Abstract
Background: Patients with AIDS-related lymphoma (ARL) is difficult to accept standard treatment for various reasons. Aims: To summarize the clinical characteristics of AIDS-related lymphoma (ARL) patients admitted to Chongqing Cancer Hospital and improve the understanding of the disease. Methods: The clinical data of 71 ARL patients admitted from January 2008 to January 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. Results: The ratio of male to female in 71 ARL patients was 6.1:1, and the median age was 50 years. Fifty-one percent of patients had no other HIV-related manifestations and were only found at the time of lymphoma diagnosis. 20% of patients were diagnosed with lymphoma within 1 year of AIDS diagnosis and antiviral therapy. At the time of diagnosis of lymphoma, 35 cases (49.3%) with CD4+ cell count>200×10^6/L, 22 cases (30.9%) with CD4+ cell count 100-200×10^6/L, and CD4+ cell count<100×10^6/L and 6 cases of <50×10^6/L (accounting for 8.5 ), and 2 other cases are unknown. The most common pathological type in the 71 patients was diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (38 cases, accounting for 53.5%), Burkitt lymphoma (13 cases, accounting for 18.3), and the types also include Hodgkin lymphoma, high-grade B-cell lymphoma, plasmablastic lymphoma, follicular lymphoma, marginal zone B-cell lymphoma tumor, CLL/SLL, T lymphoblastic lymphoma and Castleman disease. Thirty patients (42.3%) had extranodal involvement at the initial diagnosis, including lung, kidney, intestinal, pancreas, breast, testis, skin and soft tissue involvement. Ann-Arbor staging included 56 patients (78.8%) with stage III-IV, and 19 patients (26.8%) with B symptoms. Survival analysis showed that patients with central involvement, elevated LDH, and intermediate-high-risk IPI scores had shorter progression-free survival, and patients with large masses, intermediate-high-risk and high-risk IPI scores had shorter overall survival. Both CHOP and EPOCH-based chemotherapy regimens are used in AIDS-related non-Hodgkin lymphoma, but the efficacy varies greatly. ABVD treatment of AIDS-related Hodgkin lymphoma is effective, but extranodal involvement may be a poor prognostic factor. Summary/Conclusion: ARL has diverse clinical manifestations, frequent extranodal involvement, late clinical stage, high malignancy, and poor clinical efficacy.
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