Peripheral Blood Involvement at Staging in Patients With Aggressive Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma

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Abstract

Introduction: Peripheral T-Cell Lymphomas (PTCL) are a rare subgroup of lymphomas with a poor outcome.Traditional prognostic measures rely heavily on disease stage, and with the advent of targeted treatment, further stratificationcriteria are needed to guide treatment. To date, the impact of blood involvement at diagnosis on outcomes has not been assessed. Materials and Methods: We retrospectively reviewed blood involvement by flow cytometry at diagnosis in 102 consecutivelytreated patients who had flow cytometry data available at diagnosis. Of these, 78 patients with nodal subtypes were identified andstudied in this analysis. Results: Of 78 patients with nodal subtypes of PTCL who had flow data available at the time ofdiagnosis, circulating populations of malignant T cells matching those in the biopsied lymph nodes were found in 21 patients bymultiparameter flow cytometry. A positive flow cytometry was highly correlated with bone marrow involvement. The patientswith a negative flow cytometry had a trend toward a longer median PFS compared to those with a positive flow but there was noimpact on overall survival. Conclusions: Circulating malignant tumor cells can be found in the peripheral blood in a subset ofpatients with aggressive nodal T-cell lymphomas, including peripheral t-cell lymphoma not otherwise specified andangioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphomas, and blood involvement is correlated with bone marrow involvement.

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Avery, J., Chandhok, N., Rainey, C., Torres, R., Huntington, S., Isufi, I., … Foss, F. (2022). Peripheral Blood Involvement at Staging in Patients With Aggressive Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma. Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma and Leukemia, 22(9), 680–689. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clml.2022.04.019

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