Variable clinical presentations of nasal and Waldeyer ring natural killer/T-cell lymphoma

Clin Cancer Res. 2009 Apr 15;15(8):2905-12. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-2914. Epub 2009 Mar 24.

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the clinical characteristics, prognosis, and treatment outcome for patients with nasal natural killer (NK)/T-cell lymphoma (N-NKTL) and Waldeyer ring NK/T-cell lymphoma (WR-NKTL).

Experimental design: A total of 145 patients with N-NKTL and 95 patients with WR-NKTL were compared.

Results: Compared with N-NKTL, WR-NKTL exhibited distinct differences in clinical features with a propensity for nodal involvement, more advanced stages, low elevated lactate dehydrogenase, intermediate chemosensitivity, and a favorable prognosis. Compared with patients with WR-NKTL, patients with N-NKTL were associated with a lower overall response (54% versus 89%) and higher persistent or progressive disease after initial chemotherapy (46% versus 11%; P = 0.000). The 5-year overall survival and progression-free survival rates were 67% and 56% for N-NKTL and 65% and 47% for WR-NKTL, respectively. Patients with stage II WR-NKTL showed favorable prognosis compared with those with stage II N-NKTL. Compared with radiotherapy alone, patients with early-stage WR-NKTL that received radiotherapy and chemotherapy showed a superior progression-free survival and improved overall survival. In contrast, the addition of chemotherapy to radiotherapy did not provide any survival benefit for patients with early-stage N-NKTL.

Conclusions: N-NKTL and WR-NKTL represent heterogeneous groups with variable clinical features, responses, prognosis, and treatment options.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Lymphoma, Extranodal NK-T-Cell / mortality
  • Lymphoma, Extranodal NK-T-Cell / pathology*
  • Lymphoma, Extranodal NK-T-Cell / therapy*
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Neoplasm Staging
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Young Adult