Response
We thank Suzuki et al for comparing the clinical outcome of their 10 patients with localized (stage I/II) nonnasal, extranodal NK/T cell lymphoma (ENKL) from a Japanese multicenter collection (3-year overall survival; 41%), to the 18 cases with similar disease from our international study (3-year overall survival; 12%).1 They suggest that low-stage extranasal ENKL may carry a more favorable prognosis.
Due to differences in case selection criteria, it is difficult to resolve this discrepancy in a retrospective fashion. The small number of cases of low-stage extranasal ENKL in both studies means that this is a rare clinical presentation. From our understanding, most of the Japanese cases were dermatologic referrals. This category of cases was not submitted to our retrospective study. Indeed; none of our 18 stage I/II extranasal cases come from the 4 Japanese centers that participated in our study.1 In contrast, only 2 of the 18 stage I/II cases from our study were cutaneous ENKL. The majority affected the alimentary tract (n = 7) and muscles (n = 5). Such bias may have led to the omission of a Japanese subcategory of limited stage cutaneous ENKL with a good prognosis, that is either not seen or missed in other parts of the world.2 It is also possible that with more meticulous staging, that is, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)– encoded early small RNA (EBER) staining of marrow3 and whole body positive emission tomography (PET) scanning,4 apparent low-stage extranasal ENKL cases with a poor outcome would actually be upstaged. Given these uncertainties, the prognosis for bona fide low-stage extranasal ENKL (cutaneous and noncutaneous) remains unclear. In this setting, other ancillary variables; such as the size and number of lesions, biochemical and hematologic factors, and EBV DNA load, may also help to predict outcome. Future prospective studies of a larger number of well-characterized cases are needed to resolve this issue.
Authorship
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Raymond Liang, MD, Department of Medicine, Queen Mary Hospital, University of Hong Kong, 102 Pokfulam Rd, Hong Kong, China; e-mail: rliang@hkucc.hku.hk.
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