Baseline prognostic predictors in classical Hodgkin Lymphoma: a retrospective, single-center analysis on patients treated with PET/CT-guided ABVD
Alessandro Cellini, Chiara Adele Cavarretta, Francesco Angotzi, Valeria Ruocco, Andrea Serafin, Nicolò Danesin, Marco Pizzi, Michele Gregianin, Stefania Vio, Filippo Crimì, Federica Vianello, Francesco Piazza, Livio Trentin, Andrea Visentin

TL;DR
This study identifies baseline prognostic factors in classical Hodgkin Lymphoma patients treated with PET/CT-guided ABVD to improve risk-based treatment strategies.
Contribution
The study proposes new prognostic systems incorporating LMR to better identify high-risk patients.
Findings
Stage IV disease, leukocytosis, anemia, and low LMR predicted progression-free survival.
Male sex, stage IV disease, and lymphopenia predicted overall survival.
A new 4-variable and 3-variable prognostic system showed improved risk stratification.
Abstract
The identification of baseline prognostic factors in Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma could help in tailoring a risk-based approach as the therapeutic landscape expands. Currently, the International Prognostic Score (IPS) represents the most used prediction tool in clinical practice, but other potential baseline risk predictors have been identified. We performed a retrospective analysis in a cohort of 274 patients treated with 18FDG-PET/CT-guided ABVD to assess the prognostic significance of the IPS risk factors, and to validate the impact of the peripheral blood lymphocyte to monocyte (LMR) and neutrophil to lymphocyte (NLR) ratios on prognosis definition. Among the considered risk factors, stage IV disease (HR 1.83), leukocytosis (HR 2.28), anemia (HR 3.23) and low LMR (HR 2.01) significantly predicted PFS, whereas male sex (HR 2.93), stage IV disease (HR 3.00) and lymphopenia (HR 7.84)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment · CNS Lymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment · Viral-associated cancers and disorders
