1 PURPOSE
The purpose of this review is to summarize the Stanford experience in Hodgk
in's disease, the late effects of treatment, and strategies to improve mana
gement to maximize cure and decrease late effects in these patients.
2 PATIENTS AND METHODS
Between 1960 and 1999, 2617 consecutive patients with Hodgkin's disease hav
e been seen, treated, and rigorously followed at Stanford. This population
includes patients of all ages and stages of disease. The database summarizi
ng this experience serves as the source of survival and mortality data over
4 decades. Two thousand two hundred thirty-two of the population comprise
the group evaluated for secondary cardiac disease. Two thousand one hundred
sixty-two patients have been evaluated for risk of secondary leukemia, non
-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and solid tumors. Eight hundred eighty-five women were
evaluated for secondary breast cancer, prompting a subsequent analysis of
risk of secondary cancer among 694 pediatric patients.
4 RESULTS
The probability of cure of Hodgkin's disease has dramatically improved over
the past 40 years. Today, 94% of patients are expected to survive. Among t
hose who do not survive, approximately half die of Hodgkin's disease, 20% o
f new cancers, and 14% of cardiovascular complications. Modifications in pa
tient management and treatment have greatly reduced the serious late effect
s observed from prior therapy. With current combined-modality therapy using
moderate doses of involved field of radiation and limited cycles of multia
gent, risk adapted chemotherapy, serious cardiac complications and developm
ent of secondary cancers are expected to be greatly reduced. The Stanford 2
5-year pediatric Hodgkin's disease experience reveals that survival in favo
rable early-stage disease exceeds 95%. Newer protocols for children with ad
vanced-stage disease continue to show these excellent survival rates and pr
omise less late morbidity. Adult protocols using the risk-adapted Stanford
V combined-modality program now parallel the pediatric experience, with gre
ater than 90% survival in these patients.
5 DISCUSSION
Thus today the likelihood of cure of Hodgkin's disease greatly exceeds the
risk of late effects, a goal both Dr. Henry Janeway and Madame Marie Curie
emphasized and taught from first-hand experience.