Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) causes a chronic but curable infection associated with the development of marginal zone lymphoma (MZL) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Preliminary data have shown frequent transformation of indolent lymphoma to DLBCL in HCV-infected patients. To compare their clinicopathologic characteristics and oncologic outcomes, we reviewed the medical records and pathology reports of HCV-infected and uninfected patients with DLBCL that transformed from indolent lymphoma seen at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center (June 2004-May 2015). To identify predictors of DLBCL relapse, patients with relapse after first-line chemotherapy were compared with those without it using univariate and logistic regression analyses. Compared with the uninfected patients (n=63), HCV-infected patients (n=21) were younger (median age =54 years [interquartile range= 49-62 years] vs 62 years [53-66 years]; p= 0.01) and more often had advanced DLBCL (Ann Arbor stage 3-4; 95% vs 76%; p= 0.05). Immunophenotypically, more HCV-infected than uninfected patients had CD10-negative B cells (76% vs 43%; p= 0.008), CD5-positive B cells (39% vs 7%; p= 0.004), and activated B-cell phenotypes (57% v 31%; p= 0.07). Comparison of the patients who had relapse after first-line chemotherapy (n= 42) and those who did not (n= 40) revealed that having CD5-positive B cells was the only factor associated with DLBCL relapse in multivariate analysis (odds ratio= 10.7; p= 0.02). HCV-infected patients with transformed DLBCL have unique clinicopathologic characteristics that make their lymphoma difficult to treat, potentially leading to unfavorable outcome. The impact of HCV eradication should be explored in such patients. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
from #ORL-AlexandrosSfakianakis via ola Kala on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2x6MaBp
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