AI Article Synopsis

  • Early-stage MALT lymphoma patients have a lower risk of dying from lymphoma compared to other causes, highlighting the importance of age in treatment outcomes.
  • An analysis of 9,467 patients showed that radiotherapy significantly improved overall survival (73.8%) and relative survival compared to chemotherapy and other treatments.
  • The study found that younger adults benefited more from radiotherapy, indicating a notable interaction between age and treatment effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Background: Given the lower incidence of lymphoma-related death but higher background mortality in patients with early-stage mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma, it is critically important to examine how age affects a treatment's survival benefit.

Methods: 9,467 patients with early-stage MALT lymphoma in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database treated between 2000-2015 were extracted and analyzed. Primary therapy was classified as radiotherapy (n = 3,407), chemotherapy (n = 1,294), and other/unknown treatments including observation (n = 4,766). Inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was conducted to balance baseline characteristics between groups. Relative survival (RS), standardized mortality ratio (SMR), and transformed Cox regression were conducted to compare survival differences between treatment modalities by controlling for the background mortality. Radiotherapy-age interaction was examined.

Results: Across age-groups, early-stage MALT lymphoma patients were at lower risk of lymphoma-related death than death due to other causes. The 10-year overall survival (OS, 73.8 %) and RS (96.6 %) rates were significantly higher, and the SMR (1.14) significantly lower, with radiotherapy than with chemotherapy (OS, 61.7 %; RS, 86.4 %; SMR, 1.54; P < 0.001) or other/unknown treatments (OS, 61.1 %; RS, 87.2 %; SMR, 1.41; P < 0.001). By multivariable analysis and IPTW, radiotherapy remained an independent predictor of better RS (HR 0.81, 95 %CI, 0.73-0.89; P < 0.001). A significant interaction between age and radiotherapy was identified for both RS (P = 0.016) and OS (P = 0.024), indicating greater benefit in young adults.

Conclusion: Radiotherapy was associated with significantly better survival in early-stage MALT lymphoma, especially in young adults.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2022.05.034DOI Listing

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