The Low-Grade Lymphomas |
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Authors: | Mendenhall Lynch |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Radiation Oncology and the Division of Medical Oncology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, USA bDepartment of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, USA |
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Abstract: | The lymphomas comprise a spectrum of diseases with vast variation in histologic appearance, presentation and natural history, and response to therapy. At one end of the spectrum are the low-grade lymphomas (LGLs), indolent malignancies characterized by paradox. Despite an exceedingly low growth fraction, the LGLs are usually extensive at presentation, and yet they rarely involve privileged sites, such as cortical bone or central nervous system, and rarely destroy adjacent tissue. They are exquisitely responsive to many different therapeutic interventions, but responses to most agents are transient and similar. Finally, although survival of most LGL patients is measured in years, the course of the disease is punctuated by both transient and long-term responses to treatment, and also by spontaneous regression and transformation to more aggressive lymphomas in the absence of therapy, rendering the evaluation of the true impact of treatment quite difficult. The focus of this review is on the management of the LGLs, in particular the role of radiotherapy. |
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