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Elderly patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: Population-based results in the Netherlands
Authors:E. Maartense   J. Hermans   J. C. Kluin-Nelemans   P. M. Kluin   W. A. Van Deijk   S. Snijder   P. W. Wijermans  E. M. Noordijk
Affiliation:(1) Department of Internal Medicine, Reinier de Graaf Gasthuis, Delft, The Netherlands;(2) Department of Medical Statistics, University of Leiden, The Netherlands;(3) Department of Hematology, Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands;(4) Department of Pathology, Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands;(5) Department of Internal Medicine, Red Cross Hospital, The Hague, The Netherlands;(6) Comprehensive Cancer Center West, Leiden, The Netherlands;(7) Department of Hematology, Leyenburg Hospital, The Hague, The Netherlands;(8) Department of Clinical Oncology, Leiden University Medical Center, The Netherlands
Abstract:Background: To compare characteristics, treatment and outcome of patients ge70 years with patients <70 years in a population-based non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) registry.Patients and methods: All new patients with NHL (n = 1168) in a geographically defined region in the western part of The Netherlands were registered during a nearly 10-year period. Patient, tumour and treatment characteristics, response to therapy and survival were analysed for both age groups. An age-adjusted prognostic index was determined for elderly patients with aggressive lymphoma.Results: The elderly comprised 41% of the registered patients. There were significantly more females, a preponderance of intermediate-grade histology (diffuse large B-cell lymphoma) and a lower performance status. Incomplete staging in the elderly was mostly due to the omission of a bone marrow biopsy. With respect to WF grading the complete remission rate (except for patients with low-grade/stage I NHL, patients with extranodal NHL and for patients with intermediate grade/extensive NHL) and overall survival at five years (except for patients with low-grade/stage I NHL and for patients with intermediate-grade/extensive NHL) were significantly inferior in the elderly. With respect to the R.E.A.L. Classification the exceptions were in patients with high grade MALT lymphomas (elderly good) and patients with mantle-cell and peripheral T-cell lymphomas (younger group bad too). However, once complete remission was reached, the disease-free survival did not differ significantly between the two age groups, emphasising the importance of achieving complete remission. Although 65% of the classified elderly patients presented with intermediate-grade NHL, only 26% of the elderly patients treated with chemotherapy received anthracycline-based chemotherapy. In the elderly, lymphoma (treatment-related toxicity included) contributed to death in 70% and concomitant disease (other malignancy included) in 30%, versus 78% and 22%, respectively, for the younger group (P = 0.04). The age-adjusted prognostic index, made up of the factors serum LDH, stage and Karnofsky index, showed a clear distinction between the four risk categories low, low/intermediate, intermediate/high and high, with a median survival time of 43, 20, seven and four months, respectively. For the younger group the respective numbers were 144, 45, 19 and 11 months.Conclusions: In a population-based NHL registry the elderly, predominately female patients, formed a larger proportion of the patient group than the one usually reported in the literature. In this population-based cohort inferior remission and overall survival rates were seen in the elderly. However, obtaining complete remission was beneficial for the prognosis of this disease in the elderly. By the application of the R.E.A.L. Classification important subgroups emerge.
Keywords:anthracyclines  elderly patients  non-Hodgkin's lymphoma  population-based registry
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