Lymphoma Survival Rates are High But so are Long Term Effects Everyday Health

Lymphoma Survival Rates are High But so are Long Term Effects Everyday Health

Lymphoma Survival Rates are High, But so are Long Term Effects Everyday Health MenuNewslettersSearch Lymphoma After the Cure Survival Rates for Lymphomas Are High but Patients Need to Consider Long-Term Effects There are very few cancers for which doctors will use the word 'cure' right off the bat, but Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), the most common cancer diagnosis among children and young adults, comes pretty darn close: Ninety percent of patients with stages 1 and 2 go on to survive 5 years or more; even patients with stage 4 have a 65 percent survival rate. By Paula DerrowMedically Reviewed by Thomas Urban Marron, MD, PhDReviewed: April 26, 2018Medically ReviewedLymphoma survivors need to monitor their health carefully in the years after treatment.AlamyThere are very few cancers for which doctors will use the word cure right off the bat, but Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), the most common cancer diagnosis among children and young adults, comes pretty darn close: Ninety percent of patients with stages 1 and 2 go on to survive five years or more; even patients with stage 4 have a 65 percent survival rate. “When patients come in with Hodgkin lymphoma, especially, the provider is likely to say, ‘You’re lucky. This is a highly curable type,” says Michael Roth, MD, the director of the Childhood Cancer Survivorship Program at University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. What a doctor may not say is that HL also leads to very high incidences of later-in-life diseases, particularly when patients are children when diagnosed. “We now know that obtaining a cure for lymphoma isn’t enough,” says Dr. Roth. “You also have to maximize patients’ quality of life over the long term.” Early Curative Treatments for Lymphoma Raised the Risk for Other Diseases For years, the standard of care for treating HL was to use a combination of radiation and chemotherapy, a one-two punch that blasted cancer cells and could also have a seriously destructive impact on surrounding healthy cells. “We took a bazooka approach, but that approach increased the risk for a host of medical complications, including cardiac issues, lung disease, infertility, secondary blood cancers, thyroid cancer, and breast cancer,” says Lisa Roth, MD, the director of the adolescent and young adult lymphoma program at New York–Presbyterian and Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City. For instance, doctors now believe that breast tissue in girls and teenagers may be especially sensitive to radiation. “We’ve found that breast cancer is prevalent in lymphoma patients who received radiation at a young age,” says Dr. Lisa Roth. This unexpected fallout has led to a major shift in the management of Hodgkin lymphoma — one that calls for less radiation, when possible, as well as targeted treatments that harness the body’s immune system to attack only tumor cells and leave healthy cells in peace. Monitoring Long-Term Effects on the Heart It’s heartbreaking enough for any child to get a cancer diagnosis, but survivors of HL who are diagnosed as children or teens are especially prone to serious heart conditions as adults. A report published in the June 2015 issue of JAMA found that HL patients have a four- to sixfold increased incidence of congestive heart disease or heart failure compared with the general population. (1) They are also more likely to develop valve abnormalities and have heart attacks in their thirties, forties, and fifties. “These survivors are getting diseases of the elderly at an earlier stage,” says Michael Roth. “The chemotherapy and radiation to the chest appear to be speeding up the aging process in organs more targeted by those treatments, like the heart.” A class of chemotherapy drugs known as anthracyclines, which include drugs such as Adriamycin (doxorubicin) and Ellence (eprubicin) is also now known to be cardio toxic. (2) “Anthracyclines trigger the release of free oxygen that damages cells, including heart cells,” says Michael Roth. Along with his MD Anderson colleagues, Roth is investigating whether first giving patients a cardio-protective drug known as dexrazoxane (Zinecard, Totect) before chemotherapy can head off heart problems later. “The data is still coming in, but the early evidence is promising,” he says. Findings like these have spawned an emerging field known as cardio-oncology, which aims to reduce the unhealthy heart effects produced by so many cancer treatments. “Monitoring these problems is an important part of cancer survivorship,” says Michael Roth. “Years ago, we didn’t know the side effects of being exposed to radiation and chemotherapy. Now we are trying to take action on the back end, by doing regular screenings — including echocardiograms and EKGS — on these patients who were treated back in the '70s and '80s.” The goal? “To try to catch abnormalities early on.” Patients in MD Anderson’s Childhood Cancer Survivorship Program come back regularly, and are given screenings based on how much radiation they received, or their age during treatment, or any number of factors,” says Michael Roth. “For Hodgkin lymphoma, this kind of post-cancer follow-up is now the standard of care.” RELATED: CAR T Cell Therapy Enhances the Human Immune Response to Cancer The Future of Care Avoid Doing Damage in the First Place For young patients getting a diagnosis of Hodgkin lymphoma now, oncologists are offering more targeted, individualized treatments. “When we do use radiation, we use lower doses,” says Lisa Roth. “And the technology has gotten much better at allowing us to home in on just the areas that need the radiation, rather than hitting healthy tissue.” Many patients no longer get radiation at all. Often, they begin with chemo. If scans at the halfway point show that they’re responding quickly and their tumors are shrinking, they may forgo radiation — and the dangers that come with it. Doctors are also looking beyond chemotherapy to immunotherapy, which enhances a patient’s own immune response to a tumor. One example: Antibodies from a patient’s immune system might be used to pummel certain proteins on the surface of cancer cells. “We’ve seen encouraging responses with an immunotherapy drug called Keytruda (pembrolizumab), which is what’s called a checkpoint inhibitor,” Lisa Roth explains. “It works by changing the interaction between the tumor and the immune system so that the latter can fight the cancer cells more effectively.” (3) Meanwhile, a trial at MD Anderson is looking at subbing in a new drug for the chemotherapy agent bleomycin, which has been shown to cause lung damage. They are trying a medication known as brentuximab. (4) “It’s an antibody that targets a protein on the surface of tumor cells, and is safer for the lungs,” MD Anderson’s Michael Roth explains. Another new treatment, known as CAR T cell therapy (CAR stands for chimeric antigen receptor), has shown promise in treating acute leukemia as well as non-Hodgkin lymphoma. “Basically, we take out a patient’s immune system, edit it so that it will target tumor cells, then put it back into the body,” says Michael Roth. Of course, researchers still don’t know if immunotherapy will produce side effects in 10, 20, or 50 years' time. “We will have to do that surveillance, too,” Michael Roth admits. Still, he says, “there’s hope to be seen. Some of the changes we’ve made — decreasing radiation, limiting chemotherapy doses, using more targeted therapies — are already resulting in patients living longer — with a better quality of life. It’s not just about curing the cancer anymore.” NEWSLETTERS Sign up for our Cancer Care Newsletter SubscribeBy subscribing you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Editorial Sources and Fact-Checking Van Nimwegen F, et al. Cardiovascular Disease After Hodgkin Lymphoma Treatment 40-Year Disease Risk. JAMA Internal Medicine. June 2015.Van Nimwegen F, et al. Risk of Heart Failure in Survivors of Hodgkin Lymphoma: Effects of Cardiac Exposure to Radiation and Anthracyclines. Blood. April 2017.New Developments in Lymphoma. Weill Cornell Medicine. March 21, 2017.Feldman D, Vander Els N. Bleomycin-Induced Lung Injury. UpToDate. December 13, 2017.Show Less The Latest in Lymphoma Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma SLL Treatment Stages PrognosisBy Julie Lynn MarksSeptember 19, 2022 Surviving Cancer From Teenage Diagnosis to Elite Athlete and CoachLottie Mishan was just 14 when she was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma and had no role models to show her what survival could look like. Now, she’s that...By Leona VaughnAugust 26, 2022 Spotlight On The Leukemia and Lymphoma SocietyThe Leukemia and Lymphoma Society’s mission is to help educate and support people with blood cancer, and provide funding for new research. By Leona VaughnAugust 26, 2022 New Drug Combination May Be Game-Changer for Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma PatientsAdding ibrutinib (Imbruvica) could be the new standard for treating rare mantle cell lymphoma in older patients.By Susan K. TreimanJune 6, 2022 Lymphoma Symptoms Recognizing Them Early Aids Prompt DiagnosisSwollen lymph nodes, fever, and night sweats are common symptoms of lymphoma.By Julie MarksJanuary 26, 2022 Lymphoma Resources Finding the Help You NeedIf you’ve recently been diagnosed with a lymphoma, it’s important to have access to resources that can help you understand, cope, and recover from your...By Nicol NataleOctober 14, 2021 Diagnosing Lymphoma What Can I Expect By Julie Lynn MarksOctober 14, 2021 What Is Follicular Lymphoma Treatment Prognosis Symptoms Causes and MoreBy Ashley WelchOctober 14, 2021 What I Learned When My Husband Got a Rare Cancer February 28 is Rare Disease Day; one woman shares what she learned when her 30-year-old husband faced an aggressive rare cancer.By Susanne KatusFebruary 27, 2019 New Study Sheds Light on Genetic Differences in Types of LymphomaThe research could help steer patients to more appropriate treatments based on the genetic underpinnings of their disease.By Shari RoanApril 20, 2018 MORE IN Metastatic Melanoma Symptoms Stages Treatment 7 Need-to-Know Things About Low-Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer Why the Latest Screening Tests and Treatments Offer Hope for Ovarian Cancer
Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!