Cancer Management and Research | 2019

Risk Stratification Of Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma With Interim PET/CT By Combining Deauville Scores And International Prognostic Index

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Purpose Prognostic evaluation using interim positron emission tomography/computed tomography (interim PET/CT; I-PET) remains controversial. For any predictor, the prognosis of patients around its cutoff value is most uncertain. If the patients around the cutoff value could be subdivided by another factor, like the international prognostic index (IPI), it may improve the predictive power of I-PET. The combination of I-PET and IPI for risk stratification of patients was explored in this study. Patients and methods One hundred and eleven diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients treated with R-CHOP therapy were included retrospectively, 59 of whom underwent PET/CT after three or four cycles of treatment (I-PET). Fifty-two patients underwent PET/CT after five or six cycles of treatment (end of treatment; E-PET). Results When Deauville 5-point scale (5-DS) scores of 4–5 were classified as a positive scan (denoted by DS [score 4]), there was no significant difference in progression-free survival (PFS) between I-PET positive and negative patients (P=0.151). Further, patients with 5-DS score 3 and high IPI were stratified into I-PET positive-, whereas those with 5-DS score 3 and low IPI were classified into I-PET negative scan groups. Under this stratification, there was a significant difference in PFS between I-PET positive and negative patients (P=0.001). The sensitivity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for 2-year PFS for the combination score were higher than DS (score 4) alone (66.7% vs 33.3%, 50.0%vs 37.5%, 93.6% vs 88.2%) whereas specificity was almost the same (90.0% vs 88.0%). Conclusion Subdivision of patients with 5-DS score 3 by IPI improved prognostic prediction accuracy. The IPI adds strength to 5-DS in I-PET to detect patients with good or poor prognosis. Compared with other combinations of I-PET and IPI, dividing the patients around the cutoff value of 5-DS by IPI was easily accepted by clinicians and allowed them to decide on further treatment practically.

Volume 11
Pages 9449 - 9457
DOI 10.2147/CMAR.S218678
Language English
Journal Cancer Management and Research

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