Results of Little or No Treatment for Lymphocyte-Predominant Hodgkin Disease in Children and Adolescents

Abstract
The nodular lymphocyte-predominant form of Hodgkin disease (LPHD) is a distinct clinicopathologic entity with a favorable prognosis. To see if children and adolescents could be spared the adverse sequelae of treatment, the authors adopted a policy of little or no treatment of localized LPHD in 1989. Presentation, pathology, and outcomes were reviewed for 15 consecutive children and adolescents with LPHD seen at a single institution since 1989. One patient was lost to follow-up and two patients were seen only once in consultation and treated elsewhere. These three cases were excluded, leaving twelve: nine males and three females, ranging in age at diagnosis from 2 to 17 years (median 11). Eleven of the 12 had stage I disease, and 1 had stage II. Six received no treatment following excisional biopsy, while five received a brief treatment with chemotherapy only. One was initially treated with involved field radiotherapy (IFRT) due to an initially imprecise histologic diagnosis of classic Hodgkin disease. All patients are alive, without evidence of disease, for periods ranging from 2 to 13+ years after diagnosis (median 6 years). One patient recurred locally with LPHD 6 years after initial brief chemotherapy and was then treated with IFRT, achieving a prolonged second remission. Children and adolescents with localized LPHD have an excellent prognosis and may be safely approached either with a wait-and-see attitude of no initial therapy after initial adenectomy or with less aggressive treatments.