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Review
. 2010 May;186(5):247-54.
doi: 10.1007/s00066-010-2091-8. Epub 2010 Apr 26.

Advanced-stage III/IV follicular lymphoma: treatment strategies for individual patients

Affiliations
Review

Advanced-stage III/IV follicular lymphoma: treatment strategies for individual patients

Frank Heinzelmann et al. Strahlenther Onkol. 2010 May.

Abstract

Background: In patients with advanced-stage III/IV follicular lymphoma (FL), there are many treatment options available. The current challenge is to choose the optimal strategy for the individual patient.

Methods: The literature was reviewed with respect to treatment strategies in patients with advanced FL by screening the PubMed databank.

Results: In advanced-stage III/IV FL, median survival may approach 8-10 years. Treatment strategies include a watch-and-wait strategy, chemoimmunotherapy, monotherapy with rituximab, and - as an experimental approach so far - radioimmunotherapy. The use of autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for patients in first remission or chemosensitive relapse prolongs progression-free survival while the effect on overall survival remains unclear compared to standard chemotherapy. However, long-term results are flawed by high relapse rates and risk of secondary malignancies. In patients with relapsed/chemoresistant disease, allogeneic HSCT constitutes the only curative approach but is associated with high treatment-related mortality. In the palliative setting, low-dose involved-field irradiation constitutes an effective treatment option in order to control local symptoms with potential long-lasting response.

Conclusion: In case of advanced-disease FL, asymptomatic patients can be managed expectantly. In symptomatic patients, chemoimmunotherapy is regarded as standard therapy. In symptomatic elderly patients with relevant comorbidities, rituximab +/- single-agent chemotherapy, or low-dose involved-field radiotherapy might be appropriate. For younger patients with chemoresistant/relapsed disease, allogeneic HSCT might be considered, since advances in supportive care and better patient selection have resulted in improved outcomes.

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