THE PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE OF THE IMMUNOTYPE IN DIFFUSE LARGE-CELL LYMPHOMA - A COMPARATIVE-STUDY OF THE T-CELL AND B-CELL PHENOTYPE
- 1 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 72 (2) , 436-441
Abstract
The clinical significance of immunophenotyping of the non-Hodgkin''s lymphomas is controversial. Therefore, we conducted the present study of 103 consecutively accrued diffuse large-cell lymphoma (DLCL) patients to define, independently of histologic subtypes, the prognostic importance of phenotyping. We used an extensive panel of monoclonal antibodies to T- and B-cell antigens to assign all patients immunologically into the T-cell (20 patients) or B-cell group (83 patients). The only significant differences in pretreatment clinical variables between the two patient groups were the higher frequency of bulky disease (> 10 cm) in B-cell patients (P = .008) and more frequent skin involvement in the T-cell group (P .ltoreq. .001). Multiagent doxorubicin-containing chemotherapy regimens were employed as initial therapy in over 83% of the patients in each group. Our study revealed that disease-free survival (DFS) was significantly shorter in the T-cell patients than in the B-cell DLCL patients (median DFS, 10.8 months for T-cell and 42.7 months for B-cell; P = .01 log rank). No patient with T-cell DLCL remained disease free for longer than 2 years, whereas 55% of the B-cell group were disease free at 2 years. Univariate and multivariate analyses of all major prognostic factors of DFS suggest that the T-cell phenotype indicates an incurable subset of DLCL patients. Although the B-cell group had a twofold advantage in median survival (35 months v 18 months), actuarial overall survival was not significantly different between the two patient groups (P = .23). Our results indicate the need for new approaches in the search for a curative treatment for T-cell DLCL.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Brief Chemotherapy and Involved Field Radiation Therapy for Limited-Stage, Histologically Aggressive LymphomaAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1987
- MACOP-B Chemotherapy for the Treatment of Diffuse Large-Cell LymphomaAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1985
- Surface marker and histopathologic correlation with long-term survival in advanced large-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphomaCancer, 1981
- IMMUNOBLASTIC SARCOMA OF T-CELL VERSUS B-CELL ORIGIN .1. CLINICAL-FEATURES1981
- T-cell lymphomas of large cell type. A variety of malignant lymphomas: “Histiocytic” and mixed lymphocytic-“histiocytic”Cancer, 1980
- Malignant Lymphoma, T-cell Type: A Distinct Morphologic Variant with Large Multilobated Nuclei, with a Report of Four CasesAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1979
- Surface phenotyping, histology and the nature of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 157 patientsBritish Journal of Cancer, 1979
- Predictability of immunologic phenotype of malignant lymphomas by conventional morphology. A study of 60 casesCancer, 1979
- Malignant lymphoma of peripheral T-lymphocyte origin.Immunologic, pathologic, and clinical features in six patientsCancer, 1977
- Hydroxyldaunomycin (adriamycin) combination chemotherapy in malignant lymphomaCancer, 1976