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In 1976 we began a randomized study for the treatment of patients with stage III and IV diffuse histiocytic lymphoma. The therapy was either ACOMLA (doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine oncovin, methotrexate with leucovorin rescue, and cytarabine) or CHOP-B (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin hydroxydaunorubicin, vincristine oncovin, prednisone, and bleomycin). A complete response (CR) was achieved in 13 (65%) of 20 patients treated with ACOMLA and in 20 (71%) of the 28 patients treated with CHOP-B. Four patients achieving CR with ACOMLA and three patients treated with CHOP-B have relapsed for an overall relapse rate of 21%. Partial response (PR) was obtained in four patients treated with ACOMLA and five patients treated with CHOP-B. Median follow-up time is 36 months for the combined treatment groups. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that those patients who were classified by the Lukes-Collins criteria as having histiocytic lymphoma not of follicular center-cell origin (combined T- and B-cell immunoblastic sarcoma) had a significantly worse survival as compared to patients classified with follicular center-cell origin lymphoma (large cell noncleaved, large cell cleaved, and large cell unclassified) with a 40% five-year survival versus an 80% five-year survival (P = .011). The CR rate however for these two large categories of patients was 63% v 73% respectively, and the relapse rates were equivalent. The increased survival in the follicular center-cell origin lymphomas may be related to a longer survival of PRs and relapsed patients as compared to the patients with nonfollicular center-cell lymphomas.
Todd et al. (Sat,) studied this question.