Impact of age on clinical risk scores in follicular lymphoma

Author:

Alig Stefan1ORCID,Jurinovic Vindi12,Pastore Alessandro3ORCID,Haebe Sarah1,Schmidt Christian1,Zoellner Anna-Katharina1,Dreyling Martin1,Unterhalt Michael1,Hoster Eva12,Hiddemann Wolfgang145,Weigert Oliver145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine III, University Hospital, and

2. Institute for Medical Information Processing, Biometry and Epidemiology, Ludwig-Maximillans-Universität Munich, Munich, Germany;

3. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York City, NY;

4. German Cancer Consortium (DKTK), Munich, Germany; and

5. German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe Follicular Lymphoma (FL) International Prognostic Index (FLIPI) and FLIPI-2 are well-described clinical risk models. Age >60 years at diagnosis is a risk factor in both scores. Recently, we showed that older age is not associated with higher risk of disease progression or inferior treatment efficacy. Instead, shorter survival of older patients results mainly from an increased risk of nonrelapse deaths. This questions the value of age as a meaningful component of scores intended to predict disease-specific survival. The newly proposed PRIMA-prognostic index (PRIMA-PI) only includes β2-microglobulin levels and bone marrow infiltration as risk factors. Here, we independently validate the PRIMA-PI in a clinical trial cohort of 475 patients with advanced FL who uniformly received cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin hydrochloride, vincristine sulfate, prednisone, and rituximab (R-CHOP) as frontline therapy. The PRIMA-PI separated 3 similar sized risk cohorts with 5-year progression-free survival (PFS) rates of 74%, 59%, and 39%, respectively (P < .0001). Furthermore, we compare the PRIMA-PI with the FLIPI and FLIPI-2. We demonstrate that the PRIMA-PI has the highest specificity to identify high-risk patients (80% for 5-year PFS) because of its superior risk stratification in patients >60 years (73% vs 33% [FLIPI] and 47% [FLIPI-2] for 5-year PFS). Thus, the PRIMA-PI is a promising clinical tool to stringently identify patients at highest risk of poor outcome after frontline R-CHOP for advanced FL, and is particularly useful in patients with older age. Further validation in non–R-CHOP treated cohorts is needed.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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