Many patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) achieve response after treatment but complete remission (CR) rates are very low. Thus the majority of them will relapse, mainly those in advanced stage disease, due to the persistence of residual disease. Therefore, this study had the following aims: to determine the presence of bcl-2/IgH rearrangement in peripheral blood of early and advanced stage FL patients after treatment and to correlate it with their clinical situation at the same moment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aims of this study were: 1) to identify the type of bcl-2 rearrangement in a Brazilian group of FL patients and 2) to correlate it to clinical features, International Prognostic Index (IPI), histological subtype, response to treatment and clinical outcome. We reviewed the diagnosis of 48 patients with FL and investigated the type of bcl-2 gene rearrangement using DNA from paraffin-embedded tumor samples obtained at the time of diagnosis. In 30 cases, we also obtained consecutive peripheral blood samples to search for the presence of bcl-2/IgH rearrangement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is currently no consensus on the best treatment for unresectable hyaline-vascular variant or for multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD), because none of the reported regimens have consistently produced complete response or durable remission in the majority of patients In the present study, we report on the use of 2-CdA (2-chloro-deoxyadenosine) in three patients, two of them with MCD and one with unresectable hyaline-vascular type disease. Relapse-free survival of the responding patients was 24 and 20 months. Later, both patients evolved to non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) (diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and peripheral T-cell NHL, respectively).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrimary malignant breast lymphoma (PBL) is a rare disease with an incidence of 0.04-0.5% of all malignant breast neoplasms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwenty cases of systemic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) in HIV-infected patients were reviewed over a 10-year-period, divided into Group A, including 13 NHL cases treated before the highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) era, and Group B, including 7 patients who received HAART. A Kaplan-Meier survival curve was performed and log-rank was applied to assess statistical differences between the groups. In group A, the median CD4 count was 36 cells/mm3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF