Increasing use of immunotherapy and prolonged survival among younger patients with primary CNS lymphoma: a population-based study.
Magdalena NeuhauserThomas Roetzer-PejrimovskyStefan OberndorferMelitta KitzwoegererFranz PayerJulia J UnterluggauerJohannes HaybaeckGünther StockhammerSarah IglsederPatrizia MoserClaudius ThoméMartin StultschnigFranz WuertzTanisa Brandner-KokaljSerge WeisDave BandkeJosef PichlerMarkus HuttererKarl J KrenoszAlexandra BoehmBeate MayrbaeurlAndrea Hager-SeifertHannes KaufmannMartina DumserAngelika Reiner-ConcinSelma HoenigschnablWaltraud KleindienstMarkus HoffermannKarin DieckmannBarbara KieselGeorg WidhalmChristine MarosiUlrich JaegerAndreas HainfellnerMonika HacklJohannes A HainfellnerMatthias PreusserAdelheid WoehrerPublished in: Acta oncologica (Stockholm, Sweden) (2019)
Background: Primary CNS lymphoma is a highly aggressive and rare type of extranodal non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Although, new therapeutic approaches have led to improved survival, the management of the disease poses a challenge, practice patterns vary across institutions and countries, and remain ill-defined for vulnerable patient subgroups. Material and Methods: Using information from the Austrian Brain Tumor Registry we followed a population-based cohort of 189 patients newly diagnosed from 2005 to 2010 through various lines of treatment until death or last follow-up (12-31-2016). Prognostic factors and treatment-related data were integrated in a comprehensive survival analysis including conditional survival estimates. Results: We find variable patterns of first-line treatment with increasing use of rituximab and high-dose methotrexate (HDMTX)-based poly-chemotherapy after 2007, paralleled by an increase in median overall survival restricted to patients aged below 70 years. In the entire cohort, 5-year overall survival was 24.4% while 5-year conditional survival increased with every year postdiagnosis. Conclusion: In conclusion, we show that the use of poly-chemotherapy and immunotherapy has disseminated to community practice to a fair extent and survival has increased over time at least in younger patients. Annually increasing conditional survival rates provide clinicians with an adequate and encouraging prognostic measure.
Keyphrases
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- end stage renal disease
- free survival
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- peritoneal dialysis
- low dose
- mental health
- primary care
- radiation therapy
- deep learning
- machine learning
- squamous cell carcinoma
- case report
- stem cell transplantation
- health information
- hodgkin lymphoma
- data analysis