Abstract
A retrospective analysis was made of 1057 young patients (aged 15-29) with Hodgkin's disease (HD) who were entered into British National Lymphoma Investigation (BNLI) trials and studies between 1970 and 1992, and who had attained complete remission and remained disease-free thereafter from either their first-line (n = 774) or second-line (n = 283) treatment. Overall survivals at 20 years for those remaining disease-free from first-line and second-line treatment were 93% and 84%, respectively, compared to a survival of approximately 98.5% in the general population. In young patients cured by modern first-line therapeutic techniques, long-term survival should in future be only a little below that expected in the general population, and the emphasis of future trials should be directed towards the improvement of the efficacy of first-line treatment.
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Vaughan Hudson, B., Vaughan Hudson, G., Linch, D. C., & Anderson, L. (1994). Late mortality in young BNLI patients cured of Hodgkin’s disease. In Annals of Oncology (Vol. 5, pp. 65–66). https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/5.suppl_2.s65
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