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Hodgkin's disease (Hodgkin's lymphoma)
Etiology:
- currently thought that Hodgkin's disease may be a heterogenous disease derived from subpopulations of activated B-cells. activated T-cells & dendritic cells [3]
Classification:
- not a true lymphoma
- malignant cells are not of lymphocytic origin
Histology prevalence prognosis
lymphocyte predominance 2-10% excellent
nodular sclerosis 40-80% very good
mixed cellularity 20-40% good
lymphocyte depletion 2-15% poor
Epidemiology:
- seasonal variation in incidence & mortality
- incidence in March is 15% higher than in September
- seasonal variations more pronounced at high latitudes [22]
Pathology:
- lymph node biopsy
- presence of Reed-Sternberg cells (RSC) is pathognomonic
- number of infiltrating malignant macrophages (RSC) identified by CD68 immunohistochemistry correlates with treatment failure [6]
- vitamin D may play a protective role [22]
Genetics:
- implicated genes:
- CD302, LY75, CLIP1, LGALS9
Clinical manifestations:
1) palpable lymphadenopathy, generally painless
a) most commonly involves neck
b) cervical, supraclavicular, mediastinal lymphadenopathy
2) B symptoms
- fever, night sweats (Pel-Epstein fever), weight loss
3) hepatomegaly
4) splenomegaly
5) malaise
6) persistent, non-productive cough
7) pruritus may be a presenting symptom [25]
8) pain associated with alcohol ingestion (may be due to eosinophil infiltration) [5]
Laboratory:
1) complete blood count (CBC)
2) liver function tests (LFTs)
3) renal function tests (BUN & serum creatinine)
4) uric acid
5) C-reactive protein, erthrocyte sedimentation rate
6) screening for viral infections
- screening for hepatitis B
- screening for hepatitis C
- screening for HIV1
6) tests which may be useful
a) cell surface marker phenotype analysis
b) gene rearrangement analysis
c) delayed hypersensitivity status
d) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) detects Epstein-Barr virus in 60-80% of patients
Special laboratory:
1) surgical excisional lymph node biopsy to examine lymph node architecture (essential)
2) bone marrow biopsy, essential for
a) B symptoms
b) stage 3 or 4 disease [3]
c) not necessary if PET scan & blood work are negative [3,23]
3) may be indicated (not routine [3])
a) liver biopsy
b) exploratory or staging laparotomy no longer performed [3]
c) splenectomy no longer performed [3]
4) pulmomary function testing prior to treatment [23]
5) cardiac stress testing prior to treatment [23]
Radiology:
1) essential
a) chest radiograph: may show mediastinal mass
b) CT of neck, CT of thorax, CT of abdomen & pelvis with contrast
c) whole body PET scan [3] if available [23]
- interim PET scan predictive of outcome in patients treated with ABVD [14,16]
d) CT/PET used to stage Hodgkin's disease [3]
e) negative PET scan may obviate need for bone marrow biopsy
2) may be indicated
a) lymphangiogram
b) gallium scan
c) bone scan
d) bone radiographs
e) ultrasonography
f) magnetic resonance imaging
Staging:
- PET scan
- see staging of lymphoma
Differential diagnosis:
1) non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
2) sarcoidosis
3) infections (CMV, EBV, HIV, toxoplasmosis)
4) drug reaction
5) see lymphadenopathy
Complications:
1) radiation therapy can result in acute & late complications
a) mantle irradiation:
- acute complications:
- dry mouth
- pharyngitis
- fatigue
- weight loss
- Lhermitte's syndrome
- paresthesias in the lower extremities with neck flexion
- generally spontaneously resolves
- pneumonitis (< 5%)
- pulmonary fibrosis (< 1%).
- late complications:
- pericardial effusions
- myocardial injury, coronary artery disease (RR=3) heart failure (RR=7) [15]
- risk persists after 35 years [15]
- valvular heart disease
- hypothyroidism (30%)
- emergence of 2nd-cancers
- estimated increased risk is 4.6 fold [19]
- breast cancer is the most common solid tumor*
- lung cancer
- skin cancer
- leukemia, myelodysplastic syndrome -> AML
- thyroid cancer 10-fold risk [19]
- non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
- mesothelioma
- esophageal cancer
- pancreatic cancer
- gastrointestinal cancer [19]
- increased second cancer risk persists for 35 years mostly due to radiation therapy [19]
- no evidence that modern techniques of volume- & dose-limiting radiation reduce 2nd-cancer risk [19]
b) para-aortic irradiation:
- rarely associated with side effects
c) pelvic irradiation:
- acute complications:
- diarrhea
- bladder irritation
- chronic complications:
- bone marrow suppression
- sterility
2) abnormal T-cell function with infection due to:
- intracellular pathogens
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Listeria
- Salmonella
- Cryptococcus
- Mycobacterium avium
3) treatment confers increased risk for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma [3]
* chemotherapy does not increase risk of breast cancer [3]
Management:
1) general
a) all patients with Hodgkin's disease should be treated with the intent to cure
b) chemotherapy all patients, regardless of stage [3]
- chemotherapy may cure 50% of patients with disseminated disease
- complete response by PET scan after 2-3 cycles of chemotherapy may allow some patients with early stage Hodgkin's disease to forego radiation therapy [3]
c) radiation may cure 80% of patients with localized disease
- early-stage nodular Hodgkins' disease may be treated with radiation alone
- outdated recommendation
- chemotherapy all patients, regardless of stage [3]
- more advanced stages should be treated with rituximab with chemotherapy [3]
d) combination of chemotherapy + radiation therapy for early disease [3]
e) risk-adapted regimens to avoid radiation & alkylating agents, whenever possible [19]
2) management of early disease [14]
a) favorable prognosis
- 2 cycles of ABVD plus 2000 cGy of radiation
- if PET scan is negative after 2 cycles of chemotherapy for early-stage disease, > 90% likelihood of long-term response
- these patients may forgo radiation [3]
- 4-6 cycles of ABVD without radiation is an option [3]
b) unfavorable prognosis (advanced disease or B-symptoms)
- 4 cycles of ABVD plus 3000 cGy of radiation
- 2 cycles of escalate BEACOPP + 2 cycles of ABVD + 3000 cGy of radiation (alternate)
c) omission of radiation for non-bulky stage 1A/2A should be done only after consultation with radiation oncologist
- these patients should receive at least 2-3 cycles of ABVD & interim CT/PET [3]
d) assess for pulmonary toxicity prior to administration of bleomycin (component of ABVD & BEACOPP)
e) patients age 16-60 years with advanced Hodgkin's disease should receive either
- 6-8 cycles of ABVD
- 6 cycles of escalated BEACOPP
f) patients treated with ABVD should be considered for radiation therapy to sites of residual bulk > 1.5 cm on CT
- unclear in PET scan negative patients benefit
- PET scan positive patients should be biopsied or followed closely clinical/radiologic
g) patients who progress on therapy should be considered for treatment intensification with transplantation
3) treatment based on stage (older recommendations)
- see historical management of Hodgkin's disease
4) radiation therapy:
a) up to 4000 cGy administered 1000 cGy per week
b) since Hodgkin's disease spreads largely via lymphatics, 3 types of radiation fields were developed:
- mantle: includes submandibular, cervical, supraclavicular, infraclavicular, axillary, mediastinal, & hilar lymph nodes
- paraaortic: includes transverse processes of abdominal vertebral bodies & spleen
- pelvic: includes common iliac, hypogastric, external iliac, & inguinal nodes
c) when there is gross pelvic involvement, femoral nodes are also irradiated
d) when pelvic & paraaortic fields are treated as a unit, the field is called an inverted Y field
e) palliative radiation for
- airway obstruction
- spinal cord compression
f) patients with stage IA or IIA Hodgkin's lymphoma (localized node involvement) treated with mantle or paraaortic radiation have up to 80% long term disease-free survival
g) patients with stage IB & IIB have 70% survival
h) patients with extensive mediastinal involvement tend to do worse
i) patients who relapse with radiation therapy frequently respond to chemotherapy
5) chemotherapy
a) ABVD (adriamycin, bleomycin, vinblastine, & dacarbazine) is preferred 1st line treatment [3]
- 4 cycles of ABVD
- 2-3 cycles may be sufficient for early stage (stage I & II) Hodgkin's disease [3,7,9]
- toxicities of ABVD are similar to MOPP, but may beassociated with fewer secondary malignancies, but increased incidence of myocardial & pulmonary damage (see historical management of Hodgkin's disease for MOPP)
- brentuximab vedotin (Adcetris) FDA-approved for relapse or refractory Hodgkin's lymphoma
- bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine & prednisone (BEACOPP) for patients with disease activity demonstrated on PET scanafter 3 cycles of ABVD [3,8]
- do not use (BEACOPP) in patients > 60 years of age [23]
b) chemotherapy alone (without radiation) for stage 3 or 4
c) brentuximab vedotin, doxorubicin, vinblastine, & dacarbazine (A+AVD) superior to ABVD (5% disease progression, death) inpatients with advanced Hodgkin's disease [20]
6) chemotherapy + radiation
a) ABVD chemotherapy + involved field radiation for stage 1 & 2
b) ABVD chemotherapy + mediastinal radiation for bulky mediastinal disease
c) superior to radiation therapy alone [23]
7) stem cell transplantation
a) refer all patients < 70 years of age to a transplantation center
b) indicated after the 1st relapse from any 1st line treatment for Hodgkin's disease
c) autologous hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation for recurrent chemotherapy-sensitive Hodgkin's disease [3]
d) allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation for recurrent Hodgkin's disease resistant to salvage chemotherapy
e) high-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell transplantation for relapse [17]
f) brentuximab vedotin for stem cell transplantation failure
- nivolumab & pembrolizumab are approved for the treatment of patients with disease recurrence on brentuximab vedotin
8) reproductive counseling & consideration
- sperm cryopreservation prior to therapy if man wishes to preserve fertility
- oocyte collection, or ovarian tissue cryopreservation should be offered to women of reproductive age before treatment [23]
9) follow-up
a) look for second cancer (see complications)
b) mammography, MRI or both begun at age 40 or 8 years following radiation therapy* [3]
c) women who received chest wall radiation* between age 10-30 are at high risk for breast cancer*
- annual mammograms & breast MRI recommended [3,18]
d) all post-radiation patients with chest pain should be evaluated for coronary artery disease regardless of age [3]
* chemotherapy does not increase risk of breast cancer [3]
Interactions
disease interactions
Related
historical management of Hodgkin's disease
Reed-Sternberg cell
staging of lymphoma
vaccination in patients with Hodgkin's disease
Specific
Hodgkin's disease, lymphocyte depleted type
Hodgkin's disease, lymphocyte predominant type
Hodgkin's disease, mixed cellularity type
Hodgkin's disease, nodular sclerosing type
nodular sclerosis
General
lymphoma (lymphosarcoma)
References
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