1. GELAD chemotherapy with sandwiched radiotherapy for patients with newly diagnosed stage IE/IIE natural killer/T‐cell lymphoma: a prospective multicentre study
- Author
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Yang Zhu, Shu Tian, Hua Zhong, Wenhao Zhang, Lifeng Wang, Rong Tao, Zhi-Chao Li, Hao Ding, Lina Jin, Chuanying Zhu, Yu-Jie Ma, Chuan-xu Liu, Siguo Hao, and Lan Xu
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neutropenia ,Gastroenterology ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Survival rate ,Etoposide ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Pegaspargase ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Chemotherapy regimen ,Progression-Free Survival ,Gemcitabine ,Lymphoma, Extranodal NK-T-Cell ,Regimen ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Early-stage natural killer/T-cell lymphoma (NK/TCL) patients usually receive a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy, but the optimal treatment approach has not yet been established. This study aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety profile of a novel chemotherapy regimen and sandwiched radiotherapy in early-stage NK/TCL. Patients with newly diagnosed stage IE/IIE disease were eligible. Patients were initially treated with two courses of the GELAD regimen (gemcitabine 1·0 g/m2 day 1, etoposide 60 mg/m2 days 1-3, pegaspargase 2000 units/m2 day 4, and dexamethasone 40 mg days 1-4), followed by intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT; 50-56 Gy in 25-28 fractions) and two additional courses of GELAD chemotherapy. A total of 52 patients were enrolled. The overall response rate and complete response rate per Lugano 2014 criteria were 94·2% and 92·3% respectively. With a median follow-up of 32 months, the estimated four-year overall survival rate and progression-free survival rate were 94·2% [95% confidence interval (CI), 83·2% to 93·1%] and 90·4% (95% CI, 78·4% to 95·9%) respectively. The most common adverse events were related to pegaspargase. Haematological toxicities were mild, with grade 3/4 neutropenia in 15·4% of patients. Our study provides a new approach with high activity and improved safety for the treatment of early-stage NK/TCL patients. This study was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02733458.
- Published
- 2021