作者
Jennifer Geel,Artsiom Hramyka,Jan du Plessis,Yasmin Goga,Anel van Zyl,Marc Hendricks,Thanushree Naidoo,Rema Mathew,Lizette Louw,Amy Carr,Beverley Neethling,Tanya Marié Schickerling,Fareed Omar,Liezl du Plessis,Elelwani Madzhia,Vutshilo Netshituni,Katherine Eyal,Thandeka Ngcana,Tom Kelsey,Daynia Ballot,Monika L. Metzger,David Stones,Ruellyn Cockroft,Alan Davidson,Anabela Andrade,A. Büchner,Ann Van Eyssen,Barry van Emmenes,Biance Rowe,Clare Stannard,Daniela Cristina Stefan,David Reynders,Diane MacKinnon,Eleanor K. Mathews,Fareed Omar,Farieda Desai,Gesami Steytler,Gita Naidu,Janet Poole,Jeannette Parkes,Johani Vermeulen,Karin Lecuona,Karla Thomas,Kate Bennett,Kershinee Reddy,Kavilan Moodley,Komala Pillay,Mariana Kruger,Jaques van Heerden,Linda Wainwright,Leila Schoonraad,Lourens de Jager,Mairi Bassingthwaighte,Manickavallie Vaithilingum,Nicolene Moonsamy,Oloko Wedi,Palessa Radebe,Ronelle Uys,Stelios Poyiadjis,Thandeka Ngcana,Thanushree Naidoo,Rajendra Thejpal,Rosemarie Schwyzer,Johan du Plessis,Candice Laverne Hendricks,Pieter Hesseling,Barry Vanemmenes,Judy Schoeman,Mohamed Adamjee,Milind Chitnis,Percival Hartley,Wendy Mathiassen,A.J.W. Millar,Colleen A. Wright,Nadia Beringer,Ngoakoana Mahlachana,Thandeka Nkabi,J. L. Flood,Maurycy Jonas,Hamidah Van Staaden,Thirumalairengarajan Naicker,Pawel Schubert,Bulelwa Masoka
摘要
PURPOSE Response assessment of classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) with positron emission tomography-computerized tomography (PET-CT) is standard of care in well-resourced settings but unavailable in most African countries. We aimed to investigate correlations between changes in PET-CT findings at interim analysis with changes in blood test results in pediatric patients with cHL in 17 South African centers. METHODS Changes in ferritin, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), albumin, total white cell count (TWC), absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), and absolute eosinophil count were compared with PET-CT Deauville scores (DS) after two cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine in 84 pediatric patients with cHL. DS 1-3 denoted rapid early response (RER) while DS 4-5 denoted slow early response (SER). Missing values were imputed using the k-nearest neighbor algorithm. Baseline and follow-up blood test values were combined into a single difference variable. Data were split into training and testing sets for analysis using Python scikit-learn 1.2.2 with logistic regression, random forests, naïve Bayes, and support vector machine classifiers. RESULTS Random forest analysis achieved the best validated test accuracy of 73% when predicting RER or SER from blood samples. When applied to the full data set, the optimal model had a predictive accuracy of 80% and a receiver operating characteristic AUC of 89%. The most predictive variable was the differences in ALC, contributing 21% to the model. Differences in ferritin, LDH, and TWC contributed 15%-16%. Differences in ESR, hemoglobin, and albumin contributed 11%-12%. CONCLUSION Changes in low-cost, widely available blood tests may predict chemosensitivity for pediatric cHL without access to PET-CT, identifying patients who may not require radiotherapy. Changes in these nonspecific blood tests should be assessed in combination with clinical findings and available imaging to avoid undertreatment.