white blood cell count was 39 3 10 9 /L (90% neutrophils, 4% lymphocytes), while hemoglobin and platelet count were 98 g/L and 635 3 10 9 /L, respectively; erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 91 mm/hr. After lateral cervical lymphonode biopsy and standard staging, the patient was diagnosed to have a sclero-nodular, classic HL, stage IIIs (spleen) B. The patient was started on standard ABVD chemotherapy program (Dacarbazine, Bleomycin, Vinblastine, and Doxorubicin) with rapid resolution of systemic symptoms and lymphonodes disappearance. A CT-PET evaluation after two cycles showed a picture of response with FDG uptake lower than liver (Deauville Score 3).After the fourth planned ABVD course, the patient had evidence of supradiaphragmatic progression with recurrence of right supraclavicular, axilla, and mediastinal involvement. A lymphonode biopsy confirmed the initial diagnosis of scleronodular classic HL. The patient was
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