Pediatric and Adolescent Hodgkin Lymphoma: Paving the Way for Standards of Care and Shared Decision Making.
Justine M KahnChristine Mauz-KorholzTricia HernandezSarah A MilgromSharon M CastellinoPublished in: American Society of Clinical Oncology educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual Meeting (2024)
Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is a treatable cancer with an incidence peak in adolescent and young adult years. Treatment strategies have been developed to balance the intensity of therapy needed to maintain disease-free survival while simultaneously preserving overall survival. Risk-based, response-adapted frontline therapy has long used a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy (RT). Successive clinical trials over the past three decades have safely reduced cumulative alkylator, anthracycline, and RT exposures for many patients. The advent of checkpoint inhibitors and the CD30-targeted antibody drug conjugate, brentuximab vedotin, has provided new options for de-escalation of conventional therapies associated with late effects in survivors treated at a young age. The ability to evaluate novel agents has been accelerated in collaborative trials inclusive of children and adolescents within the US National Clinical Trials Network and between the Children's Oncology Group and the EuroNet Pediatric Hodgkin Lymphoma Consortium. With numerous treatment options, patients with HL and their clinicians have an opportunity for shared decision making from diagnosis, through cancer treatment, and into survivorship. Given excellent survival outcomes, decisions about treatment in classic HL should be collaborative and attention to long-term survivorship needs should remain a high priority. Patient-reported outcomes remain an important tool to aid clinicians working with survivors to optimize health status and related quality of life for decades after HL therapy.
Keyphrases
- hodgkin lymphoma
- young adults
- childhood cancer
- patient reported outcomes
- clinical trial
- free survival
- palliative care
- quality improvement
- end stage renal disease
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- mental health
- chronic kidney disease
- locally advanced
- ejection fraction
- dna damage
- open label
- early stage
- randomized controlled trial
- cancer therapy
- risk factors
- squamous cell carcinoma
- prognostic factors
- air pollution
- pain management
- working memory
- health insurance
- phase ii
- papillary thyroid
- replacement therapy
- bone marrow
- high intensity
- squamous cell
- affordable care act
- oxidative stress
- rectal cancer
- drug delivery
- lymph node metastasis