1. Clinical and prognostic features of plasmacytomas: a multicenter study of Turkish Oncology Group-Sarcoma Working Party.
- Author
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Kilciksiz S, Celik OK, Pak Y, Demiral AN, Pehlivan M, Orhan O, Tokatli F, Agaoglu F, Zincircioglu B, Atasoy BM, Ozseker N, Yersal O, Niang U, and Haydaroglu A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Bone Neoplasms mortality, Bone Neoplasms radiotherapy, Bone Neoplasms surgery, Combined Modality Therapy, Disease Progression, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Myeloma diagnosis, Multiple Myeloma epidemiology, Plasmacytoma mortality, Plasmacytoma surgery, Prognosis, Radiotherapy Dosage, Risk, Survival Analysis, Treatment Outcome, Turkey epidemiology, Plasmacytoma radiotherapy
- Abstract
To identify the outcomes of prognostic factors of solitary plasmacytoma mainly treated with local radiotherapy (RT). The data were collected from 80 patients with solitary plasmacytoma (SP). Forty patients (50.0%) received radiotherapy (RT) alone while 38 of them (47.5%) were treated with surgery (S) and RT. The median radiation dose was 46 Gy (range 30-64). The median follow up was 2.41 years (range 0.33-12.33). Ten-year overall survival (OS) and local relapse-free survival (LRFS) were 73% and 94%, respectively. The median progression-free survival (PFS) and multiple myeloma-free survival (MMFS) were 3.5 years and 4.8 years, respectively. On multivariate analyses, the favorable factors were radiotherapy dose of > or =50 Gy and RT + S for PFS and younger age for MMFS. For the patients with medullary plasmacytoma, the favorable factor was younger age for MMFS. RT at > or =50 Gy and RT + S may be favorable prognostic factors on PFS. Younger patients, especially with head-neck lesion and without pre-RT macroscopic tumor, seem to have the best outcome when treated with RT +/- S. Progression to MM remains as the main problem especially for older patients., (Copyright 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2008
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