Lymphoma Treatment, Causes, Diagnosis & Types (original) (raw)

Lymphoma (Hodgkin's Disease and Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma) Overview

Facts You Should Know About Lymphoma

  1. Lymphoma (also termed lymphatic or lymphocytic cancer) is a type of cancer involving cells of the immune system, called lymphocytes. Just as cancer represents many different diseases, lymphoma represents many different cancers of lymphocytes -- about 35-60 different subtypes, in fact, depending upon which group of experts is categorizing the subtypes.
  2. Seek medical attention for unexplained swellings in an arm or leg, fever, night sweats, unexplained weight loss, or itching that lasts for a few days.
  3. Treatment of lymphoma may involve radiation, chemotherapy, biological therapy, and occasionally stem cell transplantation.

Lymphoma is a group of cancers that affect the cells that play a role in the immune system and primarily represents cells involved in the lymphatic system of the body.

Lymphocytes recognize infectious organisms and abnormal cells and destroy them. There are two major subtypes of lymphocytes: B lymphocytes and T lymphocytes, also referred to as B cells and T cells.

Cancer occurs when normal cells undergo a transformation whereby they grow and multiply uncontrollably. Lymphoma is a malignant transformation of either B or T cells or their subtypes.

What Are the Types of Lymphoma?

Lymphomas fall into one of two major categories: Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL, previously called Hodgkin's disease) and all other lymphomas (non-Hodgkin's lymphomas or NHLs).

Lymphoma is the most common type of blood cancer in the United States. It is the seventh most common cancer in adults and the third most common in children. Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is far more common than Hodgkin's lymphoma.

What Are Lymphoma Causes and Risk Factors?

The exact causes of lymphoma are unknown. Several factors have been linked to an increased risk of developing lymphoma, but it is unclear what role they play in the actual development of lymphoma. These risk factors include the following:

The presence of these risk factors does not mean a person will actually develop lymphoma. In fact, most people with one or several of these risk factors do not develop lymphoma.

What Are Lymphoma Symptoms and Signs?

Often, the first sign of lymphoma is a painless swelling of lymph nodes in the neck, under an arm, or in the groin.

Symptoms of lymphoma may vary from patient to patient and may include one or more the following:

These symptoms are nonspecific, and not every patient will have all of these potential symptoms. This means that a patient's symptoms could be caused by any number of conditions unrelated to cancer. For instance, they could be signs of the flu or other viral infection, but in those cases, they would not last very long. In lymphoma, the symptoms persist over time and cannot be explained by an infection or another disease.

When Should Someone Seek Medical Care for Lymphoma?

Swelling in the neck, armpit, or groin, or unexplained swelling in an arm or leg should prompt one to seek medical attention. Such swellings may have many causes or have nothing to do with lymphoma, but they should be checked.

If any of the following symptoms persist for more than a few days, seek medical attention:

What Tests Do Doctors Use to Diagnose Lymphoma?

If a person has swelling or symptoms described in the Symptoms section, his or her health care provider will ask many questions about the symptoms (when they began, recent illnesses, past or current medical problems, any medications, workplace, health history, family history, and habits and lifestyle). A thorough examination follows these questions.

If, after an initial interview and examination, the health care provider suspects that a patient may have lymphoma, the patient will undergo a series of tests designed to provide further clarification. At some point in this workup, the patient might be referred to a specialist in blood diseases and cancer (hematologist/oncologist).

Blood tests

Blood is drawn for various tests.

Biopsy

If there is a swelling (also called lump or mass), a sample of tissue from the swelling will be removed for examination by a pathologist. This is a biopsy. Any of several methods can be used to obtain a biopsy of a mass.

Imaging studies

If there is no palpable mass in the presence of persistent symptoms, imaging studies will likely be carried out in order to determine whether a mass is present and, if so, how then to direct a biopsy.

Bone marrow examination

Most of the time, an examination of the bone marrow is necessary to see if the marrow is affected by the lymphoma. This is done by collecting a biopsy of the bone marrow.

How Do Doctors Determine Lymphoma Staging?

Staging is the classification of a cancer type by its size and whether and how much it has spread around the body. Determining a cancer's stage is very important because it tells the oncologist which treatment is most likely to work and what are the chances of remission or a cure (prognosis).

Staging of lymphomas depends on the results of imaging studies and related tests that reveal the extent of the cancer involvement.

HL is often described as being "bulky" or "nonbulky." Nonbulky means the tumor is small; bulky means the tumor is large. Nonbulky disease has a better prognosis than bulky disease.

NHL is a complicated set of diseases with a complex classification system. In fact, the classification system is continuously evolving as we learn more about these cancers. The newest classification system takes into account not only the microscopic appearance of the lymphoma but also its location in the body and genetic and molecular features.

Grade is also an important component of the NHL classification.

The "staging," or evaluation of extent of disease, for both HL and NHL, are similar.

If the cancer is also found in the spleen, an "S" is added to the classification.

Prognostic factors

Health researchers have extensively evaluated several risk factors shown to play a role in treatment outcome. For HL, the International Prognostic Index includes the following seven risk factors:

  1. Male sex
  2. Age 45 years or older
  3. Stage IV disease
  4. Albumin (blood test) less than 4.0 g/dL
  5. Hemoglobin (red blood cell level) less than 10.5 g/dL
  6. Elevated white blood cell (WBC) count of 15,000/mL
  7. Low lymphocyte counts less than 600/mL or less than 8% of total WBC

The absence of any of the above risk factors is associated with an 84% rate of control of Hodgkin's disease, whereas the presence of a risk factor is associated with a 77% rate of disease control. The presence of five or more risk factors was associated with a disease control rate of only 42%.

The treatment these patients received, which occurred primarily in the 1980s, determined their outcomes. Newer treatments for Hodgkin's lymphoma may improve these predicted outcomes. Furthermore, new treatments are being developed for patients with greater risk factors.

The International Prognostic Index for NHL includes five risk factors:

  1. Age older than 60 years
  2. Stage III or IV disease
  3. High LDH
  4. More than one extranodal site
  5. Poor performance status (as a measure of general health): From these factors, the following risk groups were identified:

The prognostic models were developed to evaluate groups of patients and are useful in developing therapeutic strategies. It is important to remember that any individual patient might have significantly different results than the above data, which represent statistical results for a patient group. There are specific IPIs for certain types of lymphoma, such as follicular or diffuse large B-cell.

What Types of Doctors Treat Lymphoma?

Although the patient's primary care doctor or pediatrician can help manage the patient's care, other specialists are usually involved as consultants. Oncologists, hematologists, pathologists, and radiation oncologists are usually involved in making treatment plans and caring for the patient. Occasionally, other specialists may need to be involved depending upon what organs may be at risk in the individual's disease process.

What Is the Treatment for Lymphoma?

General health care providers rarely undertake the sole care of a cancer patient. The vast majority of cancer patients receive ongoing care from oncologists but may in fact be referred to more than one oncologist should there be any question about the disease. Patients are always encouraged to gain second opinions if the situation so warrants this approach.

Once one settles in with an oncologist, there is ample time to ask questions and discuss treatment regimens.

As in many cancers, lymphoma is most likely to be cured if it is diagnosed early and treated promptly.

The goal of medical therapy in lymphoma is complete remission. This means that all signs of the disease have disappeared after treatment. Remission is not the same as cure. In remission, one may still have lymphoma cells in the body, but they are undetectable and cause no symptoms.

Remission can also be partial. This means that the tumor shrinks after treatment to less than half its size before treatment.

The following terms are used to describe the lymphoma's response to treatment:

The following terms to refer to therapy:

Medical Treatment: Radiation and Chemotherapy

Standard first-line therapy (primary therapy) for lymphoma includes radiation therapy for most early-stage lymphomas, or a combination of chemotherapy and radiation. For later-stage lymphomas, chemotherapy is primarily used, with radiation therapy added for control of bulky disease. Biological therapy, or immunotherapy, is routinely used alongside chemotherapy.

Radiation therapy

Radiation therapy uses high-energy rays to kill cancer cells. It is considered a local therapy, meaning that it should be used to target areas of the body involved by tumor masses. A radiation oncologist will plan and supervise therapy.

Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy is the use of powerful drugs to kill cancer cells. Chemotherapy is a systemic therapy, meaning that it circulates through the bloodstream and affects all parts of the body.

Unfortunately, chemotherapy also affects healthy cells; this accounts for its well-known side effects.

Chemotherapy may be given in pill form, but it is typically a liquid infused directly into the bloodstream through a vein (intravenous).

Experience has shown that combinations of drugs are more efficient than monotherapy (use of a single medication).

Chemotherapy is given in cycles.

Medical Treatment: Biological Therapy

Biological therapies are sometimes referred to as immunotherapy because they take advantage of the body's natural immunity against pathogens. These therapies are attractive because they offer anticancer effects without many of the undesirable side effects of standard therapies. There are many different types of biological therapies. The following are some of the most promising for treating lymphoma:

Other therapies that are primary or supportive medications are undergoing continuing development and refinement; they include drugs that target cancer cells on a molecular level, various new monoclonal antibodies, and other biologic therapies such as steroids and bone marrow stimulants. For example, CAR T-cell therapy uses the body's own immune cells that are modified to recognize and fight cancer cells. It treats many hematologic malignancies in clinical trials and is approved for the treatment of DLBCL (diffuse large B-cell lymphomas).

What Other Therapies Treat Lymphoma?

Watchful waiting means choosing to observe and monitor the cancer rather than treat it right away. This is strategy is sometimes used for indolent recurrent tumors. Treatment is given only if the cancer starts to grow more rapidly or to cause symptoms or other problems.

Stem cell transplantation is usually not used as a primary therapy in lymphoma.

Clinical trials

An oncologist may belong to a network of investigators who offer novel treatments for various types of cancers. These novel therapies are newer agents that have been recently developed, and extensive data on treatment results are not yet known. Such new agents can be offered in the context of a clinical trial. Usually, a consent form that explains the drug, its known side effects, its potential side effects, and alternatives to the drug treatment are presented to the patient. If the treatment seems promising for the particular subtype of lymphoma, and the patient is fully educated about the potential benefits and risks associated with such treatment and is interested in receiving such treatment, then the consent form is signed by the patient and the managing physician, and possibly other involved parties. The patient is then enrolled in a treatment protocol that specifies exactly how a patient is to be treated with the new therapy.

Alternatively, an oncologist may refer a patient to another institution to receive investigational treatment or intensive treatment, such as a stem cell transplant.

Complementary/alternative therapies

Several alternative therapies have undergone preliminary testing in lymphoma. None has been found to work better than or as well as standard medical therapies. A few therapies, still felt to be experimental, have been found to be potentially helpful as complements to medical therapy, however.

What Medications Treat Lymphoma?

Numerous chemotherapy and biological drug combinations may be prescribed by an oncologist. Which type and combination of therapy depends on many factors, including the type and stage of lymphoma, the age of the patient, the ability to tolerate chemotherapy side effects, and if any previous treatment for the lymphoma has occurred. Oncologists often work together regionally to decide which combination of chemotherapy and biological drugs are currently working best for their patients. Because of this regional collaboration, the drug combinations often vary and are able to change rapidly when improved results occur.

What Follow-up May Be Needed After Lymphoma Treatment?

After completion of primary therapy for lymphoma, all appropriate tests will be repeated to see how well the therapy worked.

If lymphoma recurs after treatment, the oncologist will likely recommend further treatment.

What Is the Prognosis of Lymphoma?

The outlook for HL is very good. It is one of the most curable cancers. The five-year survival rate after treatment is greater than 80% for adults and greater than 90% for children.

Because of refinements in and more aggressive approaches to therapy, the outlook for NHL has improved significantly in the last few decades. The five-year survival rate after treatment is 69% for adults and up to 90% for children; the 10-year relative survival rate is 59%. The addition of immunotherapy to standard treatment for NHLs may further improve survival rates so that life expectancy may move toward normal.

Many people live with lymphoma in remission for many years after treatment.

Is It Possible to Prevent Lymphoma?

There is no known way to prevent lymphoma. A standard recommendation is to avoid the known risk factors for the disease. However, some risk factors for lymphoma are unknown, and therefore impossible to avoid. Infection with viruses such as HIV, EBV, and hepatitis are risk factors that can be avoided with frequent hand washing, practicing safe sex, and by not sharing needles, razors, toothbrushes, and similar personal items that might be contaminated with infected blood or secretions.

Support Groups and Counseling for Lymphoma

Living with lymphoma presents many new challenges for an individual and his or her family and friends.

For most people with lymphoma, talking about their feelings and concerns can be helpful.

Lymphoma Symptom

Enlarged Spleen (Splenomegaly)

The causes of splenomegaly vary widely and range from malignancy (cancers), infections, congestion (increased blood flow), infiltration of the spleen from other diseases, inflammatory conditions, and blood cell diseases.

Some of the most common causes of an enlarged spleen include the following:

References

American Cancer Society. "Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma." Aug. 1, 2018. http://www.cancer.org/cancer/non-hodgkinlymphoma/detailedguide/non-hodgkin-lymphoma-types-of-non-hodgkin-lymphoma.

American Cancer Society. "What Are the Key Statistics About Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma?" Aug. 1, 2018. https://www.cancer.org/cancer/non-hodgkin-lymphoma/about/key-statistics.html.

"Clinical presentation and diagnosis of non-Hodgkin lymphoma." UptoDate.com

"Epidemiology, pathologic features, and diagnosis of classical Hodgkin lymphoma." UptoDate.com

Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. "Facts and Statistics." https://www.lls.org/http%3A/llsorg.prod.acquia-sites.com/facts-and-statistics/facts-and-statistics-overview/facts-and-statistics.