Radiotherapy Research - Cancer treatment, Side effects

Radiotherapy Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Radiotherapy, including details on cancer treatment, side effects.


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Gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma detected by clonotypic polymerase chain reaction despite continuous pathologic remission induced by involved-field radiotherapy.

Noy A, Yahalom J, Zaretsky L, Brett I, Zelenetz AD

Lymphoma Disease Management Team and Laboratroy of Molecular Hemato-Oncology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Ave, New York, NY 10021, USA. noya@mskcc.org

PURPOSE: Gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma is indolent and often associated with Helicobacter pylori bacterial infection. H pylori-independent MALT develops either in the absence of the bacteria or persists after bacterial eradication. We have previously demonstrated long-term pathologic remission after involved-field radiotherapy therapy (IFRT). We determined molecular remission status by clonotypic polymerase chain reaction (PCR). PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty-four consecutive patients with stage I to IIE gastric MALT lymphoma who obtained a pathologic remission after IFRT alone were evaluated. All had at least two follow-up endoscopic gastroduodenal biopsies at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. IFRT median dose was 30 Gy (range, 28.5 to 43.5 Gy). Post-treatment biopsies were subjected to semi-nested clonotypic PCR. RESULTS: All patients obtained a complete response based on routine immunohistochemical pathologic analysis of random post-treatment gastric biopsies. Median follow-up from completion of IFRT was 63 months (range, 19 to 117 months). Event-free survival was 96%; 23 of 34 patients remained in clinical and pathologic complete remission. Baseline DNA extraction yielded 17 clone-specific primer pairs. At the first follow-up test, 14 of 17 pairs were PCR positive. Eight remained persistently positive; and one was persistently negative. Others were intermittently positive. CONCLUSION: Despite sustained biopsy-proven remissions for as long as 117 months after radiation, the vast majority of patients remain positive by clonotypic PCR. This suggests that the malignant clone is present but missing either an internal or external signal essential to the cancer phenotype. One possibility is that radiation eradicates the polyclonal H pylori-specific T cells eliminating critical local factors necessary for proliferation of the monoclonal B cells.

Published 30 May 2005 in J Clin Oncol, 23(16): 3768-72.
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