Abstract

Several previous studies employing surface-marker techniques suggest that HLA-DR antigen expression may correlate with prognosis in diffuse large cell lymphoma. Control studies in the authors' laboratory indicated that LN3 positivity in paraffin-embedded tissue correlates well with HLA-DR antigen expression. Accordingly they examined 212 cases of diffuse large cell lymphoma from one of Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group's (ECOG) high-grade malignant lymphoma treatment protocols. All patients studied had careful clinical follow-up of between 5 and 11 1/2 years from diagnosis and initiation of therapy. There was no correlation of strongly positive, positive, weakly positive, equivocal, or negative staining with survival. Cases that were LN3 negative had a median survival of 18.8 months versus a median survival of 39.4 months for all LN3-positive cases. However this difference was not statistically significant when using a log-rank test. The authors were unable to confirm that HLA-DR antigen expression, as defined by LN3, is prognostically valuable in diffuse large cell lymphoma in a multi-institutional study.

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