Radiotherapy improves survival in early stage extranodal natural killer/T cell lymphoma patients receiving asparaginasebased chemotherapy

12Citations
Citations of this article
13Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

This study retrospectively investigated asparaginase-based chemotherapy treatment outcomes with or without radiotherapy in 143 patients with stage IE-IIE extranodal natural killer/T cell lymphoma (ENKTCL). All patients received a median of three cycles of asparaginase-based chemotherapy, while 121 patients received radiotherapy following the chemotherapy. The complete remission (CR) rate for all patients post-chemotherapy was 58.7%, and rose to 73.4% by the end of treatment. Patients who received radiotherapy achieved better survival outcomes than those who did not (89.7% vs. 49.0% for 2-year overall survival (OS), P<0.001; 86.8% vs. 37.4% for 2-year progression-free survival (PFS), P<0.001). Additionally, even patients who achieved CR post-chemotherapy exhibited differential survival rates with or without radiotherapy (90.8% vs. 60% for 2-year OS, P=0.006; 86.1% vs. 60% for 2-year PFS, P=0.044). Multivariate analysis revealed that radiotherapy was an independent factor favoring OS (HR=0.098, 95%CI=0.031-0.314, P=0.001) and PFS (HR=0.156, 95%CI=0.062-0.396, P=0.001). Thus, radiotherapy is recommended for stage IE-IIE ENKTCL patients treated with asparaginase-based chemotherapy, even in cases of CR following chemotherapy.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Li, Y. Y., Feng, L. L., Niu, S. Q., Wang, H. Y., Zhang, L. L., Wang, L., … Wang, X. C. (2017). Radiotherapy improves survival in early stage extranodal natural killer/T cell lymphoma patients receiving asparaginasebased chemotherapy. Oncotarget, 8(7), 11480–11488. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14006

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free