articleBloodNov 25, 2008Closed access

Clinical differences between nasal and extranasal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma: a study of 136 cases from the International Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma Project

Queen Mary Hospital · University of Nebraska Medical Center · +5 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Among 1153 new adult cases of peripheral/T-cell lymphoma from 1990-2002 at 22 centers in 13 countries, 136 cases (11.8%) of extranodal natural killer (NK)/T-cell lymphoma were identified (nasal 68%, extranasal 26%, aggressive/unclassifiable 6%). The disease frequency was higher in Asian than in Western countries and in Continental Asia than in Japan. There were no differences in age, sex, ethnicity, or immunophenotypic profile between the nasal and extranasal cases, but the latter had more adverse clinical features. The median overall survival (OS) was better in nasal compared with the extranasal cases in early- (2.96 vs 0.36 years, P

Citation impact

741
total citations
FWCI
18.44
Percentile
100%
References
60
Citations per year

Authors

10

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Lymphoma
  • Medicine
  • T-cell lymphoma
  • International Prognostic Index
  • Stage (stratigraphy)
  • Internal medicine
  • Gastroenterology
  • Pathology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
No related works found for this paper.