Factors of prognostic importance in childhood non-hodgkin's lymphoma treated with two modified lsa2-l2 protocols. A multivariate analysis approach

1988 
The results of therapy given to 74 children with advanced disease, abdominal non-Hodgkin's lymphoma were retrospectively evaluated with respect to the major prognostic factors related to disease outcome. The first 36 patients admitted in the study were treated with a modified LSA2-L2 protocol, and the remaining patients received the same regimen with the addition of intermediate-dose methotrexate (MTX) intravenously during the induction phase (LSA2-L2-MTX). The last ten patients admitted were given a leucovorin rescue along with the administration of MTX. The relative efficacy of the LSA2-L2-MTX over the baseline LSA2-L2 regimen was analyzed by multivariate statistical methods taking into consideration several candidate coprognostic factors. The risk of treatment failure was substantially reduced (55%) with the use of the LSA2-L2-MTX regimen. Rescue with leucovorin did not contribute a further significant gain in treatment efficacy, although fewer toxicity-related problems were observed as compared to the no-rescue period. Five prognostic factors emerged as significantly explanatory of the risk of treatment failure in addition to protocol type: lymphocyte count, disease stage, surgical debulking, sex, and nutritional status. Based on these variables, a logistic regression equation could be derived to identify groups that were at risk for treatment failure.
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