AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of low-dose palliative radiotherapy for two types of skin lymphomas: cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (CBCLs) and cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (mycosis fungoides).
  • A group of 18 patients with CBCLs showed a 72% complete response rate to low-dose radiotherapy, while initial treatment for mycosis fungoides was less effective (70% failure rate) until the dose was increased to 8 Gy, resulting in a 92% complete response.
  • The findings suggest that low-dose radiotherapy is a safe and effective palliative treatment for these skin lymphomas, and higher doses can be employed if needed after initial treatment failures

Article Abstract

Purpose: To determine the efficacy of low-dose palliative radiotherapy for both low-grade malignant cutaneous B-cell lymphomas (CBCLs) and cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (mycosis fungoides).

Methods And Materials: A total of 18 patients with low-grade CBCL (10 primary cutaneous marginal zone B-cell and 8 primary cutaneous follicle center lymphomas) with 44 symptomatic plaques and tumors underwent low-dose (4 Gy in two fractions) local radiotherapy. A total of 31 patients with mycosis fungoides were treated at 82 symptomatic sites, initially with 4 Gy and later with 8 Gy in two fractions.

Results: The complete response rate for CBCL lesions was 72%. Of the 44 B-cell lymphoma lesions, 13 were re-treated to the same site after a median of 6.3 months because of persistent (n = 8) or recurrent (n = 5) symptomatic disease. Of the mycosis fungoides patients treated with 4 Gy in two fractions (17 lesions), 70% failed to respond. Increasing the dose to 8 Gy in two fractions yielded a complete response rate of 92% (60 of 65 lesions). The patients in whom low-dose radiotherapy failed were retreated with 20 Gy in eight fractions.

Conclusion: Our results have demonstrated that low-dose involved-field radiotherapy induces a high response rate in both CBCL and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma lesions without any toxicity. Therefore, this treatment is now our standard palliative treatment. At progression, it is safe and feasible to apply greater radiation doses.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2008.06.1918DOI Listing

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