990 resultados para Malignant Myoepithelioma
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Melanoma is an aggressive disease with few standard treatment options. The conventional classification system for this disease is based on histological growth patterns, with division into four subtypes: superficial spreading, lentigo maligna, nodular, and acral lentiginous. Major limitations of this classification system are absence of prognostic importance and little correlation with treatment outcomes. Recent preclinical and clinical findings support the notion that melanoma is not one malignant disorder but rather a family of distinct molecular diseases. Incorporation of genetic signatures into the conventional histopathological classification of melanoma has great implications for development of new and effective treatments. Genes of the mitogen-associated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway harbour alterations sometimes identified in people with melanoma. The mutation Val600Glu in the BRAF oncogene (designated BRAF(V600E)) has been associated with sensitivity in vitro and in vivo to agents that inhibit BRAF(V600E) or MEK (a kinase in the MAPK pathway). Melanomas arising from mucosal, acral, chronically sun-damaged surfaces sometimes have oncogenic mutations in KIT, against which several inhibitors have shown clinical efficacy. Some uveal melanomas have activating mutations in GNAQ and GNA11, rendering them potentially susceptible to MEK inhibition. These findings suggest that prospective genotyping of patients with melanoma should be used increasingly as we work to develop new and effective treatments for this disease.
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The CD44 adhesion receptor is silenced in highly malignant neuroblastomas (NBs) with MYCN amplification. Because its functional expression is associated with decreased tumorigenic properties, CD44 behaves as a tumor suppressor gene in NB and other cancers. Given that the precise mechanisms responsible for CD44 silencing are not elucidated, we investigated whether CD44 expression could be regulated by DNA hypermethylation. The methylation status of CD44 gene promoter and exon 1 regions was analyzed in 12 NB cell lines and 21 clinical samples after bisulfite genomic modification, followed by PCR and single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis and genomic sequencing. The results showed that almost all CD44-negative cell lines displayed hypermethylation in both regions, whereas all CD44-expressing cell lines were unmethylated. These observations correlated with the ability to restore CD44 mRNA and protein expression by treatment of CD44-negative cells with the 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine demethylating agent. In contrast, no CD44 gene hypermethylation could be detected in 21 NB clinical samples of different stages, irrespective of CD44 expression. Although our results suggest that aberrant methylation of promoter and exon 1 regions is involved in CD44 silencing in NB cell lines, they also indicate that methylation of unidentified regulatory sequences or methylation-independent mechanisms also control the expression of CD44 in primary NB tumors and cell lines. We therefore conclude that CD44 silencing is controlled by complex and tumor cell-specific processes, including gene hypermethylation. Further investigation of other mechanisms and genes involved in CD44 regulation will be needed before demethylation-mediated reactivation of the CD44 gene can be considered as therapeutic strategy for neuroblastoma and perhaps other related cancers.
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To investigate a recently developed lymphadenopathy can be simple or complex. The medical history, presence or not of symptoms, the general physical examination, and the localization and characteristics of the adenopathy, most often lead to a diagnosis and therapy when indicated. Among young adults, the etiology is either infectious or reactive, rarely tumoral, as opposed to elderly persons. The most important step is to look at signs of severity (or non banality) such as an increased size, hard consistency, supra-clavicular location, an immunocompromised host, a history of Tb exposition. If present, these signs will trigger a biopsy with cyto- or histopathological examination mostly to rule out a malignant tumor. This article reviews the practical steps of an investigation of an isolated adenopathy in an adult patient.
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SUMMARY Radiotherapy is commonly and efficiently used to treat solid cancer in the clinic. Experimental evidence however suggests that radiation can promote tumor progression by inducing chronic modifications of the tumor microenvironment. Clinically, these observations are highly relevant to aggressive tumoral lesions relapsing after radiation therapy, a leading cause of patients' death. The investigation and understanding of the biological mechanisms implicated in the malignant progression of post-radiation relapses are therefore of major importance. Here we used a syngeneic (immunocompetent) breast cancer orthotopic xenograft model, to show that local irradiation of the mammary gland promotes the appearance of an invasive and metastatic tumor phenotype. Previous studies in our laboratory revealed that inhibition of tumor-induced angiogenesis and consequent increase in tumor hypoxia promotes metastasis formation through the activation of pro-invasive programs in the tumor cells. Our results extend these observations suggesting that mammary gland irradiation induces the recruitment of CD11b+ cells to both the primary tumor and the lungs at pre-metastatic stages through the hypoxia-dependent induction of Kit-ligand (KITL) expression in primary tumors. Abrogation of KITL expression in tumor cells prevented CD11 b+ cells accumulation in both the primary tumor and lungs and significantly reduced metastases of tumors growing in irradiated mammary gland. Importantly, irradiated mammary gland enhanced tumor-induced mobilization of circulating CD11b+cKit+ myelomonocytic cells through a HIF1- and KITL-dependent process. By cell transfer experiments, mobilized circulating CD11b+cKit+ cells were shown to supply both tumor- and lungs infiltrating CD11b+ cells. Using a blocking antibody against cKit (the KITL receptor), the mobilization of CD11b+cKit+ ceils was prevented as well as lung metastases derived from tumors growing in irradiated mammary gland. Taken together, these results indicate that tumors growing in a pre-irradiated mammary gland partially promote their malignant progression through the distant mobilization of circulating myelomonocytic precursor cells. They identify KITL inhibition and/or cKit receptor neutralization as potentially promising therapeutic approaches for post-radiation relapses. RESUME La radiothérapie est largement utilisée comme traitement de choix de nombreux types de cancers. L'agressivité des récidives tumorales observée en clinique après radiothérapie suggère cependant que le recours à l'irradiation pourrait dans certains cas accélérer la progression tumorale. De récents travaux expérimentaux ont en effet permis d'appuyer cette hypothèse, en montrant notamment l'effet néfaste des modifications chroniques de l'environnement induites par l'irradiation sur la progression tumorale. A l'aide d'un modèle murin syngénique orthotopique de cancer de sein, nous avons pu montrer que l'irradiation locale de la glande mammaire facilite l'invasion et la dissémination métastatique des cellules tumorales en favorisant le recrutement de cellules myéloïdes CD11 b+ vers la tumeur primaire et les poumons à un stade pré-métastatique. Comme mécanisme impliqué dans le recrutement des cellules CD11b+, nous avons pu observer après irradiation locale de la glande mammaire une expression augmentée de Kit-ligand (KITL) dans la tumeur (induite par l'hypoxie) ainsi que la mobilisation de cellules myéloïdes circulantes exprimant le récepteur cKit et précurseurs des cellules CD11b+ infiltrant la tumeur et les poumons. En empêchant la mobilisation par la tumeur de cellules circulantes cKit+ par des approches à la fois génétique et pharmacologique nous avons pu prévenir l'accumulation de cellules myéloïdes CD11 b+ dans la tumeur primaire et les poumons ainsi que la dissémination métastatique induites par' l'irradiation de la glande mammaire. De façon générale, ces résultats montrent que la progression agressive des tumeurs qui se développent dans un environnement irradié repose à la fois sur l'expression tumorale de KITL et la mobilisation de cellules myéloïdes précurseurs cKit*. Ils auront permis d'identifier KITL et/ou cKit comme des cibles thérapeutiques potentielles intéressantes pour le traitement des récidives tumorales après radiothérapie.
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The incidence of contralateral breast cancer is high and constant with age, around five per 1000 women who had a primary breast cancer. For other neoplasms, the pattern of incidence of second primary neoplasms with age is less known, particularly as for only a few neoplasms the site of origin is not totally removed, and hence remains at risk of a second primary. Using the dataset from the Cancer Registry of the Swiss Canton of Vaud, we show that the incidence of second neoplasms is constant with age also after oral and pharyngeal, colorectal cancers, cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM) and basal cell carcinoma. The incidence of first primary oral and pharyngeal cancer increased 20-fold between age 30-39 and 70-89 years, whereas the incidence of second neoplasms did not increase with age. Rates of second colorectal cancer remained relatively constant with age, between 2.5 per 1000 at age 40-59 years and 3.8 per 1000 at 70 years and above. Likewise, for CMM, the age-specific incidence rates of second primary CMM did not vary, ranging between 1 and 2.5 per 1000 in various subsequent age groups. The pattern of incidence for second basal cell carcinoma was similar, with no clear rise with age. These patterns are compatible with the occurrence of a single mutational event in a population of susceptible individuals. A possible implication of these observations is that a variable, but potentially large, proportion of cancers arise in very high-risk individuals and the incidence, on average, increases at a high constant level at a predetermined age.
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PURPOSE: To remind of the absolute necessity for early diagnosis in the presence of ocular signs in children giving rise to possible intraocular tumours. METHOD: Based on our own experience of intraocular tumours in children, together with findings from the literature, diagnostic criteria and methods of treatment are presented. RESULTS: Retinoblastoma is the predominant cause of intraocular tumours in children, representing over 80% of cases under the age of 15 years. Other diseases may give rise to the same initial signs, usually leukocoria, sometimes strabismus, more rarely other atypical signs. Elements taken into account for diagnosis include age, sex, laterality, heredity, size of the globe, clinical aspect of the tumours, presence of calcifications and vitreous seeding. Full fundus examination under general anaesthetic is usually necessary. Biological examination, ultrasonography, computerized tomography and MRI enable an accurate diagnosis to be made in the majority of doubtful cases. The management of retinoblastoma is adapted for each individual case from the wide range of treatments available. Enucleation, radioactive applicators (...), brachytherapy (...), cryo- and photocoagulation represent classical measures. Primary chemotherapy, combined with other treatments such as thermotherapy, has become the treatment of choice in those cases where external beam radiotherapy has been used up to now, or in some instances before enucleation. Enucleation is usually carried out for medullo-epitheliomas, but brachytherapy may offer an alternative. CONCLUSION: Any unexplained ocular sign in children should be considered as a possible retinoblastoma, making an accurate and certain diagnosis imperative. Early treatment may save not only the life but also the vision of patients carrying this highly malignant lesion.
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Significant progress has been made in the molecular diagnostic subtyping of brain tumors, in particular gliomas. In contrast to the classical molecular markers in this field, p53 and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) status, the clinical significance of which has remained controversial, at least three important molecular markers with clinical implications have now been identified: 1p/19q codeletion, O⁶-methylguanine methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter methylation and isocitrate dehydrogenase-1 (IDH1) mutations. All three are favorable prognostic markers. 1p/19q codeletion and IDH1 mutations are also useful to support and extend the histological classification of gliomas since they are strongly linked to oligodendroglial morphology and grade II/III gliomas, as opposed to glioblastoma, respectively. MGMT promoter methylation is the only potentially predictive marker, at least for alkylating agent chemotherapy in glioblastoma. Beyond these classical markers, the increasing repertoire of anti-angiogenic agents that are currently explored within registration trials for gliomas urgently calls for efforts to identify molecular markers that predict the benefit derived from these novel treatments, too.
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The function of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells, which may protect against both infectious and malignant diseases, can be impaired by ligation of their inhibitory receptors, which include CTL-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) and programmed cell death 1 (PD-1). Recently, B and T lymphocyte attenuator (BTLA) was identified as a novel inhibitory receptor with structural and functional similarities to CTLA-4 and PD-1. BTLA triggering leads to decreased antimicrobial and autoimmune T cell responses in mice, but its functions in humans are largely unknown. Here we have demonstrated that as human viral antigen-specific CD8+ T cells differentiated from naive to effector cells, their surface expression of BTLA was gradually downregulated. In marked contrast, human melanoma tumor antigen-specific effector CD8+ T cells persistently expressed high levels of BTLA in vivo and remained susceptible to functional inhibition by its ligand herpes virus entry mediator (HVEM). Such persistence of BTLA expression was also found in tumor antigen-specific CD8+ T cells from melanoma patients with spontaneous antitumor immune responses and after conventional peptide vaccination. Remarkably, addition of CpG oligodeoxynucleotides to the vaccine formulation led to progressive downregulation of BTLA in vivo and consequent resistance to BTLA-HVEM-mediated inhibition. Thus, BTLA activation inhibits the function of human CD8+ cancer-specific T cells, and appropriate immunotherapy may partially overcome this inhibition.
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Standard care for newly diagnosed glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) previously consisted of resection to the greatest extent feasible, followed by radiotherapy. The role of chemotherapy was controversial and its efficacy was marginal at best. Five years ago temozolomide (TMZ) was approved specifically for the treatment of recurrent malignant glioma. The role of TMZ chemotherapy administered alone or as an adjuvant therapy for newly diagnosed GBM has been evaluated in a large randomized trial whose results suggested a significant prolongation of survival following treatment. Findings of correlative molecular studies have indicated that methylguanine methyltransferase promoter methylation may be used as a predictive factor in selecting patients most likely to benefit from such treatment. In this short review the authors summarize the current role of TMZ chemotherapy in the management of GBM, with an emphasis on approved indications and practical aspects.
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BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to explore the potential use of image analysis on tissue sections preparation as a predictive marker of early malignant changes during squamous cell (SC) carcinogenesis in the esophagus. Results of DNA ploidy quantification on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue using two different techniques were compared: imprint-cytospin and 6 microm thick tissue sections preparation. METHODS: This retrospective study included 26 surgical specimens of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) from patients who underwent surgery alone at the Department of Surgery in CHUV Hospital in Lausanne between January 1993 and December 2000. We analyzed 53 samples of healthy tissue, 43 tumors and 7 lymph node metastases. RESULTS: Diploid DNA histogram patterns were observed in all histologically healthy tissues, either distant or proximal to the lesion. Aneuploidy was observed in 34 (79%) of 43 carcinomas, namely 24 (75%) of 32 early squamous cell carcinomas and 10 (91%) of 11 advanced carcinomas. DNA content was similar in the different tumor stages, whether patients presented with single or multiple synchronous tumors. All lymph node metastases had similar DNA content as their primary tumor. CONCLUSIONS: Early malignant changes in the esophagus are associated with alteration in DNA content, and aneuploidy tends to correlate with progression of invasive SCC. A very good correlation between imprint-cytospin and tissue section analysis was observed. Although each method used here showed advantages and disadvantages; tissue sections preparation provided useful information on aberrant cell-cycle regulation and helped select the optimal treatment for the individual patient along with consideration of other clinical parameters.
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High-grade gliomas represent a group of aggressive brain tumors with poor prognosis due to an inherent capacity of persistent cell growth and survival. The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is an intracellular machinery responsible for protein turnover. Emerging evidence implicates various proteins targeted for degradation by the UPS in key survival and proliferation signaling pathways of these tumors. In this review, we discuss the involvement of UPS in the regulation of several mediators and effectors of these pathways in malignant gliomas.
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Photodynamic therapy (PDT) has been used as an adjunct to cytoreductive surgery in patients with malignant pleura mesothelioma (MPM). However, it was associated with substantial side effects and found to be only of modest clinical benefit. In contrast, Visudyne®-mediated low-dose PDT has been shown to selectively increase the concentration of macromolecular cytostatic compounds in various tumors grown subpleurally on rodent lungs. Consequently, it was thought that PDT-assisted enhanced tumor penetration for cytostatic agents might be better suited to achieve additional tumor control after cytoreductive surgery for mesothelioma. This effect seems to be mainly related to PDT-mediated modulations of tumor vessels which improve the distribution of circulating, systemically administered chemotherapeutic macromolecular agents. However, the mechanisms involved and the optimization of this effect for therapeutic implications remain to be solved. By using the dorsal skin fold chamber method we demonstrated that both angiogenesis and microcirculation of human mesothelioma xenografts can be continuously assessed in vivo by intravital microscopy. We described a new, simple, reproducible and reliable scoring system for the assessment of tumor angiogenesis and microcirculation in this model, thereby allowing the quantitative description of the neo-vascular network development while avoiding a complicated technical setup. This method can serve as a useful tool for the assessment of novel vessel-targeted therapies against MPM. We then applied this newly established model so as to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of PDT-induced extravasation of macromolecular compounds across the endothelial barrier in tumors and surrounding normal tissue. We found that low-dose PDT selectively enhanced the uptake of macromolecular compounds in human mesothelioma xenografts compared to surrounding normal tissue. Interestingly, this increase of effective permeability of tumor vasculature was not related to the inflammatory stimuli generated by PDT such as the mobilization of leucocytes and their adhesion and penetration of the injured vessel wall. We then used the model for optimizing the drug-light conditions of low- dose PDT in order to obtain maximal leakage of the macromolecular compounds in the tumor with minimal uptake in normal surrounding tissue and we were able to identify such a therapeutic window. With these optimized PDT treatment conditions, we assessed the therapeutic effect of this new treatment concept in vivo by measuring tumor growth rates on subcutaneously grown mesothelioma xenografts in nude mice after low-dose PDT of the tumors following systemically administered liposomal (macromolecular) cisplatin, a cytostatic compound commonly used in clinical practice. We were able to demonstrate that low-dose PDT with optimized drug-light conditions combined with systemic chemotherapy indeed resulted in a reduction in tumor growth compared to chemotherapy or PDT alone. In conclusion, our work demonstrates that low-dose PDT may selectively enhance the uptake of macromolecular cytostatic drugs in superficially growing tumors such as mesotheliomas and opens new perspectives for the treatment of these diseases. - Les effets cytotoxiques de la thérapie photodynamique (PDT) sur le mésothéliome pleural malin (MPM) n'ont pas apporté de bénéfice clinique significatif. Toutefois, une application innovante non cytotoxique de la PDT serait la bienvenue en supplément des chimiothérapies pour améliorer le contrôle local de la tumeur. Le prétraitement des néovaisseaux tumoraux par une PDT à bas régime, qui améliorerait la distribution d'une chimiothérapie administrée par voie systémique de façon concomitante, a attiré une attention particulière pour de futures applications cliniques. Toutefois, les mécanismes impliqués dans cet événement et les implications thérapeutiques de ces changements physiopathologiques restent non résolus. Dans cette thèse, nous avons observé en premier que l'angiogenèse et la microcirculation dans les xénogreffes de mésothéliomes humains peuvent être observées et analysées in vivo par microscopie intravitale. Le nouveau système de score appliqué pour l'évaluation de l'angiogenèse et de la microcirculation tumorale dans cette étude est une méthode simple, reproductible et fiable servant à décrire de manière quantitative le réseau néo-vasculaire en développement, tout en évitant d'utiliser une installation technique compliquée. Ce modèle sert de nouvel outil pour l'évaluation des thérapies anti-vasculaires dirigées contre le MPM. Le modèle animal nouvellement établi a alors été utilisé pour élucider les mécanismes sous-jacents de Γ extravasation d'agents macromoléculaires induite par PDT dans les vaisseaux tumoraux et normaux. Nous avons trouvé que la PDT à fable dose améliore la distribution ciblée de drogues macromoléculaires dans des greffes de mésothéliome humain, de manière sélective pour la tumeur. La perméabilité vasculaire tumorale n'est pas influencée par les stimuli inflammatoires générés par la PDT, ce qui joue un rôle important dans la sélectivité de notre photodynamic drug delivery. Ensuite, nous avons recherché la fenêtre thérapeutique optimale de la PDT pour obtenir une accumulation sélective du colorant macromoléculaire dans le tissu tumoral ainsi qu'une efficacité de la PDT combinée avec une chimiothérapie macromoléculaire sur la croissance tumorale. Nous avons démontré que la PDT à faible dose combinée avec une administration systémique de cisplatine liposomale mène à un ralentissement de la croissance tumorale dans notre modèle de mésothéliome malin humain. En conclusion, l'utilisation de la PDT comme prétraitement pour améliorer sélectivement la distribution d'agents thérapeutiques dans des tumeurs poussant superficiellement est prometteuse. Cette observation fourni une preuve du concept remarquable et garanti la suite des investigations, éventuellement ayant pour but de développer de nouveaux concepts de thérapie pour les patients atteints de mésothéliome. Une PDT intra cavitaire à faible dose après pleuro- pneumonectomie pourrait améliorer la pénétration des agents cytostatiques administrés de façon concomitante par voie systémique dans les îlots tumoraux résiduels, et ainsi améliorer le contrôle local.
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The melanotic neuroectodermal tumour of infancy (MNTI) is an uncommon, usually benign neoplasm which is most commonly found in the maxilla. We describe the case of a 6-month-old boy who was referred with a swiftly increasing swelling of the left cheek. After imaging and biopsy, MNTI was confirmed, and surgical resection was performed. Literature demonstrates that most MNTIs occur in the head and neck area and most of those occur in the maxilla. Although most cases are benign, 6.5% are malignant with metastatic disease. Treatment and outcome are discussed in detail. The case highlights the importance of making the diagnosis MNTI early on in order to achieve an optimal outcome.
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Although p53-gene mutations occur with significant frequency in diffuse low-grade and high-grade astrocytomas, and are postulated to play an important role in tumorigenesis in these cases, the role of the p53 gene in pilocytic astrocytomas remains unclear. Published data using DNA-based assays for p53-gene analysis in these tumors have shown contradictory results in mutation frequency (0-14%). It is not known whether these heterogeneous results stem from the biological diversity of this tumor group or from technical problems. To re-evaluate p53-gene status in pilocytic tumors, we analyzed 18 tumors chosen to represent the clinical and biological heterogeneity of this tumor type with respect to anatomical location, patient age, gender, ethnic origin (Caucasian or Japanese) and the concomitant occurrence of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). All primary tumors were histologically diagnosed as pilocytic astrocytoma (WHO grade I), except for one anaplastic pilocytic astrocytoma (WHO grade III) which developed in an NF1 patient and recurred as glioblastoma multiforme (WHO grade IV). p53 mutations were detected using an assay in yeast which tests the transcriptional activity of p53 proteins synthesized from tumor mRNA-derived p53-cDNA templates. None of 18 tumors, including 3 NF1-related tumors, showed p53-gene mutations between and including exons 4 and 11. We conclude that p53-gene mutations are extremely rare findings in pilocytic astrocytomas, and are absent even in those exceptional cases in which malignant progression of such tumors has occurred.
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PURPOSE: Primary bone lymphoma (PBL) represents less than 1% of all malignant lymphomas. In this study, we assessed the disease profile, outcome, and prognostic factors in patients with Stages I and II PBL.¦PATIENTS AND METHODS: Thirteen Rare Cancer Network (RCN) institutions enrolled 116 consecutive patients with PBL treated between 1987 and 2008 in this study. Eighty-seven patients underwent chemoradiotherapy (CXRT) without (78) or with (9) surgery, 15 radiotherapy (RT) without (13) or with (2) surgery, and 14 chemotherapy (CXT) without (9) or with (5) surgery. Median RT dose was 40 Gy (range, 4-60). The median number of CXT cycles was six (range, 2-8). Median follow-up was 41 months (range, 6-242).¦RESULTS: The overall response rate at the end of treatment was 91% (complete response [CR] 74%, partial response [PR] 17%). Local recurrence or progression was observed in 12 (10%) patients and systemic recurrence in 17 (15%). The 5-year overall survival (OS), lymphoma-specific survival (LSS), and local control (LC) were 76%, 78%, and 92%, respectively. In univariate analyses (log-rank test), favorable prognostic factors for OS and LSS were International Prognostic Index (IPI) score ≤1 (p = 0.009), high-grade histology (p = 0.04), CXRT (p = 0.05), CXT (p = 0.0004), CR (p < 0.0001), and RT dose >40 Gy (p = 0.005). For LC, only CR and Stage I were favorable factors. In multivariate analysis, IPI score, RT dose, CR, and CXT were independently influencing the outcome (OS and LSS). CR was the only predicting factor for LC.¦CONCLUSION: This large multicenter retrospective study confirms the good prognosis of early-stage PBL treated with combined CXRT. An adequate dose of RT and complete CXT regime were associated with better outcome.