Diagnosis, management and follow-up of follicular lymphoma: a consensus practice statement from the Australasian Lymphoma Alliance

Joshua W.D. Tobin, Greg Hapgood, Anna Johnston, Chan Y. Cheah, Sze T. Lee, Judith Trotman, Shafqat Inam, Belinda A. Campbell, Debbie Norris, Michael MacManus, Mark Hertzberg, Eliza Hawkes

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Follicular lymphoma (FL) is the most common indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma subtype, accounting for 15–20% of all lymphoma diagnoses. Although typically slow-growing and responsive to frontline therapies, advanced-stage FL remains incurable with current treatments and typically follows a chronic relapsing/remitting course with increasingly shorter responses to subsequent lines of therapy. Outcomes are highly variable; some patients experience prolonged first remissions that may approximate a ‘functional cure’. By contrast, a significant minority of patients experience disease progression shortly after frontline treatment resulting in high rates of lymphoma-related mortality. Reflecting on the heterogeneous natural history of FL, clinical practice varies widely, particularly in controversial areas, including appropriate disease staging, selection of management strategies and duration of clinical follow-up. This position statement presents an evidence-based synthesis of the literature for application in Australasian practice.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1384-1395
Number of pages12
JournalInternal Medicine Journal
Volume54
Issue number8
Early online date4 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2024

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