Purpose: Disease dissemination to the bone marrow is detected at diagnosis in approximately 15% of children with T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-LL). It is unclear whether the remaining patients have submicroscopic systemic disease and, if so, what is the clinical significance of this finding. Patients and Methods: Using a flow cytometric method that can detect one T-LL cell among 10,000 normal cells, we examined bone marrow and peripheral-blood samples collected from 99 children with T-LL at diagnosis, as well as blood samples collected from 42 patients during treatment. Results: In 71 (71.7%) of the 99 marrow samples obtained at diagnosis, T-LL cells represented 0.01% to 31.6% (median, 0.22%) of mononuclear cells; 57 of the 71 T-LL-positive samples were from patients with stage II/III disease. Results of studies in bilateral marrow aspirates were highly concordant. Two-year event-free survival (EFS) was 68.1% ± 11.1% (SE) for patients with ≥ 1% T-LL cells in bone marrow versus 90.7% ± 4.4% for those with lower levels of marrow involvement (P = .031); EFS for patients with ≥ 5% lymphoblasts was 51.9% ± 18.0% (P = .009). T-LL cells were as prevalent in blood as in marrow; monitoring residual T-LL cells in blood during remission induction therapy identified patients with slower disease clearance. Conclusion: More than two thirds of children with T-LL have disseminated disease at diagnosis, a proportion much higher than previously demonstrated. Measurements of disease dissemination at diagnosis might provide useful prognostic information, which can be further refined by monitoring response to therapy through blood testing. © 2009 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.
CITATION STYLE
Coustan-Smith, E., Sandlund, J. T., Perkins, S. L., Chen, H., Chang, M., Abromowitch, M., & Campana, D. (2009). Minimal disseminated disease in childhood T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma: A report from the Children’s Oncology Group. Journal of Clinical Oncology, 27(21), 3533–3539. https://doi.org/10.1200/JCO.2008.21.1318
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