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Article Abstract

To determine the optimal treatment for early-stage extranodal NK/T-cell lymphoma (ENKTL), the efficacy differences between chemoradiotherapy (CRT) and radiotherapy (RT) alone, and between sequential DDGP (dexamethasone, cisplatin, gemcitabine, and pegaspargase) followed by RT (DDGP+RT) versus RT followed by DDGP (RT+DDGP) were investigated. This study compared RT alone versus CRT using DDGP regimen in 189 early-stage ENKTL patients. CRT showed higher objective response rates (95.0% vs 88.0 %, P > 0.05) and significantly improved 10-year PFS (81.3 % vs 54.0 %, P < 0.001) and OS (91.4 % vs 87.3 %, P = 0.029) versus RT alone. DDGP followed by RT (DDGP+RT) achieved superior ORR (98.7 % vs 90.2 %, P = 0.043) and better 10-year PFS in patients with elevated β2-microglobulin (94.4 % vs 57.1 %, P = 0.025) compared to RT followed by DDGP. Multivariate analysis identified RT alone (HR=4.207, P<0.001), and elevated LDH (HR=4.906, P = 0.012) as poor prognostic factors. CRT sequencing did not significantly affect survival outcomes. These findings demonstrate CRT's superiority over RT alone and suggest β2-MG may guide optimal treatment sequencing in early-stage ENKTL.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.leukres.2025.107921DOI Listing

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