Clinicopathological Profile and 2 Year Relapse Rates of Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma in Tertiary Care Center.

Sunadh Mailapalli, Ratheesh Kumar,P Suresh,Anuj Singhal, Sarvinder Singh

The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India(2022)

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摘要
The aim and objectives are to study clinicopathological profiles and 2-year relapse rates of Non-Hodgkin lymphoma,Material :This prospective observational study was conducted from Jan 2017 to May 2021. All newly diagnosed patients of NHL were enrolled and received a CHOP±R regimen for 6 cycles as per B-cell or T-cell lineage. The data was and analyzed using spss software. Observation: A total of 50 patients were enrolled and followed for 2 years. The median age of presentation was 44.62±15.92. Commonest clinical presentation was lymphadenopathy (46%), followed by B symptoms (32%). Commonest clinical sign was lymph node enlargement (52%). The commonest extranodal presentation was hepatomegaly (22%) and splenomegaly (22%). On peripheral blood smear, macrocytic hypochromic anemia (12%) was the commonest presentation. CT Scan showed, nodal involvement in 86% with generalized lymphadenopathy in (40%) cases. Extranodal involvement was seen in 50%. WB PET showed nodal involvement in (90%), and extranodal involvement in 70%. PET scan (90%) was a little more sensitive for detecting lymph node involvement over CT scan (86%). On lymph node biopsy, the most common subtype was B cell NHL (84.84%) and the commonest histopathological subtype was diffuse large cell B cell lymphoma. Biopsy from the extranodal site shown B cell NHL in (93.33%). The commonest histopathological subtype was DLBCL (18%). On marrow examination and biopsy, 88% were B cell type and the commonest type was DLBCL (62%). The commonest treatment-related toxicity was febrile neutropenia (44%). At 6 months, 30% were having clinical active disease and PET imaging revealed radiologic disease activity in 32 %. At 12 months, 14% were having clinical disease, and radiologic disease activity in 14%. At 18 months, 5% were having clinical disease, and radiologic disease activity in 10%. At 24 months, 14% were having clinical disease, and radiologic disease activity in 14%. At the end of the study period, 78 % were in remission, 10% cases in relapse, 6% cases had progressive disease and 6% of cases expired. Conclusion: This study found 02-year survival post standard chemotherapy in NHL cases was 88%. The relapse rate at 24 months was 14%. The B symptoms were seen less commonly, and bulky disease was noted in one-third of cases. The role of PET in diagnosing and follow up on these cases was good but it was comparable with CT scan.
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