Volume 39, Issue 6 pp. 581-585
Research Article

Response to initial treatment of multisystem langerhans cell histiocytosis: An important prognostic indicator

Milen Minkov MD

Milen Minkov MD

St. Anna Children's Hospital, Vienna, Austria

Search for more papers by this author
Nicole Grois MD

Nicole Grois MD

St. Anna Children's Hospital, Vienna, Austria

Search for more papers by this author
Andreas Heitger MD

Andreas Heitger MD

University Children's Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria

Search for more papers by this author
Ulrike Pötschger

Ulrike Pötschger

St. Anna Children's Hospital, Vienna, Austria

Search for more papers by this author
T. Westermeier

T. Westermeier

Institute for Medical Statistics and Documentation, University of Mainz, Germany

Search for more papers by this author
Helmut Gadner MD, FRCP (Glasg.)

Corresponding Author

Helmut Gadner MD, FRCP (Glasg.)

St. Anna Children's Hospital, Vienna, Austria

St. Anna Children's Hospital, Kinderspitalgasse 9, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.Search for more papers by this author
for the DAL-HX Study Group

for the DAL-HX Study Group

Members of the DAL-HX Study Group Committee are: H. Gadner, MD (Vienna), Study chairman, T. Radaszkiewicz, MD (Vienna)†, G. Stingl, MD (Vienna), R. Hawliczek, MD (Vienna), Austria; J.D. Beck, MD (Erlangen), W. Brandeis, MD (Heidelberg)†, M. Bolkenius, MD (Augsburg), D. Harms, MD (Kiel), G. Janka-Schaub, MD (Hamburg), J. Kühl, MD (Würzburg), J. Ritter, MD (Münster), D. Schmidt, MD (Mannheim), R. Sauer, MD (Erlangen), W. Wahlen, MD (Homburg), Germany; A. Feldges, MD (St. Gallen), Switzerland; J.P.M. Bökkerink, MD (Nijmegen), The Netherlands. (†deceased.)

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 09 October 2002
Citations: 109

Abstract

Background

Reliable prediction of prognosis allowing risk-adapted therapy remains a major issue in the management of multisystem Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH). In a recent publication of the International LCH Study Group, response to initial therapy appears to be a reliable outcome predictor. The aim of this study is to test this observation in a cohort of patients treated with more intensive initial therapy. Furthermore, we compare the predictive value of response to initial therapy to some other well-established stratification systems.

Procedure

Response to initial combination chemotherapy (prednisolone, vinblastine, and etoposide) at 6 weeks and its prognostic value was evaluated retrospectively in 63 patients with multisystem LCH from the DAL-HX 83 and 90 Studies, and correlated to some established scoring systems from the literature.

Results

After 6 weeks of therapy, 50/63 (79%) patients qualified as responders, 4/63 (7%) patients showed intermediate response, and 9/63 (14%) patients did not respond. Probability of survival at 5 years was 0.94 ± 0.03 for responders, 0.75 ± 0.22 for patients with intermediate response, and only 0.11 ± 0.10 for non-responders.

Conclusions

Response to initial therapy appears to be a reliable prognostic predictor. Compared to the published international LCH-I Study, our results suggest that more intensive initial treatment allows a better discrimination between responders and non-responders. This allows to identify a subgroup of patients with extremely poor prognosis (mortality rate 90%) relatively early in the disease course. Med Pediatr Oncol 2002;39:581–585. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.