Salvage therapy with temozolomide in an immunocompetent patient with primary brain lymphoma.

Abstract
Twenty years ago, it was reported that a patient with relapsed primary brain lymphoma had been successfully treated with high-dose methotrexate (1). Since then, this drug has become the cornerstone of therapy, changing the natural course of this malignancy (2). Several other drugs have been used sporadically, mainly in combination with high-dose methotrexate, without achieving an improvement in outcome compared with monochemotherapy. No other single-agent activity has been prospectively proven to be effective. Moreover, cytostatic drugs that cross the blood-brain barrier (e.g., cytarabine, procarbazine, and nitrosoureas) may produce severe neurotoxicity, mainly when combined with radiotherapy or administered to patients older than 60 years of age (3,4). The most efficient cytostatic drugs against extracerebral non-Hodgkin's lymphomas penetrate the blood-brain barrier poorly and produce systemic toxicity (2). So, the routine use of drugs with unproven activities or unproven additive effects greater than that of high-dose methotrexate alone is not advisable.