Primary skeletal non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma in the pediatric age group
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Medical and Pediatric Oncology
- Vol. 20 (6) , 506-513
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mpo.2950200604
Abstract
The authors discuss rare primary skeletal non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma in 16 patients treated from 1973 to 1989. The symptoms of these patients related to bone lesions in 95% of the cases. These bone lesions were monostotic or polyostotic, with or without regional and distant metastases. The locations of these lesions were long bones in 13 patients, pelvic bones in seven patients, and skull and vertebral bodies in two patients. The anatomical locations of these lesions in the bones were diaphysis alone in one patient, epiphysis in two patients, metaphysis in three patients, and a combination of diaphyseal, epiphyseal, and metaphyseal lesions in seven patients. Extraskeletal involvement was present in nine patients; extraskeletal sites included regional or distant lymph node involvement in seven cases, the mediastinum in two, lung nodules in two patients, the skin and subcutaneous regions in four patients; bone marrow in three patients, and peripheral nervous system (PNS) in one patient. Two patients had stage I disease, three had stage II disease, eight had stage III disease, and three had stage IV disease. The majority of patients had large noncleaved cell diffuse lymphomas or DHL by Rappaport classification. All patients were treated with the LSA2‐L2 protocol; six patients received radiation therapy to the affected bone, and ten patients received no radiation therapy. Three patients failed on treatment within the first 4 months of therapy. Two patients developed a second tumor, one in the radiation therapy field and the other in a patient who received no radiation therapy. Eleven patients are alive without evidence of disease, with a median observation time of 6.5 years. The event‐free survival for the 16 patients receiving LSA2‐L2 was 73%, and the lymphoma‐free survival was 81%. Extension of disease to multiple sites or location of the primary site was not of prognostic significance, but the finding of central nervous system (CNS), PNS, or bone marrow disease at diagnosis was. Whether the skeletal lesions were uni‐ or multifocal, with regional or distant metastases, the prognosis for lymphoma‐free survival was good. The role of radiation therapy for all patients and intensive treatment for earlystage disease is discussed. The authors conclude that chemotherapy is the most important modality of treatment for any stage, histology, or location of the tumor. This chemotherapy shou ld include drugs that have been shown to be effective in the treatment of pediatric lymphoma, such as cyclophosphamide, cytosine arabinoside, vincristine, methotrexate, and daunomycin, in dosages sufficient to produce marrow suppression and early recovery, allowing for continuous or intermittent therapy. Radiation therapy should be used if there is no response or progression of disease (demonstrated either clinically or by scans, confirmed by a biopsy) within the first few months of treatment.Keywords
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