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Stomach cancer risk after treatment for hodgkin lymphoma.

Lindsay M Morton ,
Graça M Dores ,
Rochelle E Curtis ,
Charles F Lynch ,
Marilyn Stovall ,
Per Hall ,
Ethel S Gilbert ,
David C Hodgson ,
Hans H Storm ,
Tom Børge Johannesen ,
Susan A Smith ,
Rita E Weathers ,
Michael Andersson ,
Sophie D Fossa ,
Michael Hauptmann ,
Eric J Holowaty ,
Heikki Joensuu ,
Magnus Kaijser ,
Ruth A Kleinerman ,
Frøydis Langmark ,
Eero Pukkala ,
Leila Vaalavirta ,
Alexandra W van den Belt-Dusebout ,
Joseph F Fraumeni ,
Lois B Travis ,
Berthe M Aleman ,
Flora E van Leeuwen

Abstract

PATIENTS AND METHODS

We conducted an international case-control study of stomach cancer nested in a cohort of 19,882 HL survivors diagnosed from 1953 to 2003, including 89 cases and 190 matched controls. For each patient, we quantified cumulative doses of specific alkylating agents (AAs) and reconstructed radiation dose to the stomach tumor location.

CONCLUSION

Patients with HL who received subdiaphragmatic radiotherapy had dose-dependent increased risk of stomach cancer, with marked risks for patients who also received chemotherapy containing high-dose procarbazine. For current patients, risks and benefits of exposure to both procarbazine and subdiaphragmatic radiotherapy should be weighed carefully. For patients treated previously, GI symptoms should be evaluated promptly.

RESULTS

Stomach cancer risk increased with increasing radiation dose to the stomach (Ptrend < .001) and with increasing number of AA-containing chemotherapy cycles (Ptrend = .02). Patients who received both radiation to the stomach ≥ 25 Gy and high-dose procarbazine (≥ 5,600 mg/m(2)) had strikingly elevated stomach cancer risk (25 cases, two controls; odds ratio [OR], 77.5; 95% CI, 14.7 to 1452) compared with those who received radiation < 25 Gy and procarbazine < 5,600 mg/m(2) (Pinteraction < .001). Risk was also elevated (OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.3 to 6.4) among patients who received radiation to the stomach ≥ 25 Gy but procarbazine < 5,600 mg/m(2); however, no procarbazine-related risk was evident with radiation < 25 Gy. Treatment with dacarbazine also increased stomach cancer risk (12 cases, nine controls; OR, 8.8; 95% CI, 2.1 to 46.6), after adjustment for radiation and procarbazine doses.

PURPOSE

Treatment-related stomach cancer is an important cause of morbidity and mortality among the growing number of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) survivors, but risks associated with specific HL treatments are unclear.

More about this publication

Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology

Volume 31
Issue nr. 27
Pages 3369-77
Publication date 20-09-2013

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1200/JCO.2013.50.6832
Europe PubMed Central 23980092
Pubmed 23980092

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