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Relapsed Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma: Current Advances

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.649789

Keywords

primary central nervous system lymphoma; relapse; mechanism; clinical feature; treatment; prognosis

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82001378]

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Primary Central Nervous System Lymphoma (PCNSL) relapses are often derived from occult lymphoma cells, with treatment options including chemotherapy, radiation therapy, stem cell transplantation, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy. The overall prognosis is very poor, with early and varied clinical symptoms.
Primary central nervous system lymphoma is an invasive malignant lymphoma confined to the central nervous system. Although patients undergoing first-line treatment can achieve complete response, most of them still relapse within two years. Relapsed lymphoma is derived from occult lymphoma cells, and B cell receptor pathway activation and immune escape are the key mechanisms for the pathogenesis of PCNSL. Most relapses are in the central nervous system, a small number of relapses are isolated systemic relapses, and clinical symptoms occur early and vary. Current treatments for relapse include high-dose methotrexate rechallenge and other regimens of chemotherapy, whole-brain radiation therapy, hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation, targeted therapy and immunotherapy, which have become promising treatments. The overall prognosis of relapsed PCNSL is very poor, although it is affected by many factors. This article summarizes the mechanisms, related factors, clinical features, follow-up, treatment and prognosis of relapsed primary central nervous system lymphoma.

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