Hodgkin Lymphoma
Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is a heterogeneous group of malignant lymphoid neoplasms of B-cell origin characterized histologically by the presence of Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells in the vast majority of cases.
Epidemiology
HL is an uncommon cancer with an incidence of about 1/40,000 in North America and Europe. There are about 8500 new cases reported in the U.S. each year.
Clinical description
HL is comprised of 2 major forms: classical Hodgkin lymphoma (CHL; see this term), seen in 95% of all HL cases, and nodular lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL; see this term), seen in only 5% of all HL cases. Disease onset occurs most frequently in young adults (age 15-35) followed by older adults (over the age of 55) and usually begins with the painless swelling of a lymph node in the upper body. Disease can spread to multiple lymph node regions or lymphoid structures and associated systemic symptoms (weight loss > 10% of baseline, fevers, night sweats) are observed in about 20% of patients.
Etiology
The exact cause is unknown but immunological, genetic and environmental factors are thought to be involved.
Management and treatment
Treatment with radiotherapy and systemic chemotherapy leads to a very good prognosis. Follow-up physical exams, blood tests and x-rays are needed to check for recurrence and check for any long-term side effects of the toxic treatments. Possible long-term side effects include secondary cancers, infertility, reduced immunity, thyroid problems, heart disease and stroke.
Prognosis
The international prognostic score (IPS) is a score given based on the presence of 7 risk factors (male sex, >45 years of age, stage 4 disease, serum albumin <4g/dl, hemoglobin <10.5 g/l, lymphocytopenia and WBC count >15,000/mm3) at the time of diagnosis. The more factors present, the less favorable the prognosis. The cure rates are 90% for early-stage HL and 70% for advance stage HL.