Hematologic Malignancies Program

Hodgkin's Disease

Stages and Treatments

If a patient has Hodgkin's disease, the doctor will do more tests to find out if cancer cells have spread to other parts of the body. This process is called staging and it is used to help the doctor plan the patient's treatment.

The doctor may determine the stage of the disease by conducting a thorough examination that may include blood tests and different kinds of x-rays. This type of staging is called clinical staging.

In some cases, the doctor may need to do an operation called a laparotomy to determine the stage of the cancer. During this operation, the doctor cuts into the abdomen and carefully looks at the organs inside to see if they contain cancer. The doctor will cut out (biopsy) small pieces of tissue during the operation and look at them under a microscope to see whether they contain cancer. This type of staging is called pathologic staging. Pathologic staging is usually done only when it is needed to help the doctor plan treatment.

Each stage of Hodgkin's disease is broken down into two substages (A and B) based on symptoms. The B stage always indicates the presence of certain symptoms: loss of more than 10 percent of body weight in the previous 6 months, fever without any known cause other than Hodgkin's disease, and night sweats that leave the body soaked.

The following stages are used to describe Hodgkin's disease in adults:

Stage I

Cancer is found in only one lymph node area or in only one area or organ outside of the lymph nodes. Treatment depends on whether the patient has stage IA or stage IB disease and where the cancer is found.

Stage IA: If the cancer is above the diaphragm and does not involve a large part of the chest, treatment may be one of the following:

If the cancer is above the diaphragm but involves a large part of the chest, treatment may be one of the following:

If the cancer is below the diaphragm, treatment may be one of the following:

Stage IB: Treatment may be one of the following for patients with B symptoms:

Stage II

Either of the following may be true:

Treatment depends on whether the patient has stage IIA or stage IIB disease and where the cancer is found.

Stage IIA: If the cancer is above the diaphragm and does not involve a large part of the chest, treatment may be one of the following:

If the cancer is above the diaphragm but involves a large part of the chest, treatment may be radiation therapy to a mantle field plus chemotherapy.

Stage IIB: Treatment may be one of the following for patients with B symptoms:

Stage III

Cancer is found in lymph node areas on both sides of the diaphragm. The cancer may also have spread to an area or organ near the lymph node areas and/or to the spleen. Treatment depends on whether the patient has stage IIIA or stage IIIB disease and where the cancer is found.

Stage IIIA: If the cancer does not involve a large part of the chest, treatment may be one of the following:

If the cancer involves a large part of the chest, treatment may be chemotherapy in combination with radiation therapy.

Stage IIIB: Treatment may be one of the following for patients with B symptoms:

Stage IV

Either of the following may be true:

Treatment may be one of the following:

Recurrent

Recurrent cancer is cancer that has come back after it has been treated. It may come back in the area where it first started or in another part of the body.

About the Treatment Options

There are two primary treatment options for patients with adult Hodgkin's disease: radiation therapy and chemotherapy. Bone marrow transplants are being tested in clinical trials.

Radiation Therapy

Radiation therapy is the use of high-energy x-rays to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. Radiation for Hodgkin's disease usually comes from a machine outside the body (external-beam radiation therapy). Radiation therapy given to the neck, chest, and lymph nodes under the arms is called radiation therapy to a mantle field. Radiation therapy given to the mantle field and to the lymph nodes in the upper abdomen, the spleen, and the lymph nodes in the pelvis is called total nodal irradiation. Radiation given to the brain to keep the cancer cells from growing there is called cranial irradiation. Radiation therapy may be used alone or in addition to chemotherapy.

The most common side effects of radiation therapy are tiredness, skin reactions in the treated areas (such as a rash or redness), and loss of appetite. Radiation therapy may also cause a decrease in the number of white blood cells that help protect the body against infection. Most of these side effects can be treated or controlled and in most cases they are not permanent.

Chemotherapy

Chemotherapy is the use of drugs to kill cancer cells. Most anticancer drugs are injected into a vein (IV) or a muscle; some are given by mouth. Chemotherapy is a systemic treatment, meaning that the drugs flow through the bloodstream to nearly every part of the body to kill cancerous cells. It is generally given in cycles; a treatment period is followed by a recovery period, then another treatment period, and so on.

Chemotherapy drugs generally fight rapidly dividing cells in the body. Cells that divide rapidly include both the targeted cancer cells and healthy cells in the blood, digestive tract, and hair follicles. Depending on which anticancer drugs a patient receives, he or she may experience symptoms when healthy cells are damaged along with the cancer cells. If healthy blood cells are destroyed by chemotherapy, the patient may be more susceptible to infections, bruising or bleeding, and fatigue. When cells in the hair roots or digestive tract are affected by anticancer drugs, the patient may have hair loss, nausea, vomiting, or mouth sores. Not all chemotherapy patients develop all of these side effects, and the symptoms usually go away during the recovery period or after the treatments are done. Doctors can prescribe medicines and other treatments to control most of the symptoms.

Bone Marrow Transplant

A bone marrow transplant is a treatment in which a patient's diseased bone marrow is replaced with healthy bone marrow. A bone marrow transplant using marrow from a relative or person not related to the patient is called an allogeneic bone marrow transplant. The transplant includes the following steps:

Another type of bone marrow transplant, called an autologous bone marrow transplant, is conducted in the following steps:

Another type of autologous transplant is called a peripheral blood stem cell transplant. The patient's blood is passed through a machine that removes the stem cells (immature cells from which all blood cells develop) and then returns the blood to the patient. This procedure is called leukapheresis and usually takes three or four hours to complete. The stem cells are treated with drugs to kill any cancer cells and then frozen until they are transplanted to the patient. This procedure may be done alone or with an autologous bone marrow transplant.

Patients have a greater chance of recovery if they are treated in a hospital that does more than five bone marrow transplants a year.


This page was last updated on: March 3, 2008.