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Browsing by Author "Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)"

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    Biological and clinical features of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in the elderly
    (2012)
    Hajder, Jelena (8701284500)
    ;
    Marisavljevic, D. (55945359700)
    ;
    Stanisavljevic, N. (36163559700)
    ;
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    ;
    Kovcin, V. (6701684004)
    ;
    Markovic, O. (57205699382)
    ;
    Zivkovic, R. (35323469100)
    Purpose: The incidence of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs) in elderly people has increased in recent years because the world population is getting older. The aim of this study was to compare the biological and clinical features in patients diagnosed with NHLs younger and older than 65 years, and the possible influence of age on the choice of optimal therapeutic approach. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated 193 patients with NHLs: 111 (68%) were <65 years and 82 (42%) ≥65 years. The following parameters were analysed: age, gender, clinical stage, International Prognostic Index (IPI), histological type, presence of B symptoms, disease localization, presence of bulky mass, Karnofsky performance status (PS), comorbidities, blood counts, liver and renal function and serum LDH. Results: Elderly patients had statistically more frequent indolent NHLs (p=0.036), IPI 3 and 4 (p<0.0001), presence of comorbidities (p<0.001), and less frequent presence of bulky disease (p=0.043). Response to therapy was different in the 2 age groups: 29% of patients ≥65 years achieved complete remission (CR) in contrast to 71% of patients <65 years (p<0.001). The most frequent cause of death was disease progression (PD) (86% of younger patients and 71% of elderly patients (p=0.150). Older patients died more frequently because of comorbidities compared younger ones (21 and 10%, respectively; p=0.250), and had more complications of therapy (8.1 and 4%, respectively (p=0.320). Overall survival (OS) was shorter in older patients in all lymphoma types: indolent lymphoma (36 vs. 17 months), aggressive (22 vs. 20 months) and very aggressive (14 vs. 1 months). Multivariate analysis showed that parameters for shorter survival in the elderly were Karnofsky PS <60, increased serum LDH and treatment toxicity. Conclusion: In elderly NHLs patients, treatment response and survival are significantly poorer. Since older patients mostly died of PD, they should be treated with standard regimens and best supportive measures. © 2012 Zerbinis Medical Publications.
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    Biological and clinical features of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in the elderly
    (2012)
    Hajder, Jelena (8701284500)
    ;
    Marisavljevic, D. (55945359700)
    ;
    Stanisavljevic, N. (36163559700)
    ;
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    ;
    Kovcin, V. (6701684004)
    ;
    Markovic, O. (57205699382)
    ;
    Zivkovic, R. (35323469100)
    Purpose: The incidence of non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHLs) in elderly people has increased in recent years because the world population is getting older. The aim of this study was to compare the biological and clinical features in patients diagnosed with NHLs younger and older than 65 years, and the possible influence of age on the choice of optimal therapeutic approach. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated 193 patients with NHLs: 111 (68%) were <65 years and 82 (42%) ≥65 years. The following parameters were analysed: age, gender, clinical stage, International Prognostic Index (IPI), histological type, presence of B symptoms, disease localization, presence of bulky mass, Karnofsky performance status (PS), comorbidities, blood counts, liver and renal function and serum LDH. Results: Elderly patients had statistically more frequent indolent NHLs (p=0.036), IPI 3 and 4 (p<0.0001), presence of comorbidities (p<0.001), and less frequent presence of bulky disease (p=0.043). Response to therapy was different in the 2 age groups: 29% of patients ≥65 years achieved complete remission (CR) in contrast to 71% of patients <65 years (p<0.001). The most frequent cause of death was disease progression (PD) (86% of younger patients and 71% of elderly patients (p=0.150). Older patients died more frequently because of comorbidities compared younger ones (21 and 10%, respectively; p=0.250), and had more complications of therapy (8.1 and 4%, respectively (p=0.320). Overall survival (OS) was shorter in older patients in all lymphoma types: indolent lymphoma (36 vs. 17 months), aggressive (22 vs. 20 months) and very aggressive (14 vs. 1 months). Multivariate analysis showed that parameters for shorter survival in the elderly were Karnofsky PS <60, increased serum LDH and treatment toxicity. Conclusion: In elderly NHLs patients, treatment response and survival are significantly poorer. Since older patients mostly died of PD, they should be treated with standard regimens and best supportive measures. © 2012 Zerbinis Medical Publications.
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    Enhanced International Prognostic Index (NCCN-IPI), Charlson Comorbidity Index and absolute lymphocyte count as predictors for survival of elderly patients with diffuse large B cell lymphoma treated by immunochemotherapy
    (2015)
    Jelicic, J. (56180044800)
    ;
    Todorovic Balint, M. (55773026600)
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    Antic, D. (23979576100)
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    Sretenovic, A. (24170024700)
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    Balint, B. (7005347355)
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    Perunicic Jovanovic, M. (57210906777)
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    Andjelic, B. (6507067141)
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    Vukovic, V. (56180315400)
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    Djurasinovic, V. (35172762900)
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    Bila, J. (57208312102)
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    Pavlovic, M. (8970684700)
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    Smiljanic, M. (45661914300)
    ;
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) affects more commonly patients over 60 years. These patients have vast number of comorbidities which can modify survival as well as other clinical parameters. The aim of this study was to evaluate prognostic significance of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network International Prognostic Index (NCCN-IPI), absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), absolute monocyte count (AMC), lymphocyte-to-monocyte ratio (LMR) and comorbidities expressed with Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI). A total of 182 DLBCL patients 60 years old and older were included, focusing on whole group and patients older than 70. All patients were treated with immunochemotherapy. Overall treatment response was achieved in 84.6% of patients. The NCCN-IPI was of highly prognostic value in the analyzed group (p<0.0001). Survival analysis showed that ALC>1.1x109/L, AMC≤0.59x109/L, and LMR>2.8 were associated with more favorable outcome (p=0.029, p=0.019, p=0.028, respectively). The patients with CCI≥2 had poorer outcome (p=0.008) compared to the patients with CCI 0-1. Multivariate analysis showed that among ALC, AMC, LMR, NCCN-IPI and CCI, the NCCN-IPI was the critical parameter that significantly affected survival (p<0.0001). Furthermore, comorbidities were also valuable independent factors which influenced survival (p=0.031) as well as the ALC (p=0.024). In elderly DLBCL patients, NCCN-IPI and ALC proved their prognostic validity, while poorer outcome could be expected in older patients with high CCI (≥2). Furthermore, mentioned prognostic parameters retained their prognostic value in the group of patients older than 70. © 2015, Cancer Research Institute Slovak Acad. of Sciences. All rights reserved.
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    Intravascular large B-cell lymphoma of central nervous system - A report of two cases and literature review
    (2010)
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
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    Sternic, N. (6603691178)
    ;
    Skender Gazibara, M. (22836997600)
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    Sretenovic, A. (24170024700)
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    Antic, D. (23979576100)
    ;
    Terzic, T. (55916182400)
    ;
    Kostic, V. (35239923400)
    Intravascular large B-cell lymphoma (IVL) is a rare form of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DBCL) frequently presenting with skin and/or central nervous system (CNS) involvement. IVL involves CNS in 75 - 85% of patients and neurological symptoms include sensory and motor deficits or neuropathies, meningoradiculitis, paresthesia, hypostenia, aphasia, dysarthria, hemiparesis, seizures, transient visual loss, vertigo and impaired cognitive function. Neuroimaging discloses CNS involvement only in half of patients with neurological symptoms because there are no pathognomonic neuroradiological findings for IVL; ischemic foci are the most com mon presentation pattern and therefore vasculitis is the most common differential diagnosis. According to all mentioned data, diagnosis of CNS IVL requires a histopathological confirmation. Brain biopsy is absolutely indicated in patients with progressive neurological deterioration with unclear abnormalities in cerebral MR imaging. A general policy is that patients with IVL should be considered to have disseminated disease and should be treated with systemic chemotherapy. In younger patients with unfavorable features the high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation should be used. Nevertheless, the course of IVL is rapidly progressive and ultimately fatal. ©2010 Dustri-Verlag Dr. K. Feistle.
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    Intravascular large B-cell lymphoma of central nervous system - A report of two cases and literature review
    (2010)
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    ;
    Sternic, N. (6603691178)
    ;
    Skender Gazibara, M. (22836997600)
    ;
    Sretenovic, A. (24170024700)
    ;
    Antic, D. (23979576100)
    ;
    Terzic, T. (55916182400)
    ;
    Kostic, V. (35239923400)
    Intravascular large B-cell lymphoma (IVL) is a rare form of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DBCL) frequently presenting with skin and/or central nervous system (CNS) involvement. IVL involves CNS in 75 - 85% of patients and neurological symptoms include sensory and motor deficits or neuropathies, meningoradiculitis, paresthesia, hypostenia, aphasia, dysarthria, hemiparesis, seizures, transient visual loss, vertigo and impaired cognitive function. Neuroimaging discloses CNS involvement only in half of patients with neurological symptoms because there are no pathognomonic neuroradiological findings for IVL; ischemic foci are the most com mon presentation pattern and therefore vasculitis is the most common differential diagnosis. According to all mentioned data, diagnosis of CNS IVL requires a histopathological confirmation. Brain biopsy is absolutely indicated in patients with progressive neurological deterioration with unclear abnormalities in cerebral MR imaging. A general policy is that patients with IVL should be considered to have disseminated disease and should be treated with systemic chemotherapy. In younger patients with unfavorable features the high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation should be used. Nevertheless, the course of IVL is rapidly progressive and ultimately fatal. ©2010 Dustri-Verlag Dr. K. Feistle.
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    Orbital and ocular adnexal Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue (MALT) lymphomas: A single-center 10-year experience
    (2013)
    Smiljanic, M. (45661914300)
    ;
    Milosevic, R. (6603680940)
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    Antic, D. (23979576100)
    ;
    Andjelic, B. (6507067141)
    ;
    Djurasinovic, V. (35172762900)
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    Todorovic, M. (23010544100)
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    Bila, J. (57208312102)
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    Bogdanovic, A. (6603686934)
    ;
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    Orbital and ocular andexal Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue Lymphoma (MALT) or ocular adnexal MALT lymphoma (OAML) is the most common of all eye non-Hodgkin lymphomas. Autoimmune inflammatory disorders and chronic infections are important etiological factors and CD5 and CD43 (sialophorin) tumor markers are significant negative prognostic factors. Disease signs and symptoms can occur a long time before diagnosis. Varieties of treatment options are available. The aim of this retrospective analysis was to compare the efficiency of different treatment options and to investigate disease outcome. Twenty OAML patients, diagnosed in the Clinic of Hematology, Clinical Centre of Serbia, between 2003 and 2013, were enrolled. In most cases, OAML developed in the eighth decade with greater incidence in the male population. Median age was 67.5 years. The median period between the appearance of local signs and symptoms and diagnosis was 7 months. The dominant sign at presentation was swelling of involved tissue (40 %). The most common was orbital involvement (55 %). All patients had localized disease. Observed laboratory parameters on presentation showed low disease activity. Sialophorin prognostic significance was not registered. Our patients were initially treated differently but there was no significant difference in progression-free survival (PFS) due to initial treatment option (p = 0.2957). Median PFS was 22 months (3-89), and 5-year PFS was 60 %. Median overall survival (OS) was 43 months (1-105) and 5-year OS 95 %. Eight patients (40 %) relapsed and one patient died due to non-hematological complications. In our experience, most modern induction treatment options appear to result in the same, favorable outcome. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media New York.
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    Orbital and ocular adnexal Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue (MALT) lymphomas: A single-center 10-year experience
    (2013)
    Smiljanic, M. (45661914300)
    ;
    Milosevic, R. (6603680940)
    ;
    Antic, D. (23979576100)
    ;
    Andjelic, B. (6507067141)
    ;
    Djurasinovic, V. (35172762900)
    ;
    Todorovic, M. (23010544100)
    ;
    Bila, J. (57208312102)
    ;
    Bogdanovic, A. (6603686934)
    ;
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    Orbital and ocular andexal Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue Lymphoma (MALT) or ocular adnexal MALT lymphoma (OAML) is the most common of all eye non-Hodgkin lymphomas. Autoimmune inflammatory disorders and chronic infections are important etiological factors and CD5 and CD43 (sialophorin) tumor markers are significant negative prognostic factors. Disease signs and symptoms can occur a long time before diagnosis. Varieties of treatment options are available. The aim of this retrospective analysis was to compare the efficiency of different treatment options and to investigate disease outcome. Twenty OAML patients, diagnosed in the Clinic of Hematology, Clinical Centre of Serbia, between 2003 and 2013, were enrolled. In most cases, OAML developed in the eighth decade with greater incidence in the male population. Median age was 67.5 years. The median period between the appearance of local signs and symptoms and diagnosis was 7 months. The dominant sign at presentation was swelling of involved tissue (40 %). The most common was orbital involvement (55 %). All patients had localized disease. Observed laboratory parameters on presentation showed low disease activity. Sialophorin prognostic significance was not registered. Our patients were initially treated differently but there was no significant difference in progression-free survival (PFS) due to initial treatment option (p = 0.2957). Median PFS was 22 months (3-89), and 5-year PFS was 60 %. Median overall survival (OS) was 43 months (1-105) and 5-year OS 95 %. Eight patients (40 %) relapsed and one patient died due to non-hematological complications. In our experience, most modern induction treatment options appear to result in the same, favorable outcome. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media New York.
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    Solitary intracranial plasmacytomas
    (1997)
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    ;
    Colovic, M. (21639151700)
    ;
    Cvetkovic, D. (35571537400)
    ;
    Jovanovic, V. (57188713150)
    We present two cases of an unusual localised extramedullary plasmacytoma with a long survival period: a 42-year-old woman with left temporal and a 25-year-old woman with left parietal intracranial plasmacytoma. The tumor masses were totally removed in both patients and their histological, histochemical (PAS and methyl green pyronin positive granules) and immunohistochemical (positive light chains mostly λ, and negative stains for GFAP, NSE and S-100 protein) properties showed that the tumor tissues consisted of monoclonal population of plasma cells. Our cases were diagnosed as solitary cerebral plasmacytomas since the presence of underlying multiple myeloma has been ruled out by the clinical, laboratory, radiographic and immunological investigations. Postoperatively the patients were given 40 Gy to the whole cranium and additional 20 Gy focused on the tumor site. Complete remissions were achieved 7.5 and 5.5 years, respectively.
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    Solitary intracranial plasmacytomas
    (1997)
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    ;
    Colovic, M. (21639151700)
    ;
    Cvetkovic, D. (35571537400)
    ;
    Jovanovic, V. (57188713150)
    We present two cases of an unusual localised extramedullary plasmacytoma with a long survival period: a 42-year-old woman with left temporal and a 25-year-old woman with left parietal intracranial plasmacytoma. The tumor masses were totally removed in both patients and their histological, histochemical (PAS and methyl green pyronin positive granules) and immunohistochemical (positive light chains mostly λ, and negative stains for GFAP, NSE and S-100 protein) properties showed that the tumor tissues consisted of monoclonal population of plasma cells. Our cases were diagnosed as solitary cerebral plasmacytomas since the presence of underlying multiple myeloma has been ruled out by the clinical, laboratory, radiographic and immunological investigations. Postoperatively the patients were given 40 Gy to the whole cranium and additional 20 Gy focused on the tumor site. Complete remissions were achieved 7.5 and 5.5 years, respectively.
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    Survivin expression in patients with newly diagnosed nodal diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL)
    (2012)
    Markovic, O. (57205699382)
    ;
    Marisavljevic, D. (55945359700)
    ;
    Cemerikic-Martinovic, V. (6602432953)
    ;
    Martinovic, T. (55178221600)
    ;
    Filipovic, B. (22934489100)
    ;
    Stanisavljevic, D. (23566969700)
    ;
    Živković, R. (35323469100)
    ;
    Hajder, J. (8701284500)
    ;
    Stanisavljevic, N. (36163559700)
    ;
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    Survivin is one of the inhibitors of apoptosis proteins (IAP) that might play an important role in the pathogenesis of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The present study was designed to investigate the clinical and prognostic significance of survivin expression in nodal DLBCL. We analyzed lymph node biopsy specimens obtained from 56 patients with newly diagnosed nodal DLBCL, treated with immunochemotherapy (R-CHOP). The expression of survivin was analyzed using the standard immunohistochemical method on formalin-fixed and routinely processed paraffin-embedded lymph node specimens and evaluated semiquantitatively as a percentage of tumor cells. Survivin immunoexpression (>45 % positive tumor cells) was found in 22 (39.28 %) and observed as cytoplasmic staining in 15 patients, or mixed (cytoplasmic and nuclear) staining in 7 patients. A significant difference in survivin immunoexpression was noticed between the GCB and the non-GCB subtypes of DLBCL (p = 0.031). However, survivin immunoexpression had no significant association with IPI, "bulky" disease, extranodal localization, hemoglobin, Ki-67 immunoexpression or other clinicopathological parameters. A univariate analysis showed that survivin positivity was an unfavorable factor for therapy response and a predictor of shorter survival in patients with DLBCL (p = 0.048 and p = 0.034, respectively). Patients with survivin overexpression experienced a relapse more often than patients without expression of this apoptotic protein (27.3 vs. 11.8 %), but this difference did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.131). The results of this study showed that disregulation of survivin expression had an important role in the determination of the course of the disease in patients with nodal DLBCL treated with R-CHOP. Therefore, survivin represents a potential target for therapeutic intervention in DLBCL. © 2012 The Author(s).
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    Survivin expression in patients with newly diagnosed nodal diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL)
    (2012)
    Markovic, O. (57205699382)
    ;
    Marisavljevic, D. (55945359700)
    ;
    Cemerikic-Martinovic, V. (6602432953)
    ;
    Martinovic, T. (55178221600)
    ;
    Filipovic, B. (22934489100)
    ;
    Stanisavljevic, D. (23566969700)
    ;
    Živković, R. (35323469100)
    ;
    Hajder, J. (8701284500)
    ;
    Stanisavljevic, N. (36163559700)
    ;
    Mihaljevic, B. (6701325767)
    Survivin is one of the inhibitors of apoptosis proteins (IAP) that might play an important role in the pathogenesis of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The present study was designed to investigate the clinical and prognostic significance of survivin expression in nodal DLBCL. We analyzed lymph node biopsy specimens obtained from 56 patients with newly diagnosed nodal DLBCL, treated with immunochemotherapy (R-CHOP). The expression of survivin was analyzed using the standard immunohistochemical method on formalin-fixed and routinely processed paraffin-embedded lymph node specimens and evaluated semiquantitatively as a percentage of tumor cells. Survivin immunoexpression (>45 % positive tumor cells) was found in 22 (39.28 %) and observed as cytoplasmic staining in 15 patients, or mixed (cytoplasmic and nuclear) staining in 7 patients. A significant difference in survivin immunoexpression was noticed between the GCB and the non-GCB subtypes of DLBCL (p = 0.031). However, survivin immunoexpression had no significant association with IPI, "bulky" disease, extranodal localization, hemoglobin, Ki-67 immunoexpression or other clinicopathological parameters. A univariate analysis showed that survivin positivity was an unfavorable factor for therapy response and a predictor of shorter survival in patients with DLBCL (p = 0.048 and p = 0.034, respectively). Patients with survivin overexpression experienced a relapse more often than patients without expression of this apoptotic protein (27.3 vs. 11.8 %), but this difference did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.131). The results of this study showed that disregulation of survivin expression had an important role in the determination of the course of the disease in patients with nodal DLBCL treated with R-CHOP. Therefore, survivin represents a potential target for therapeutic intervention in DLBCL. © 2012 The Author(s).

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