Long‐term follow‐up and second malignancies in 487 patients with hairy cell leukaemia

Édouard Cornet(Université de Caen Normandie), Cécile Tomowiak(Université de Poitiers), Aline Schmidt(Université d'Angers), Stéphane Leprêtre, Jehan Dupuis, Pierre Feugier(Centre Hospitalier Régional et Universitaire de Nancy), Alain Devidas(Centre Hospitalier Sud Francilien), Clara Mariette(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble), Véronique Leblond(Sorbonne Université), Catherine Thiéblemont(Hôpital Saint-Louis), Patricia Validire-Charpy(Institut Curie), Laurent Sutton(Centre Hospitalier Victor Dupouy), Emmanuel Gyan(Université de Tours), Jean‐Claude Eisenmann(Centre Hospitalier de Mulhouse), Pascale Cony‐Makhoul(Centre Hospitalier Annecy Genevois), Loïc Ysebaert(Université Fédérale de Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées), Xavier Troussard(Université de Caen Normandie), the Société Française d'Hématologie
British Journal of Haematology
April 18, 2014
Cited by 68

Abstract

A large, multicentre, retrospective survey of patients with hairy cell leukaemia (HCL) was conducted in France to determine the frequency of second malignancies and to analyse the long-term effects of the established purine nucleoside analogues (PNAs), cladribine and pentostatin. The survey retrospectively reviewed the medical history of patients and their immediate family, clinical and biological presentation at the time of HCL diagnosis, treatment choice, response to treatment, time to relapse and cause of death. Data were collected for 487 patients with HCL. Of the patients included in the survey, 18% (88/487) had a familial history of cancers, 8% (41/487) presented with malignancies before HCL diagnosis and 10% (48/487) developed second malignancies after HCL was diagnosed. An excess incidence of second malignancies was observed, with a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of 1·86 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1·34-2·51), with no significant difference between PNAs. For second haematological malignancies alone, the SIR was markedly increased at 5·32 (95% CI: 2·90-8·92). This study highlights the high frequency of cancers in HCL patients and their family members. The frequency of second malignancies is notably increased, particularly for haematological malignancies. The respective role of pentostatin and cladribine in the development of second malignancies is debatable.


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