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Prognostic Factors and Long-term Outcomes in 41 Children With Primary Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis: Report of a Single-center Experience and Review of the Literature.

Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a rare life-threatening hyperinflammatory syndrome with diverse clinical manifestations leading to major diagnostic and therapeutic difficulties. This study aimed to evaluate clinical manifestations, prognostic factors, and long-term outcomes in children with primary HLH. Forty-one patients diagnosed with primary HLH were retrospectively evaluated for patient characteristics, HLH gene mutations, clinical and laboratory manifestations, prognostic factors, and long-term outcomes. The median age of the patients at the time of diagnosis was 3 months (minimum to maximum: 1 to 144 mo). There were 23 patients who had HLH mutation analysis performed, 10 patients with PRF1 mutation, 6 with STX11 mutation, and 7 with UNC13D mutation. Thirteen patients (31.7%) had central nervous system involvement. No correlation was found between overall survival and central nervous system involvement. The estimated 5-year overall survival for the patient who had hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was 9.4 times better than the patients who did not receive hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (81.3% vs 16.7%; P = 0.001). Median serum sodium and blood urea nitrogen levels were significantly higher in deceased HLH patients compared with surviving HLH patients (P = 0.043, and P = 0.017, respectively). Primary HLH has a poor outcome with high mortality, which necessitates well-designed and international clinical trials to improve diagnosis, therapy, and long-term outcomes.

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