Table 1.
Ref.
|
Study period (year)
|
Study type
|
Sample size
|
Patients with gastric peripheral T-cell lymphoma-not otherwise specified
|
Patient demographics
|
Treatment
|
Outcomes
|
Park et al[9] | 1990-2004 | Primary gastric lymphoma of T-cell origin | 17 | 7 (41.1) | Median age 49 years, male (14 : 3) | CHOP, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone, and etoposide, Vanderbilt regimen, surgical resection | Median progression-free survival 10 months, median OS 12 months |
Kim et al[8] | 1995-2008 | Endoscopic and clinical analysis of primary T-cell lymphoma of the GI tract | 36 | 5 (13.9) | Median age 50 years, male to female ratio 2.6:1 | Of the 36 patients, primary surgical resection with chemotherapy (55%), primary chemotherapy without surgery (45%) | Median OS 7.8 months, 3-year survival rate 19.4% |
Kohri et al[10] | 2007-2018 | Peripheral T-cell lymphoma with GI involvement | 11 | 2 (2.4) | Median age 75 years, 10 males and 1 female | CHOP | OS 7 months and 83 months (2 patients) |
Zhang et al[5] | 1975-2016 | Gastric T-cell lymphoma in the SEER program | 164 | 104 (63.4) | Median age 65 years, mostly White and male | Chemotherapy, surgery, radiotherapy | Median OS 8 months, 5-year OS 23.5% |
CHOP: Cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone; GI: Gastrointestinal; OS: overall survival.