Background and purpose: The treatment of elderly patients with high or intermediate grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) remains difficult and controversial. In order to audit our own practice, 270 elderly patients treated between 1988 and 1993 with this diagnosis were retrospectively reviewed.
Material and methods: 81 patients unfit for chemotherapy received fractionated radiotherapy for apparently localised stage I or II disease. The median age of the patients was 78 years (range 70-87 years). Forty stage I and 17 stage II patients had extra-nodal sites of disease. The radiation field included the primary site plus immediate adjacent nodes.
Results: After a median follow-up of 3.9 years the 5-year overall and disease-free survival rates were 33% and 31%, respectively. Age (hazard ratio (HR) 1.22, P = 0.03), stage (HR 5.50, P = 0.02) and lactate dehydrogenase level (HR 1.003, P = 0.004) were identified as independent risk factors for relapse.
Conclusion: These factors can define a group in which radiotherapy can produce acceptable survival rates (age < or = 80 years, stage I and lactate dehydrogenase < or = 500). This group represented 34% of those patients where all these variables were recorded and had 5-year disease-free and overall survival rates of 56% and 62%, respectively.