International Peripheral T-Cell and Natural Killer/T-Cell Lymphoma Study: Pathology Findings and Clinical Outcomes
Nebraska Medical Center · University of Nebraska Medical Center
Abstract
A diagnosis of PTCL or NKTCL was confirmed in 1,153 (87.8%) of the cases. The most common subtypes were PTCL not otherwise specified (NOS; 25.9%), angioimmunoblastic type (18.5%), NKTCL (10.4%), and adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL; 9.6%). Misclassification occurred in 10.4% of the cases including Hodgkin's lymphoma (3%), B-cell lymphoma (1.4%), unclassifiable lymphoma (2.8%), or a diagnosis other than lymphoma (2.3%). We found marked variation in the frequency of the various subtypes by geographic region. The use of an anthracycline-containing regimen was not associated with an improved outcome in PTCL-NOS or angioimmunoblastic type, but was associated with an improved outcome in anaplastic large-cell lymphoma, ALK positive.
The WHO classification is useful for defining subtypes of PTCL and NKTCL. However, expert hematopathology review is important for accurate diagnosis. The clinical outcome for patients with most of these lymphoma subtypes is poor with standard therapies, and novel agents and new modalities are needed to improve survival.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
1- ITInternational T-Cell Lymphoma ProjectCorresponding
Nebraska Medical Center, University of Nebraska Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Lymphoma
- Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma
- Hematopathology
- Peripheral T-cell lymphoma
- Not Otherwise Specified
- T-cell lymphoma
- Pathology
- No poverty