26.
Lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin’s lymphoma (LPHL) differs in histologic and clinical presentation from classical Hodgkin’s
lymphoma (cHL). Treatment of LPHL patients using standard Hodgkin’s lymphoma protocols leads to complete remission in more
than 95% of patients. Survival and freedom from treatment failure are substantially worse in advanced-stage patients than
for early-stage patients. Thus, patients in advanced stages and those in early stages with unfavorable risk factors should
be treated similar to those with cHL. In contrast, patients with early-stage LPHL without risk factors might be sufficiently
treated with reduced-intensity programs having less severe adverse effects. As a result, treatment of early LPHL is rather
heterogeneous, including radiotherapy using extended-fleld technique, involved-fleld radiotherapy (IF-RT), combined-modality
treatment, and, more recently, monoclonal antibodies. Watch-and-wait strategy plays an important role in pediatric oncology,
to avoid adverse effects associated with therapy. IF-RT seems to be emerging as a treatment of choice for patients with stage
IA LPHL; most larger study groups, such as the German Hodgkin Study Group and the European Organisation for Research and Treatment
of Cancer, have adopted IF-RT as the treatment of choice for these patients.
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