Influence of staging celiotomy in localized presentations of Hodgkin's disease

Staging celiotomy was performed in 139 previously untreated patients with lymphogram negative Stage I and I1 Hodgkin's disease. Sixteen additional patients received definitive radiotherapy for symptomatic relief of upper torso disease prior to abdominal exploration. The overall incidence of pos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer 1975-03, Vol.35 (3), p.817-825
Hauptverfasser: Gamble, Jess F., Fuller, Lillian M., Martin, Richard G., Sullivan, Margaret P., Jinc, Bao‐Shan, Butler, James J., Shullenberger, C. C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Staging celiotomy was performed in 139 previously untreated patients with lymphogram negative Stage I and I1 Hodgkin's disease. Sixteen additional patients received definitive radiotherapy for symptomatic relief of upper torso disease prior to abdominal exploration. The overall incidence of positive abdominal findings for these two groups was 34.5% and 31.2%, respectively. Further analysis of the 139 previously untreated cases revealed notable differences in incidence of positive abdominal findings for stage, presentation, and specific histology. Stage I patients with upper cervical or inguinal presentations o r a lymphocytic predominance classification had negative celiotomies, as contrasted with a 43% incidence of positive abdominal findings in patients with supraclavicular presentations. In Stage I1 disease, the incidence of positive findings was related to the status of the mediastinum. For mediastinal presentations, the incidence was 33.3%, as compared to 48% for nonmediastinal presentations. To date, the number of relapses in celiotomy Stage I and I1 patients has been low regardless of whether or not prophylactic irradiation was administered to the major lymph‐node‐bearing regions of the upper and lower torso. Of 9 patients with progression, extranodal spread occurred as the first evidence of new disease in 4 patients. The implication of this finding is considered in a discussion on the influence of staging celiotomy in the management of Stage I and II patients with Hodgkin's disease.
ISSN:0008-543X
1097-0142
DOI:10.1002/1097-0142(197503)35:3<817::AID-CNCR2820350338>3.0.CO;2-C