U. Wollina et al., Survival of patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma after treatment with extracorporeal photochemotherapy, ONCOL REP, 7(6), 2000, pp. 1197-1201
Few studies have assessed the long-term outcome of patients with cutaneous
T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) treated with extracorporeal photochemotherapy (ECP).
Our objective was to assess the efficacy, safety, and survival of a cohort
of patients with refractory CTCL in stages Ib to III who were treated with
ECP. A retrospective study was performed. Twenty patients (19 male, 1 fema
le) aged 38 to 87 years with CTCL of the mycosis fungoides type (n=17) and
primary cutaneous Ki-1 lymphoma (n=2) were treated twice a month. Sixteen h
ad an adjunctive treatment with interferon alpha (IFN alpha) s.c. 3 times a
week in the maximal tolerable dosage (i.e. up to 21x10(6)). A complete res
ponse was achieved in 10 patients, a partial response in three and a stable
disease in seven patients (response rate 65.0%). The overall survival was
29.4+/-16.0 months, the event-free survival was 26.2+/-12.4 months, and the
progression-free survival was 23.4+/-12.2 months. Four patients died of ca
uses unrelated to CTCL and two patient died of CTCL. Median survival time w
as 26 months. No severe side effects were noted. ECP is a safe alternative
therapy for CTCL. In particular when combined with IFN alpha it can induce
long-term remissions.