30 results on '"Goergen, Helen"'
Search Results
2. 9p24.1 alterations and programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 expression in early stage unfavourable classical Hodgkin lymphoma: an analysis from the German Hodgkin Study Group NIVAHL trial.
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Gerhard-Hartmann E, Goergen H, Bröckelmann PJ, Mottok A, Steinmüller T, Grund J, Zamò A, Ben-Neriah S, Sasse S, Borchmann S, Fuchs M, Borchmann P, Reinke S, Engert A, Veldman J, Diepstra A, Klapper W, and Rosenwald A
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- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Biomarkers, Tumor, Combined Modality Therapy, DNA Copy Number Variations, Disease Management, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Germany, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Prognosis, Treatment Outcome, B7-H1 Antigen genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 9, Hodgkin Disease diagnosis, Hodgkin Disease etiology, Translocation, Genetic
- Abstract
High programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) protein expression and copy number alterations (CNAs) of the corresponding genomic locus 9p24.1 in Hodgkin- and Reed-Sternberg cells (HRSC) have been shown to be associated with favourable response to anti-PD-1 checkpoint inhibition in relapsed/refractory (r/r) classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL). In the present study, we investigated baseline 9p24.1 status as well as PD-L1 and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II protein expression in 82 biopsies from patients with early stage unfavourable cHL treated with anti-PD-1-based first-line treatment in the German Hodgkin Study Group (GHSG) NIVAHL trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03004833). All evaluated specimens showed 9p24.1 CNA in HRSC to some extent, but with high intratumoral heterogeneity and an overall smaller range of alterations than reported in advanced-stage or r/r cHL. All but two cases (97%) showed PD-L1 expression by the tumour cells in variable amounts. While MHC-I was rarely expressed in >50% of HRSC, MHC-II expression in >50% of HRSC was found more frequently. No obvious impact of 9p24.1 CNA or PD-L1 and MHC-I/II expression on early response to the highly effective anti-PD-1-based NIVAHL first-line treatment was observed. Further studies evaluating an expanded panel of potential biomarkers are needed to optimally stratify anti-PD-1 first-line cHL treatment., (© 2021 The Authors. British Journal of Haematology published by British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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3. Histopathological growth patterns in patients with advanced nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma treated within the randomized HD18 study: a report from the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Eichenauer DA, Bühnen I, Kreissl S, Goergen H, Fuchs M, von Tresckow B, Rosenwald A, Klapper W, Hansmann ML, Möller P, Bernd HW, Feller AC, Engert A, Borchmann P, and Hartmann S
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Biopsy, Hodgkin Disease etiology, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Neoplasm Grading, Neoplasm Staging, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Treatment Outcome, Tumor Burden, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease diagnosis, Hodgkin Disease therapy
- Abstract
We retrospectively investigated histopathological growth patterns in individuals with advanced nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL) treated within the randomized HD18 study. In all, 35/60 patients (58%) presented with atypical growth patterns. Patients with atypical growth patterns more often had stage IV disease (P = 0·0354) and splenic involvement (P = 0·0048) than patients with typical growth patterns; a positive positron emission tomography after two cycles of chemotherapy (PET-2) tended to be more common (P = 0·1078). Five-year progression-free survival [hazard ratio (HR) = 0·86; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0·49-1·47] and overall survival (HR = 0·85; 95% CI = 0·49-1·51) did not differ between the groups after study treatment with PET-2-guided escalated BEACOPP (bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone). Thus, advanced NLPHL is often associated with atypical growth patterns but their prognostic impact is compensated by PET-2-guided escalated BEACOPP., (© 2021 The Authors. British Journal of Haematology published by British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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4. Involved-Field Radiation Therapy Prevents Recurrences in the Early Stages of Hodgkin Lymphoma in PET-Negative Patients After ABVD Chemotherapy: Relapse Analysis of GHSG Phase 3 HD16 Trial.
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Baues C, Goergen H, Fuchs M, Rosenbrock J, Celik E, Eich H, Kobe C, Voltin CA, Engert A, Borchmann P, and Marnitz S
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- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Bleomycin, Chronic Disease, Combined Modality Therapy, Dacarbazine therapeutic use, Doxorubicin therapeutic use, Humans, Neoplasm Staging, Positron-Emission Tomography, Prospective Studies, Recurrence, Vinblastine, Hodgkin Disease diagnostic imaging, Hodgkin Disease radiotherapy
- Abstract
Purpose: The HD16 trial of the German Hodgkin Study Group (NCT00736320) demonstrated that radiation therapy in early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma without risk factors cannot be safely omitted, and therefore combined modality therapy (CMT) remains the standard treatment. To demonstrate the local effect of consolidating involved-field radiation therapy (IF-RT), we performed an analysis of the recurrence pattern of positron emission tomography (PET)-negative HD16 patients., Methods and Materials: Between 2009 and 2015, 1150 patients with early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma without risk factors were randomly assigned to PET guided to 20 Gy IF-RT after 2 cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine chemotherapy in the HD16 study of the German Hodgkin Study Group. The study was designed as a prospective randomized controlled trial. We correlated the localization of recurrence with the panel-based IF-RT plan, which was drawn up for all patients prospectively, blinded to treatment allocation. Accordingly, we were able to identify recurrences that occurred at least in part inside or outside of the (potential) radiation field (in-field and out-field, respectively)., Results: There were 328 and 300 PET-negative patients assigned to CMT and PET-guided treatment (ie, chemotherapy alone), respectively. Within a median 47-month follow-up, disease progression or recurrence was documented for 15 and 29 patients treated with and without IF-RT, respectively. Relapse localization was unknown in 1 CMT patient. Without IF-RT, 5-year incidence of in-field relapses was 10.5% (95% confidence interval, 6.5-14.6) compared with 2.4% (0.5-4.3) with CMT (P = .0008). There were no relevant differences in out-field recurrences (5-year incidence 4.1% [1.7-6.6] vs 6.6% [3.0-10.3], P = .54). There was no grade 4 toxicity observed during IF-RT, and incidence of second primary malignancies was similar in both groups., Conclusions: PET-negative patients of the HD16 study showed no significant toxicity after 20 Gy IF-RT, and we demonstrated that omission of IF-RT resulted in more, particularly local, recurrences. Therefore, consolidation IF-RT should still be considered as standard therapy in this setting., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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5. PET-guided eBEACOPP treatment of advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma (HD18): follow-up analysis of an international, open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial.
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Kreissl S, Goergen H, Buehnen I, Kobe C, Moccia A, Greil R, Eichenauer DA, Zijlstra JM, Markova J, Meissner J, Feuring-Buske M, Soekler M, Beck HJ, Willenbacher W, Ludwig WD, Pabst T, Topp MS, Hitz F, Bentz M, Keller UB, Kühnhardt D, Ostermann H, Hertenstein B, Aulitzky W, Maschmeyer G, Vieler T, Eich H, Baues C, Stein H, Fuchs M, Diehl V, Dietlein M, Engert A, and Borchmann P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Etoposide administration & dosage, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Positron-Emission Tomography, Progression-Free Survival, Rituximab administration & dosage, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: The German Hodgkin Study Group's HD18 trial established the safety and efficacy of PET-guided eBEACOPP (bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone in escalated doses) for the treatment of advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma. However, because of a protocol amendment during the enrolment period (June 1, 2011) that changed standard treatment from eight to six cycles, the results of the HD18 trial have been partially immature. We report a prespecified 5-year follow-up analysis of the completed HD18 trial., Methods: HD18 was an international, open-label, randomised, phase 3 trial done in 301 hospitals and private practices in five European countries. Patients aged 18-60 years with newly diagnosed, advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0-2 were recruited. After receiving an initial two cycles of eBEACOPP (1250 mg/m
2 intravenous cyclophosphamide [day 1], 35 mg/m2 intravenous doxorubicin [day 1], 200 mg/m2 intravenous etoposide [day 1-3], 100 mg/m2 oral procarbazine [day 1-7], 40 mg/m2 oral prednisone [day 1-14], 1·4 mg/m2 intravenous vincristine [day 8], and 10 mg/m2 intravenous bleomycin [day 8]), patients underwent a contrast-enhanced CT and PET scan (PET-2). Patients with positive PET-2 were randomly assigned to receive standard therapy (an additional six cycles of eBEACOPP; ie, eight cycles in total) or experimental therapy (an additional six cycles of eBEACOPP plus 375 mg/m2 intravenous rituximab; ie, eight cycles in total) until June 1, 2011. After June 1, 2011, all patients with positive PET-2 were assigned to the updated standard therapy with an additional four cycles of eBEACOPP (ie, six cycles in total). Patients with negative PET-2 were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive standard therapy (an additional six cycles of eBEACOPP [ie, eight cycles in total] until June 1, 2011; an additional four cycles of eBEACOPP [ie, six cycles in total] after June 1, 2011) or experimental therapy (an additional two cycles of eBEACOPP; ie, four cycles in total). Randomisation was done centrally with the minimisation method, including a random component, stratified by centre, age, stage, international prognostic score, and sex. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival. HD18 aimed to improve 5-year progression-free survival by 15% in the PET-2-positive intention-to-treat cohort and to exclude inferiority of 6% or more in 5-year progression-free survival in the PET-2-negative per-protocol population. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00515554, and is completed., Findings: Between May 14, 2008, and July 18, 2014, 2101 patients were enrolled and 1945 were assigned to a treatment group according to their PET-2 result. In the PET-2-positive cohort, with a median follow-up of 73 months (IQR 59 to 94), 5-year progression-free survival was 89·9% (95% CI 85·7 to 94·1) in 217 patients assigned to eight cycles of eBEACOPP before the protocol amendment and 87·7% (83·1 to 92·4) in 217 patients assigned to eight cycles of rituximab plus eBEACOPP (p=0·40). Among 506 patients who received six cycles of eBEACOPP after the protocol amendment, 5-year progression-free survival was 90·1% (95% CI 87·2 to 92·9), with a median follow-up of 58 months (IQR 39 to 66). In the PET-2-negative cohort, with a median follow-up of 66 months (IQR 54 to 85) in the combined pre-amendment and post-amendment groups, 5-year progression-free survival was 91·2% (95% CI 88·4 to 93·9) in 446 patients who received eight or six cycles of eBEACOPP and 93·0% (90·6 to 95·4) in 474 patients who received four cycles of eBEACOPP (difference 1·9% [95% CI -1·8 to 5·5]). In the subgroup of PET-2-negative patients randomly assigned after protocol amendment, 5-year progression-free survival was 90·9% (95% CI 86·8 to 95·1) in 202 patients assigned to receive six cycles of eBEACOPP and 91·0% (86·6 to 95·5) in 200 patients assigned to receive four cycles of eBEACOPP (difference 0·1% [-5·9 to 6·2])., Interpretation: Long-term follow-up confirms the efficacy and safety of PET-2-guided eBEACOPP in patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma. The reduction from eight to four cycles of eBEACOPP represents a benchmark in the treatment of early-responding patients, who can now be potentially cured with a short and safe treatment approach., Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe, Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation SERI (Switzerland), and Roche Pharma., Translation: For the German translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests AM reports participation in advisory boards from Roche, Janssen, and Takeda outside the submitted work. RG reports honoraria, a consulting advisory role, research funding, travel, accommodations, and expenses from Celgene, Roche, Merck, Takeda, AstraZeneca, Novartis, Amgen, Bristol Myers Squibb, MSD, Sandoz, Abbvie, Gilead, Daiichi Sankyo, and Janssen outside the submitted work. JMe reports non-financial support from MSD, Bristol Myers Squibb, Takeda, Celgene, and Hexal outside the submitted work. GM reports personal fees from Amgen, Bristol Myers Squibb, Janssen, AstraZeneca, Gilead, and Merck Serono, outside the submitted work. AE reports grants and personal fees from Takeda/Millennium, Bristol Myers Squibb, Hexal, Janssen, AstraZeneca, and Merck outside the submitted work. SK, HG, IB, CK, DAE, JMZ, JMa, MFB, MS, H-JB, WW, W-DL, TP, MST, FH, MB, UBK, DK, HO, BH, WA, TV, HE, CB, HS, MF, VD, MD, and PB declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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6. Non-Hodgkin lymphoma after treatment for classical Hodgkin lymphoma: a report from the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Eichenauer DA, Müller H, Elger L, Goergen H, Fuchs M, Kreissl S, Böll B, Diehl V, von Tresckow B, Borchmann P, and Engert A
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- Aged, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin mortality, Neoplasms, Second Primary mortality
- Abstract
Data on non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) after classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) are scarce. We therefore performed a retrospective analysis comprising 11·841 cHL patients who had first-line treatment within the randomized German Hodgkin Study Group (GHSG) HD7-HD15 studies. After a median follow-up of 106 months, 175 patients (1·5%) had developed NHL. The median time to NHL was 44 months, the median age at NHL diagnosis was 54 years. The five-year event-free survival and overall survival estimates from the diagnosis of NHL were 36·9% and 44·2%, respectively. Thus, NHL after cHL is a rare event primarily affecting older individuals and often resulting in the patient´s death., (© 2021 The Authors. British Journal of Haematology published by British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2021
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7. Early Response to First-Line Anti-PD-1 Treatment in Hodgkin Lymphoma: A PET-Based Analysis from the Prospective, Randomized Phase II NIVAHL Trial.
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Voltin CA, Mettler J, van Heek L, Goergen H, Müller H, Baues C, Keller U, Meissner J, Trautmann-Grill K, Kerkhoff A, Fuchs M, Sasse S, von Tresckow B, Dietlein M, Borchmann P, Engert A, Kobe C, and Bröckelmann PJ
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- Adult, Dacarbazine administration & dosage, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Female, Hodgkin Disease metabolism, Humans, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors administration & dosage, Male, Middle Aged, Nivolumab administration & dosage, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Outcome Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Prospective Studies, Survival Analysis, Vinblastine administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease diagnostic imaging, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Positron-Emission Tomography methods
- Abstract
Purpose: A primary analysis of the ongoing NIVAHL trial demonstrated unexpectedly high interim complete response rates to nivolumab-based first-line treatment in early-stage unfavorable Hodgkin lymphoma. However, biomarkers such as metabolic tumor volume (MTV) or total lesion glycolysis (TLG) and their change under treatment (ΔMTV and ΔTLG), measured on PET, might provide additional relevant information for response assessment in this setting. Hence, the current analysis aimed to investigate early response to checkpoint inhibitor therapy beyond conventional criteria., Patients and Methods: NIVAHL is a prospective, randomized phase II trial that recruited between April 2017 and October 2018. Patients in arms A and B were assessed for early treatment response after two courses of doxorubicin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine with two concomitant nivolumab infusions per cycle (2 × N-AVD) and 4 × nivolumab, respectively. In the current analysis, we included all 59 individuals with PET images available to the central review panel for quantitative analysis before April 30, 2019., Results: At interim restaging, we determined a mean ΔMTV and ΔTLG of -99.8% each in arm A after 2 × N-AVD, compared with -91.4% and -91.9%, respectively, for treatment group B undergoing 4 × nivolumab. This high decrease in MTV and TLG was observed regardless of the initial lymphoma burden., Conclusions: Our study showed that nivolumab-based first-line treatment leads to rapid, near-complete reduction of tumor metabolism in early-stage unfavorable Hodgkin lymphoma. Thus, PET-derived biomarkers might allow reduction or even omission of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Furthermore, MTV and TLG could be also used to optimize immune checkpoint-targeting treatments in other cancers., (©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2021
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8. The interplay between cancer-related fatigue and functional health in Hodgkin lymphoma survivors.
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Stadtbaeumer N, Müller H, Goergen H, Kreissl S, Borchmann P, and Mayer A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Cancer Survivors, Female, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease psychology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Fatigue psychology, Hodgkin Disease complications, Quality of Life psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is among the most distressing symptoms reported by cancer survivors as compromising their quality of life. This study investigates the complex interplay between CRF and functional health (FH) in survivors of Hodgkin lymphoma by using longitudinal data to clarify the etiology of CRF., Methods: Data from N = 3596 survivors (HD13-15) from the German Hodgkin Study Group was analyzed using bivariate latent curve models with structured residuals to model how the interplay between CRF and FH unfolds over time across and within individuals. CRF and FH were measured with the EORTC QLQ-C30. Assessed FH domains were physical, cognitive, emotional, social, and role functioning. Age at diagnosis, gender, country, baseline fatigue, and cancer stage were included as covariates., Results: The latent curve models with structured residuals had an adequate model fit (χ² = 416.63-548.28, df = 114, p < .001, root mean square error of approximation = .03, comparative fit index = .98-.99, Tucker-Lewis index = .97-.98). On the between-person level, CRF and all FH domains were strongly negatively correlated ( r = -.72 to r = -.84). On the within-person level, earlier CRF (ρ
F = -.05 to ρF = -.12) and FH deviations (ρFH = -.05 to ρFH = -.13) negatively predicted subsequent deviations of the respective other variable. Time-specific within-person improvements in physical, cognitive, and emotional functioning reduced CRF more than vice versa, whereas the effect of CRF was stronger for social functioning. Role functioning had a balanced relation with CRF., Conclusions: This analysis reveals a complex reciprocal relation between CRF and FH with distinct between- and within-person effects. The results contribute to a better understanding of CRF in survivors of Hodgkin lymphoma and could inform the development of much-needed targeted interventions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).- Published
- 2020
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9. Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients With Hodgkin Lymphoma: A Longitudinal Analysis of the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Kreissl S, Müller H, Goergen H, Meissner J, Topp M, Sökler M, Markova J, Bernhard J, Greil R, von Tresckow B, Behringer K, Rüffer JU, Flechtner HH, Möstl M, Fuchs M, Engert A, Diehl V, and Borchmann P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Cancer Survivors, Female, Germany epidemiology, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Hodgkin Disease psychology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Young Adult, Hodgkin Disease diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose: Many important details of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) after diagnosis and treatment of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) are still unknown because large longitudinal studies of HRQoL are rare. Therefore, we analyzed a systematically assessed, comprehensive range of HRQoL domains in patients with HL of all stages from diagnosis up to 5 years of survivorship., Patients and Methods: We included patients with HL age 18-60 years at diagnosis from the German Hodgkin Study Group trials HD13, HD14, and HD15. We analyzed HRQoL using all functional and symptom scales of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire C30 including deviations from reference values. We estimated the effect of different disease, patient, and treatment characteristics using multiple regression and repeated measures analysis and computed correlations of HRQoL scores., Results: We analyzed 4,215 patients with any HRQoL assessment within 5 years after treatment. Higher tumor burden at diagnosis was associated with impaired baseline scores in many HRQoL domains. During survivorship, cognitive, emotional, role, and social functioning and fatigue, dyspnea, sleep, and financial problems were severely and persistently affected. From year 2 on, mean deviations from reference values ranged between 12 and 29 points, with 10 points being a commonly used margin of clinical relevance. In all 3 trials, HRQoL domains 2 and 5 years after therapy were significantly influenced by baseline scores and age but not by randomized treatments. Fatigue was most closely correlated with other symptoms and scales., Conclusion: Our results show a high and persistent amount of different HRQoL deficits in survivors of HL that are largely independent of the applied chemotherapies. Our analysis underscores the high, unmet medical need of these rather young survivors of HL regarding the psychosocial adverse effects of the cancer experience.
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- 2020
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10. Efficacy of Nivolumab and AVD in Early-Stage Unfavorable Classic Hodgkin Lymphoma: The Randomized Phase 2 German Hodgkin Study Group NIVAHL Trial.
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Bröckelmann PJ, Goergen H, Keller U, Meissner J, Ordemann R, Halbsguth TV, Sasse S, Sökler M, Kerkhoff A, Mathas S, Hüttmann A, Bormann M, Zimmermann A, Mettler J, Fuchs M, von Tresckow B, Baues C, Rosenwald A, Klapper W, Kobe C, Borchmann P, and Engert A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological adverse effects, Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Dacarbazine adverse effects, Doxorubicin adverse effects, Female, Germany, Humans, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors adverse effects, Male, Middle Aged, Nivolumab adverse effects, Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor antagonists & inhibitors, Progression-Free Survival, Remission Induction, Vinblastine adverse effects, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Dacarbazine therapeutic use, Doxorubicin therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors therapeutic use, Nivolumab therapeutic use, Vinblastine therapeutic use
- Abstract
Importance: In early-stage unfavorable classic Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL), conventional therapy induces high cure rates but also relevant acute and long-term toxic effects. Nivolumab is well tolerated and highly effective in relapsed/refractory cHL but has not been adequately studied in first-line treatment of early-stage cHL. The NIVAHL trial evaluated nivolumab in this setting with the aim to develop a highly effective yet tolerable systemic therapy to ultimately mitigate morbidity in patients who survive cHL., Objective: To evaluate efficacy of 2 experimental nivolumab-based first-line treatment strategies in patients with early-stage unfavorable cHL., Design, Setting, and Participants: This was an open-label, multicenter, phase 2 randomized clinical trial, open between April 2017 and October 2018. The trial took place at 35 trial centers across Germany, ranging from academic centers to private offices. Eligibility was defined by age 18 to 60 years, cHL confirmed by expert pathology review, early-stage unfavorable disease by German Hodgkin Study Group criteria (stage I to II with risk factor[s]), and absence of serious concomitant disease or organ dysfunction. Among 110 enrolled patients, 109 were eligible., Interventions: Systemic therapy, per random assignment (1:1) to either concomitant treatment with 4 cycles of nivolumab and doxorubicin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (N-AVD) or sequential treatment with 4 doses of nivolumab, 2 cycles of N-AVD, and 2 cycles of AVD at standard doses, followed by 30-Gy involved-site radiotherapy., Main Outcomes and Measures: Complete remission (CR) rate after study treatment, aiming at excluding a CR rate of 80% or lower via a 2-sided 95% CI for each treatment group., Results: Of 109 patients included in this study, 65 (59.6%) were women, and the median (range) age was 27 (18-60) years. At interim staging after 2 cycles of N-AVD or 4 doses of nivolumab monotherapy, 54 of 54 (100%) and 49 of 51 (96%) response-eligible patients, respectively, achieved an objective response, with CR in 47 (87%) and 26 (51%) patients, respectively. Among 101 patients eligible for primary end point analysis, 46 of 51 (90%; 95% CI, 79%-97%) patients receiving concomitant therapy and 47 of 50 (94%; 95% CI, 84%-99%) patients receiving sequential therapy achieved CR after study treatment. With a median follow-up of 13 months, 12-month progression-free survival was 100% for patients receiving concomitant treatment and 98% (95% CI, 95%-100%) for patients receiving sequential therapy., Conclusions and Relevance: Both strategies combining nivolumab and AVD are feasible and resulted in high remission rates. Despite narrowly missing the efficacy benchmark in the concomitant group, the excellent 12-month progression-free survival and the unexpectedly high CR rate after 4 doses of nivolumab monotherapy warrant further evaluation of this approach in the first-line treatment of patients with early-stage cHL., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03004833.
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- 2020
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11. Reply to H.J.A. Adams et al.
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Fuchs M, Goergen H, Kobe C, Borchmann P, and Engert A
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- Humans, Positron-Emission Tomography, Hodgkin Disease
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- 2020
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12. Pretreatment Vitamin D Deficiency Is Associated With Impaired Progression-Free and Overall Survival in Hodgkin Lymphoma.
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Borchmann S, Cirillo M, Goergen H, Meder L, Sasse S, Kreissl S, Bröckelmann PJ, von Tresckow B, Fuchs M, Ullrich RT, and Engert A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Animals, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Calcitriol pharmacology, Case-Control Studies, Disease-Free Survival, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm drug effects, Female, Heterografts, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Humans, Male, Mice, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Progression-Free Survival, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Hodgkin Disease complications, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Vitamin D Deficiency complications
- Abstract
Purpose: Vitamin D deficiency is described as a modifiable risk factor for the incidence of and mortality in many common cancers; however, data in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) are lacking., Patients and Methods: We thus performed a study measuring pretreatment vitamin D levels in prospectively treated patients with HL and correlated this with clinical outcomes. A total of 351 patients from the German Hodgkin Study Group clinical trials (HD7, HD8, and HD9) were included., Results: Fifty percent of patients were vitamin D deficient (< 30 nmol/L) before planned chemotherapy. Pretreatment vitamin D deficiency was more common in relapsed/refractory patients than matched relapse-free controls (median baseline vitamin D, 21.4 nmol/L v 35.5 nmol/L; proportion with vitamin D deficiency, 68% v 41%; P < .001). Vitamin D-deficient patients had impaired progression-free survival (10-year difference, 17.6%; 95% CI, 6.9% to 28.4%; hazard ratio, 2.13; 95% CI, 1.84 to 2.48; P < .001) and overall survival (10-year difference, 11.1%; 95% CI, 2.1% to 20.2%; hazard ratio, 1.82; 95% CI, 1.53 to 2.15; P < .001), consistent across trials and treatment groups. We demonstrated that vitamin D status is an independent predictor of outcome and hypothesized that vitamin D status might be important for the chemosensitivity of HL. We subsequently performed experiments supplementing physiologic doses of vitamin D (calcitriol) to cultured HL cell lines and demonstrated increased antiproliferative effects in combination with chemotherapy. In an HL-xenograft animal model, we showed that supplemental vitamin D (dietary supplement, cholecalciferol) improves the chemosensitivity of tumors by reducing the rate of tumor growth compared with vitamin D or chemotherapy alone., Conclusion: On the basis of our clinical and preclinical findings, we encourage that vitamin D screening and replacement be incorporated into future randomized clinical trials to properly clarify the role of vitamin D replacement therapy in HL.
- Published
- 2019
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13. Predictive Value of Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography After ABVD-Based Chemotherapy in Early-Stage Hodgkin Lymphoma.
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Kobe C, Goergen H, Fuchs M, Müller H, Baues C, Engert A, Dietlein M, von Tresckow B, and Borchmann P
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- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Bleomycin, Dacarbazine, Doxorubicin, Humans, Positron-Emission Tomography, Prognosis, Risk Assessment, United Kingdom, Vinblastine, Hodgkin Disease
- Published
- 2019
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14. Positron Emission Tomography-Guided Treatment in Early-Stage Favorable Hodgkin Lymphoma: Final Results of the International, Randomized Phase III HD16 Trial by the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Fuchs M, Goergen H, Kobe C, Kuhnert G, Lohri A, Greil R, Sasse S, Topp MS, Schäfer E, Hertenstein B, Soekler M, Vogelhuber M, Zijlstra JM, Keller UB, Krause SW, Wilhelm M, Maschmeyer G, Thiemer J, Dührsen U, Meissner J, Viardot A, Eich H, Baues C, Diehl V, Rosenwald A, von Tresckow B, Dietlein M, Borchmann P, and Engert A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Bleomycin adverse effects, Clinical Decision-Making, Dacarbazine administration & dosage, Dacarbazine adverse effects, Disease Progression, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Doxorubicin adverse effects, Europe, Female, Hodgkin Disease diagnostic imaging, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Predictive Value of Tests, Progression-Free Survival, Time Factors, Vinblastine administration & dosage, Vinblastine adverse effects, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Chemoradiotherapy adverse effects, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Positron-Emission Tomography, Radiotherapy Dosage
- Abstract
Purpose: Combined-modality treatment (CMT) with 2× ABVD (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine) and small-field radiotherapy is standard of care for patients with early-stage favorable Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). However, the role of radiotherapy has been challenged. Positron emission tomography (PET) after 2× ABVD (PET-2) might help to predict individual outcomes and guide treatment., Methods: Between November 2009 and December 2015, we recruited patients age 18 to 75 years with newly diagnosed, early-stage favorable HL for this international randomized phase III trial. Patients were assigned to standard CMT of 2× ABVD and 20-Gy involved-field radiotherapy or PET-guided treatment, omitting involved-field radiotherapy after negative PET-2 (Deauville score < 3). Primary objectives were to exclude inferiority of 10% or more in 5-year progression-free survival (PFS) of ABVD alone compared with CMT in a per-protocol analysis among PET-2-negative patients (noninferiority margin for hazard ratio, 3.01) and to confirm PET-2 positivity (Deauville score ≥ 3) as a risk factor for PFS among CMT-treated patients., Results: We enrolled 1,150 patients. Median follow-up was 45 months. Among 628 PET-2-negative, per-protocol-treated patients, 5-year PFS was 93.4% (95% CI, 90.4% to 96.5%) with CMT and 86.1% (95% CI, 81.4% to 90.9%) with ABVD (difference 7.3% [95% CI, 1.6% to 13.0%]; hazard ratio, 1.78 [95% CI, 1.02 to 3.12]). Five-year overall survival was 98.1% (95% CI, 96.5% to 99.8%) with CMT and 98.4% (95% CI, 96.5% to 100.0%) with ABVD. Among 693 patients who were assigned to CMT, 5-year PFS was 93.2% (95% CI, 90.2% to 96.2%) among PET-2-negative patients and 88.4% (95% CI, 84.2% to 92.6%) in PET-2-positive patients ( P = .047). When using the more common liver cutoff (Deauville score, 4) for PET-2 positivity, the difference was more pronounced (5-year PFS, 93.1% [95% CI, 90.7% to 95.5%] v 80.9% [95% CI, 72.2% to 89.7%]; P = .0011)., Conclusion: In early-stage favorable HL, a positive PET after two cycles ABVD indicates a high risk for treatment failure, particularly when a Deauville score of 4 is used as a cutoff for positivity. In PET-2-negative patients, radiotherapy cannot be omitted from CMT without clinically relevant loss of tumor control.
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- 2019
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15. Survivors' perspectives on risks and benefits of Hodgkin lymphoma treatment: results of a survey by the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Kreissl S, Goergen H, Müller H, Meissner J, Mehnert A, Bürkle C, Fuchs M, Engert A, Behringer K, and Borchmann P
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- Adult, Aftercare, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols economics, Cancer Survivors statistics & numerical data, Disease Progression, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hodgkin Disease economics, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local economics, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local psychology, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant adverse effects, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant methods, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk Assessment statistics & numerical data, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Cancer Survivors psychology, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local prevention & control, Patient Preference statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
We performed a survey in Hodgkin lymphoma survivors to learn more about their perspectives on treatment risks and benefits. We sent questions to 1149 survivors from the GHSG's HD13-15 trials with ( N = 249) or without ( N =900) documented progression or relapse. The participation rate was 52% ( N =581). After median follow-up of 106 months, 40% of relapse-free and over 60% of relapsed survivors were still worried about late effects and the possibility of relapse. Chemotherapy, largely independent of its intensity, had been a strain on 74% of relapse-free and 90% of relapsed survivors. Most physical, psychological, and socio-economic sequelae were more frequent among relapsed survivors ( p < .05) and described as very burdensome. 74% of relapse-free and 61% of relapsed survivors considered primary cure from Hodgkin lymphoma as the most important aspect in the choice of treatment. Accordingly, primary optimal lymphoma control is of utmost importance from the patients' perspective.
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- 2019
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16. Outcome-based interpretation of early interim PET in advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma.
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Kobe C, Goergen H, Baues C, Kuhnert G, Voltin CA, Zijlstra J, Hoekstra O, Mettler J, Drzezga A, Engert A, Borchmann P, and Dietlein M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Bleomycin therapeutic use, Cyclophosphamide administration & dosage, Cyclophosphamide therapeutic use, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Doxorubicin therapeutic use, Etoposide administration & dosage, Etoposide therapeutic use, Female, Hodgkin Disease diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Positron-Emission Tomography, Prednisone administration & dosage, Prednisone therapeutic use, Procarbazine administration & dosage, Procarbazine therapeutic use, Survival Analysis, Treatment Outcome, Vincristine administration & dosage, Vincristine therapeutic use, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Hodgkin Disease pathology
- Abstract
The HD18 study for patients with newly diagnosed advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) used positron emission tomography (PET) after 2 cycles (PET-2) of bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone in escalated doses (eBEACOPP) to guide further treatment. Here, we analyzed the impact of PET-2 results in the context of eBEACOPP according to the Deauville score (DS) in patients treated within the HD18 trial. Residual tissue was visually compared with reference regions according to DS. We analyzed the association between PET-2 uptake and baseline characteristics, progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS). One thousand five patients (52%) had DS1 or DS2, 471 (24%) had DS3, and 469 (24%) DS4. PET-2 uptake was associated with baseline risk factors large mediastinal mass, extranodal disease, and high International Prognostic Score ( P < .0001 each). Among 722 patients receiving standard therapy with 6 cycles of eBEACOPP, 3-year PFS rates were 92.2%, 95.9%, and 87.6% with DS1-2, DS3, and DS4, respectively. Univariate hazard ratio (HR) for PFS in patients with DS4 vs DS1-3 was 2.3 (1.3-3.8; P = .002). DS4 was the only factor remaining significant for PFS in a multivariate analysis including the associated baseline risk factors. Three-year OS rates were 97.6% for DS1-2, 99.0% for DS3, and 96.8% for DS4, with a univariate HR for DS4 vs DS1-3 of 2.6 (1.0-6.6; P = .04). Residual uptake above that in the liver at PET-2 (ie, DS4) is an important risk factor regarding survival outcomes for patients treated with eBEACOPP upfront. We thus recommend DS4 as the cutoff value for PET-2 positivity. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00515554., (© 2018 by The American Society of Hematology.)
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- 2018
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17. Intensive treatment strategies in advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma (HD9 and HD12): analysis of long-term survival in two randomised trials.
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von Tresckow B, Kreissl S, Goergen H, Bröckelmann PJ, Pabst T, Fridrik M, Rummel M, Jung W, Thiemer J, Sasse S, Bürkle C, Baues C, Diehl V, Engert A, and Borchmann P
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- Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Cyclophosphamide, Female, Humans, Male, Neoplasm Staging, Prednisone, Procarbazine, Survival Analysis, Treatment Outcome, Vincristine, Young Adult, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Hodgkin Disease pathology
- Abstract
Background: Although intensified chemotherapy regimens have improved tumour control and survival in advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma, data on the long-term sequelae are scarce. We did preplanned follow-up analyses of the German Hodgkin Study Group (GHSG) trials HD9 and HD12 to assess whether the primary results of these trials-which had shown that intensive initial therapy in advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma has a beneficial effect on treatment outcomes-would continue with longer follow-up., Methods: In HD9 (Feb 1, 1993, to March 10, 1998), 1282 patients with newly diagnosed, histology-proven, advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma received eight alternating cycles of COPP and ABVD (COPP/ABVD), eight cycles of bBEACOPP, or eight cycles of eBEACOPP. In HD12 (Jan 4, 1999, to Jan 13, 2003; registered with ClinicalTrials.gov [NCT00265031]), 1670 patients with newly diagnosed, histology-proven, advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma received eight cycles of eBEACOPP or four cycles of eBEACOPP plus four cycles of bBEACOPP (4 + 4), plus consolidation radiotherapy to initial bulk and residual disease or no radiotherapy, to analyse two non-inferiority objectives. In both trials, randomisation was done centrally in the GHSG trial coordination centre using the minimisation method including a random component, stratified according to centre, age, stage, international prognostic score, the presence or absence of a large mediastinal mass, and bulky disease. Patients and investigators were not masked to treatment allocation. All analyses were done on the intention-to-treat principle. The primary endpoint of this follow-up analysis was progression-free survival (time from first diagnosis to progressive disease, relapse, or death from any cause or censoring at the date of last information on disease status). To assess whether long-term outcome might be impaired by long-term sequelae, we analysed overall survival and second primary malignant neoplasm incidence as key secondary endpoints., Findings: Median observation time was 141 months (IQR 101-204) in HD9 and 97 months (69-143) in HD12. For HD9 trial patients, 15-year progression-free survival was 57·0% (95% CI 50·0-64·0) for COPP/ABVD, 66·8% (61·9-71·8) for bBEACOPP, and 74·0% (69·0-79·0) for eBEACOPP, 15-year overall survival was 72·3% (95% CI 66·5-78·1), 74·5% (70·1-78·9), and 80·9% (76·7-85·0), respectively. Progression-free survival and overall survival in the eBEACOPP group remained significantly better than in the COPP/ABVD group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·53, 95% CI 0·41-0·69, p<0·0001, and 0·68, 0·50-0·93, p=0·015, respectively). The 15-year cumulative incidence of second primary malignant neoplasms was 7·2% (95% CI 3·7-10·7) after COPP/ABVD, 13·0% (9·1-16·9) after bBEACOPP, and 11·4% (7·6-15·1) after eBEACOPP. For HD12 trial patients, non-inferiority of 4 + 4 was shown, with 10-year progression-free survival of 82·6% (95% CI 79·6-85·6) for eBEACOPP and 80·6% (77·4-83·7) for 4 + 4 (HR 1·13 [0·89-1·43], within non-inferiority margin of 1·50), and 10-year overall survival of 87·3% (95% CI 84·7-89·9) and 86·8% (84·2-89·4), respectively (HR 1·02 [95% CI 0·77-1·36]). Among 555 (37%) patients with residual disease after chemotherapy, omission of radiotherapy was associated with significantly worse 10-year progression-free survival (89·7% [95% CI 85·8-93·6] radiotherapy vs 83·4% [78·2-88·5] for no radiotherapy; p=0·027) and 10-year overall survival (94·4% [91·4-97·3] vs 88·4% [83·8-93·0]; p=0·025). 10-year cumulative second primary malignant neoplasms incidence was 6·4% (95% CI 3·3-9·5) for 4 + 4 and 8·8% (5·2-12·4) for eBEACOPP., Interpretation: Long-term follow-up of HD9 and HD12 shows an ongoing benefit of intensive first-line treatment and consolidation radiotherapy to residual disease in terms of progression-free survival and overall survival. Our results support the use of eBEACOPP in advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma. However, because late toxicities such as second primary malignant neoplasms contribute to mortality, less toxic but equally effective treatments need to be developed to further improve overall survival., Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe e.V., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2018
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18. Outcome of Patients With Early-Stage Infradiaphragmatic Hodgkin Lymphoma: A Comprehensive Analysis From the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Sasse S, Goergen H, Plütschow A, Böll B, Eichenauer DA, Fuchs M, Behringer K, Zijlstra JM, Greil R, Markova J, Topp MS, Meissner J, Neubauer A, Baues C, Engert A, Borchmann P, and von Tresckow B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Bleomycin adverse effects, Cyclophosphamide administration & dosage, Cyclophosphamide adverse effects, Dacarbazine administration & dosage, Dacarbazine adverse effects, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Doxorubicin adverse effects, Etoposide administration & dosage, Etoposide adverse effects, Female, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Middle Aged, Prednisone administration & dosage, Prednisone adverse effects, Procarbazine administration & dosage, Procarbazine adverse effects, Progression-Free Survival, Treatment Outcome, Vincristine administration & dosage, Vincristine adverse effects, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Chemoradiotherapy methods, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Lymphatic Metastasis pathology
- Abstract
Purpose The prognostic effect of isolated infradiaphragmatic involvement in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is controversial, and there are little data about patients treated with current therapies. Therefore, we performed a risk factor analysis to focus on isolated nodal infradiaphragmatic disease in patients treated within the German Hodgkin Study Group trials HD13 (clinical trial information: ISRCTN63474366) and HD14 (clinical trial information: ISRCTN04761296) for early-stage HL. Patients and Methods Characteristics and outcomes of patients who had infradiaphragmatic HL were compared with patients who had supradiaphragmatic disease. Progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were estimated according to Kaplan-Meier methods and were compared between groups using the log-rank test and Cox proportional hazards regression, which was also applied for multivariable analyses that adjusted for relevant baseline characteristics. Results Of 2,903 qualified patients, 223 (7.7%) were diagnosed with isolated nodal infradiaphragmatic disease. In general, these patients were older, had a poorer performance status, were more often male, and had the nodular sclerosis subtype less often than those with supradiaphragmatic disease. After a median follow-up time of 51 months, PFS and OS were significantly worse in patients with infradiaphragmatic disease (5-year PFS and OS, 80.1% and 91.5% v 91.2% and 97.6% in patients with supradiaphragmatic disease; each P < .001). In multivariable analyses, infradiaphragmatic HL remained a significant risk factor in terms of PFS (hazard ratio [HR], 1.5; 95% CI, 1.04 to 2.2; P = .03) and OS (HR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.2 to 3.5; P = .01). However, inferior PFS and OS could not be observed among those patients treated with the more intensive chemotherapy (two cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine [ABVD] in HD13, and two cycles of escalated bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone [BEACOPP
escalated ] plus two cycles of ABVD in HD14; all patients received 30 Gy of involved-field radiotherapy). Conclusion Early-stage HL that presents with infradiaphragmatic disease only represents a distinct patient group with an inferior outcome. However, this adverse outcome can be outweighed by appropriate combined modality treatment.- Published
- 2018
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19. PET-guided treatment in patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma (HD18): final results of an open-label, international, randomised phase 3 trial by the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Borchmann P, Goergen H, Kobe C, Lohri A, Greil R, Eichenauer DA, Zijlstra JM, Markova J, Meissner J, Feuring-Buske M, Hüttmann A, Dierlamm J, Soekler M, Beck HJ, Willenbacher W, Ludwig WD, Pabst T, Topp MS, Hitz F, Bentz M, Keller UB, Kühnhardt D, Ostermann H, Schmitz N, Hertenstein B, Aulitzky W, Maschmeyer G, Vieler T, Eich H, Baues C, Stein H, Fuchs M, Kuhnert G, Diehl V, Dietlein M, and Engert A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Austria, Bleomycin therapeutic use, Cyclophosphamide therapeutic use, Czech Republic, Doxorubicin therapeutic use, Etoposide therapeutic use, Female, Germany, Hodgkin Disease diagnostic imaging, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Netherlands, Positron-Emission Tomography, Prednisone therapeutic use, Procarbazine therapeutic use, Rituximab administration & dosage, Switzerland, Treatment Outcome, Vincristine therapeutic use, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: The intensive polychemotherapy regimen eBEACOPP (bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone in escalated doses) is very active in patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma, albeit at the expense of severe toxicities. Individual patients might be cured with less burdensome therapy. We investigated whether metabolic response determined by PET after two cycles of standard regimen eBEACOPP (PET-2) would allow adaption of treatment intensity, increasing it for PET-2-positive patients and reducing it for PET-2-negative patients., Methods: In this open-label, randomised, parallel-group phase 3 trial, we recruited patients aged 18-60 years with newly diagnosed, advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma in 301 hospitals and private practices in Germany, Switzerland, Austria, the Netherlands, and the Czech Republic. After central review of PET-2, patients were assigned (1:1) to one of two parallel treatment groups on the basis of their PET-2 result. Patients with positive PET-2 were randomised to receive six additional cycles of either standard eBEACOPP (8 × eBEACOPP in total) or eBEACOPP with rituximab (8 × R-eBEACOPP). Those with negative PET-2 were randomised between standard treatment with six additional cycles of eBEACOPP (8 × eBEACOPP) or experimental treatment with two additional cycles (4 × eBEACOPP). A protocol amendment in June, 2011, introduced a reduction of standard therapy to 6 × eBEACOPP; after this point, patients with positive PET-2 were no longer randomised and were all assigned to receive 6 × eBEACOPP and patients with negative PET-2 were randomly assigned to 6 × eBEACOPP (standard) or 4 × eBEACOPP (experimental). Randomisation was done centrally using the minimisation method including a random component, stratified according to centre, age (<45 vs ≥45 years), stage (IIB, IIIA vs IIIB, IV), international prognostic score (0-2 vs 3-7), and sex. eBEACOPP was given as previously described; rituximab was given intravenously at a dose of 375 mg/m
2 (maximum total dose 700 mg). The primary objectives were to show superiority of the experimental treatment in the PET-2-positive cohort, and to show non-inferiority of the experimental treatment in the PET-2-negative cohort in terms of the primary endpoint, progression-free survival. We defined non-inferiority as an absolute difference of 6% in the 5-year progression-free survival estimates. Primary analyses in the PET-2-negative cohort were per protocol; all other analyses were by intention to treat. This trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00515554., Findings: Between May 14, 2008, and July 18, 2014, we recruited 2101 patients, of whom 137 were found ineligible before randomisation and a further 19 were found ineligible after randomisation. Among 434 randomised patients (217 per arm) with positive PET-2, 5-year progression-free survival was 89·7% (95% CI 85·4-94·0) with eBEACOPP and 88·1% (83·5-92·7) with R-eBEACOPP (log-rank p=0·46). Patients with negative PET-2 randomly assigned to either 8 × eBEACOPP or 6 × eBEACOPP (n=504) or 4 × eBEACOPP (n=501) had 5-year progression-free survival of 90·8% (95% CI 87·9-93·7) and 92·2% (89·4-95·0), respectively (difference 1·4%, 95% CI -2·7 to 5·4). 4 × eBEACOPP was associated with fewer severe infections (40 [8%] of 498 vs 75 [15%] of 502) and organ toxicities (38 [8%] of 498 vs 91 [18%] of 502) than were 8 × eBEACOPP or 6 × eBEACOPP in PET-2-negative patients. Ten treatment-related deaths occurred: four in the PET-2-positive cohort (one [<1%] in the 8 × eBEACOPP group, three [1%] in the 8 × R-eBEACOPP group) and six in the PET-2-negative group (six [1%] in the 8 × eBEACOPP or 6 × eBEACOPP group)., Interpretation: The favourable outcome of patients treated with eBEACOPP could not be improved by adding rituximab after positive PET-2. PET-2 negativity allows reduction to only four cycles of eBEACOPP without loss of tumour control. PET-2-guided eBEACOPP provides outstanding efficacy for all patients and increases overall survival by reducing treatment-related risks for patients with negative PET-2. We recommend this PET-2-guided treatment strategy for patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma., Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe, Swiss State Secretariat for Education and Research, and Roche Pharma AG., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
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20. Long-Term Follow-Up of Contemporary Treatment in Early-Stage Hodgkin Lymphoma: Updated Analyses of the German Hodgkin Study Group HD7, HD8, HD10, and HD11 Trials.
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Sasse S, Bröckelmann PJ, Goergen H, Plütschow A, Müller H, Kreissl S, Buerkle C, Borchmann S, Fuchs M, Borchmann P, Diehl V, and Engert A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Bleomycin therapeutic use, Combined Modality Therapy, Cyclophosphamide administration & dosage, Dacarbazine therapeutic use, Disease-Free Survival, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Doxorubicin therapeutic use, Etoposide administration & dosage, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Germany, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Prednisone administration & dosage, Procarbazine administration & dosage, Radiotherapy Dosage, Survival Rate, Time Factors, Vinblastine therapeutic use, Vincristine administration & dosage, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Neoplasms, Second Primary etiology, Radiotherapy methods
- Abstract
Purpose Combined-modality treatment is widely considered the standard of care in early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), and treatment intensity has been reduced over the last years. Long-term follow-up is important to judge both efficacy and safety of the different therapies used. Patients and Methods We analyzed updated follow-up data on 4,276 patients treated within the German Hodgkin Study Group trials HD7 and HD10 for early-stage favorable HL and HD8 and HD11 for early-stage unfavorable HL between 1993 and 2003. Results In HD7 (N = 627; median follow-up, 120 months), combined-modality treatment was superior to extended-field radiotherapy (RT), with 15-year progression-free survival (PFS) of 73% versus 52% (hazard ratio [HR], 0.5; 95% CI, 0.3 to 0.6; P < .001), without differences in overall survival (OS). In HD10 (N = 1,190; median follow-up, 98 months), noninferiority of two cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine (ABVD) plus 20 Gy involved-field (IF)-RT to more intensive four cycles of ABVD plus 30 Gy IF-RT was confirmed with 10-year PFS of 87% each (HR, 1.0; 95%, 0.6 to 1.5) and OS of 94% each (HR, 0.9; 95% CI, 0.5 to 1.6), respectively. In both trials, no differences in second neoplasias were observed. In HD8 (N = 1,064; median follow-up, 153 months), noninferiority of involved-field RT to extended-field RT regarding PFS was confirmed (HR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.8 to 1.2). In HD11 (N = 1,395; median follow-up, 106 months), superiority of bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone at baseline over ABVD was not observed. After BEACOPP
baseline , 20 Gy IF-RT was noninferior to 30 Gy (10-year PFS, 84% v 84%; HR, 1.0; 95% CI, 0.7 to 1.5). In contrast, PFS was inferior in ABVD-treated patients receiving 20 Gy instead of 30 Gy IF-RT (10-year PFS, 76% v 84%; HR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.0 to 2.1). No differences in OS or second neoplasias were observed in in both trials. Conclusion Long-term follow-up data of the four randomized trials largely support the current risk-adapted therapeutic strategies in early-stage HL. Nevertheless, continued follow-up is necessary to assess the long-term safety of currently applied therapeutic strategies.- Published
- 2017
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21. Late Relapse of Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma: An Analysis of the German Hodgkin Study Group HD7 to HD12 Trials.
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Bröckelmann PJ, Goergen H, Kohnhorst C, von Tresckow B, Moccia A, Markova J, Meissner J, Kerkhoff A, Ludwig WD, Fuchs M, Borchmann P, and Engert A
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Recurrence, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Young Adult, Hodgkin Disease epidemiology
- Abstract
Purpose Clinical characteristics, therapeutic approaches, and prognosis of late relapse (LR) in patients with classic Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) are poorly understood. We performed a comprehensive analysis of LR of Hodgkin lymphoma (LR-HL). Methods To estimate the incidence of LR-HL, we retrospectively analyzed 6,840 patients with cHL included in the German Hodgkin Study Group trials HD7 to HD12. Patients who experienced a relapse > 5 years into remission were compared with patients in continued remission for > 5 years and with those who experienced a relapse ≤ 5 years after first diagnosis. Results With a median observation time of 10.3 years, 141 incidences of LR-HL were observed. Cumulative incidences at 10, 15, and 20 years rose linearly and were 2.5%, 4.3%, and 6.9%, respectively. The standardized incidence ratio for HL with respect to age- and sex-matched German reference data was 84.5 (95% CI, 71.2 to 99.7). LR-HL was more frequently observed in patients with early-stage favorable than unfavorable or advanced stage at first diagnosis (15-year cumulative incidence, 5.3% v 3.9% and 3.9%, respectively; P = .01). Overall survival from first diagnosis was worse after LR compared with nonrelapse survivors (10-year estimate, 95.8% v 86.1%; hazard ratio, 2.5; 95% CI, 1.7 to 3.5; P < .001). In patients with LR-HL, survival was better compared with 466 patients with earlier relapse (hazard ratio, 0.6; 95% CI, 0.4 to 0.9, P = .01). Forty-four percent and 49% of patients with LR-HL and earlier relapse, respectively, received stem cell transplantations. Conclusion Apart from treatment-associated adverse effects, survivors after initially successful therapy for cHL are at an 85-fold risk for recurrence of disease compared with the general German population. After risk-adapted treatment strategies, especially in early-stage favorable HL, regular clinical follow-up is recommended for timely detection of LR-HL. With adequate treatment, prognosis of LR-HL is better compared with early relapses.
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- 2017
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22. Cancer-Related Fatigue in Patients With and Survivors of Hodgkin Lymphoma: The Impact on Treatment Outcome and Social Reintegration.
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Behringer K, Goergen H, Müller H, Thielen I, Brillant C, Kreissl S, Halbsguth TV, Meissner J, Greil R, Moosmann P, Shonukan O, Rueffer JU, Flechtner HH, Fuchs M, Diehl V, Engert A, and Borchmann P
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- Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Aged, Chronic Disease, Cohort Studies, Fatigue epidemiology, Fatigue psychology, Female, Germany, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Severity of Illness Index, Socioeconomic Factors, Survivors, Young Adult, Employment statistics & numerical data, Fatigue physiopathology, Hodgkin Disease diagnosis, Hodgkin Disease epidemiology, Quality of Life, Social Adjustment
- Abstract
Purpose Cancer-related fatigue occurs frequently in patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and has a major impact on their quality of life. We hypothesized that severe fatigue (sFA) might have an impact on patients' treatment outcome and social reintegration. Methods Of 5,306 patients enrolled in the German Hodgkin Study Group's fifth generation of clinical trials in HL (HD13, HD14, and HD15; nonqualified and older [> 60 years] patients excluded), 4,529 provided data on health-related quality of life. We describe sFA (defined as a score ≥ 50 on the 0 to 100 scale from the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30) before and up to 9 years after therapy and analyze its impact on treatment outcome and social reintegration. Results The proportion of patients reporting sFA was 37% at baseline and ranged from 20% to 24% during follow-up. Baseline sFA was associated with significantly impaired progression-free survival and a trend to impaired overall survival, which can be overcome in patients receiving highly effective HL therapies as applied in our fifth-generation trials. Our analysis revealed a significant negative association of sFA and employment in survivors: 5 years after therapy, 51% and 63% of female and male survivors, respectively, with sFA were working or in professional education, compared with 78% and 90% without sFA, respectively ( P < .001 adjusted for age, sex, stage, baseline employment status, and treatment outcome). sFA was also associated with financial problems and the number of visits to a general practitioner and medical specialists. Conclusion sFA is an important factor preventing survivors from social reintegration during follow-up. This observation underscores the need to address fatigue as a significant diagnosis when treating patients with and survivors of cancer.
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- 2016
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23. Cancer-related fatigue in patients with and survivors of Hodgkin's lymphoma: a longitudinal study of the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Kreissl S, Mueller H, Goergen H, Mayer A, Brillant C, Behringer K, Halbsguth TV, Hitz F, Soekler M, Shonukan O, Rueffer JU, Flechtner HH, Fuchs M, Diehl V, Engert A, and Borchmann P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Clinical Trials as Topic, Female, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Fatigue etiology, Hodgkin Disease complications, Survivors
- Abstract
Background: Patients with Hodgkin's lymphoma might have persistent fatigue even years after treatment. However, knowledge of the development of fatigue persisting long after completion of treatment is limited. Therefore, we did a detailed analysis of fatigue in our first-line clinical trials for early-stage favourable (HD13 trial), early-stage unfavourable (HD14 trial), and advanced-stage (HD15 trial) Hodgkin's lymphoma. Beyond the description of fatigue from diagnosis up to 5 years after treatment, we aimed to assess any effect of patient characteristics, disease characteristics, or treatment characteristics on persistent fatigue., Methods: In this longitudinal study, we included patients with early-stage favourable, early-stage unfavourable, and advanced-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma from the HD13, HD14, and HD15 trials, respectively, aged between 18 and 60 years. Eligible patients for these trials had newly diagnosed, histologically proven Hodgkin's lymphoma, an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 2 or lower, HIV negativity, and absence of comorbidity disallowing protocol treatment. We used the fatigue scale of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) QLQ-C30 questionnaire to assess fatigue from diagnosis up to 5 years after the end of treatment. The primary outcomes of interest in this study were fatigue scores in the second and fifth year after end of treatment. We estimated the effect of different disease, patient, and treatment characteristics on fatigue with multiple regression analyses and identified fatigue trajectories with growth mixture models. The regression analyses and growth mixture models used robust and full information maximum likelihood estimates to account for missing data. The HD13, HD14, and HD15 trials are registered as international standard randomised controlled trials, ISRCTN63474366, ISRCTN04761296, and ISRCTN32443041, respectively., Findings: The HD13 trial enrolled patients with early-stage favourable disease from Jan 28, 2003, to Sept 30, 2009; the HD14 trial enrolled patients with early-stage unfavourable disease from Jan 28, 2003, to Dec 23, 2009; and the HD15 trial enrolled patients with advanced-stage disease from Jan 28, 2003, to April 18, 2008. 5306 patients were enrolled in these trials. We analysed 4215 patients with any valid fatigue assessment up to 5 years after the end of treatment. Patients with higher tumour burden at diagnosis had more fatigue at baseline (mean fatigue score in HD13: 30·8 [SD 28·0]; in HD14: 39·8 [29·4], and in HD15: 49·0 [30·2]). Fatigue scores (FA) in the second year after the end of treatment were 28·5 (24·7) in HD13, 28·8 (24·4) in HD14, and 30·7 (24·4) in HD15; in the fifth year after the end of treatment FA was 30·8 (26·0) in HD13, 27·1 (24·8) in HD14, and 28·2 (24·9) in HD15. Predictors of fatigue in the second and fifth year after end of treatment were baseline fatigue (p<0·0001) and age as a continuous variable (p<0·0001). In addition to preceding fatigue and age, patient sex and Hodgkin's lymphoma specific risk factors at baseline did not consistently and significantly improve the prognosis of fatigue in the first, second, and fifth year after end of treatment. There was no significant effect of treatment on fatigue scores in the second and fifth year after treatment., Interpretation: Our findings show a high incidence of severe acute and persistent fatigue in Hodgkin's lymphoma survivors, which is largely independent of tumour stage and treatment. Our results contribute to a better understanding of fatigue in patients with Hodgkin's lymphoma and Hodgkin's lymphoma survivors and could inform development of urgently needed intervention strategies., Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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24. Bleomycin in older early-stage favorable Hodgkin lymphoma patients: analysis of the German Hodgkin Study Group (GHSG) HD10 and HD13 trials.
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Böll B, Goergen H, Behringer K, Bröckelmann PJ, Hitz F, Kerkhoff A, Greil R, von Tresckow B, Eichenauer DA, Bürkle C, Borchmann S, Fuchs M, Diehl V, Engert A, and Borchmann P
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Bleomycin adverse effects, Dacarbazine administration & dosage, Dacarbazine adverse effects, Disease-Free Survival, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Doxorubicin adverse effects, Female, Hodgkin Disease radiotherapy, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Lung Diseases chemically induced, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Remission Induction, Vinblastine administration & dosage, Vinblastine adverse effects, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine sulfate, and dacarbazine (ABVD) is associated with severe toxicity in older patients, particularly from bleomycin-induced lung toxicity (BLT). Therefore, using bleomycin has been questioned in older Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients, especially in early-stage HL. We therefore analyzed feasibility, toxicity, and efficacy of ABVD or AVD in 287 older early-stage favorable HL patients. We included patients ≥60 years of age in the German Hodgkin Study Group HD10 and HD13 trials randomized to either 2 cycles of ABVD (2×ABVD; n = 137) or AVD (2×AVD; n = 82), each followed by involved-field radiotherapy (IF-RT), with patients randomized to 4×ABVD+IF-RT (n = 68). Patients' median age was 65 years (range, 60-75) with comparable patient and disease characteristics. Grade III-IV adverse event rates were similar in patients receiving 2×AVD and 2×ABVD (40% and 39%, respectively), but considerably higher in patients receiving 4×ABVD (65%). Similarly, BLT was rare in patients receiving 2×ABVD/AVD, but occurred in 7/69 (10%) of patients randomized to 4×ABVD, with 3 lethal events. In conclusion, no effects of bleomycin on toxicity rates were detectable in older patients receiving 2 cycles of chemotherapy. However, we found a high risk of severe toxicity of bleomycin in older HL patients receiving more than 2 cycles of ABVD. These trials are registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov and www.isrctn.com as #NCT00265018 (HD10) and #ISRCTN63474366 (HD13)., (© 2016 by The American Society of Hematology.)
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- 2016
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25. Impact of centralized diagnostic review on quality of initial staging in Hodgkin lymphoma: experience of the German Hodgkin Study Group.
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Bröckelmann PJ, Goergen H, Fuchs M, Kriz J, Semrau R, Baues C, Kobe C, Behringer K, Eichenauer DA, von Tresckow B, Klimm B, Halbsguth T, Wongso D, Plütschow A, Haverkamp H, Dietlein M, Eich HT, Stein H, Diehl V, Borchmann P, and Engert A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Clinical Decision-Making, Clinical Trials as Topic, Diagnostic Imaging, Female, Hodgkin Disease diagnosis, Humans, Lymph Nodes pathology, Male, Mediastinum pathology, Middle Aged, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Patient Selection, Retrospective Studies, Risk Adjustment, Software Design, Young Adult, Diagnostic Errors, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Neoplasm Staging, Observer Variation, Quality Control
- Abstract
Accurate clinical staging is crucial for adequate risk-adapted treatment in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) to prevent patients from under- or over-treatment. Within the latest German Hodgkin Study Group trial generation, diagnostic findings such as histopathology, computerized tomography imaging and clinical risk factors were re-evaluated by expert panels. Here, we retrospectively analysed 5965 patients and identified 399 in who major discordant findings changed their first-line treatment allocation. Histopathology review did not confirm the initial diagnosis of HL in 87 patients. Treatment allocation was revised in 312 of the remaining 5878 patients: 176 were assigned to a higher and 128 to a lower risk group, respectively; the correct treatment group remained unclear in 8 patients. Cases of revised treatment allocation accounted for 9·8%, 6·0%, 0·8%, and 14·8% of patients initially assigned to the HD13, HD14, HD15 trials and stage IA lymphocyte-predominant HL project, respectively. Most revisions were due to wrong application of clinical stage (20·5% of 312 patients with revised treatment group), histological subtype (9·0%) or the risk factors ≥3 involved areas (46·8%) or large mediastinal mass (9·3%). In conclusion, centralized review by experienced experts changed risk-adapted first-line treatment in a relevant proportion of HL patients. Quality control measures clearly improve the accuracy of treatment and should be implemented in clinical practice., (© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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26. Omission of dacarbazine or bleomycin, or both, from the ABVD regimen in treatment of early-stage favourable Hodgkin's lymphoma (GHSG HD13): an open-label, randomised, non-inferiority trial.
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Behringer K, Goergen H, Hitz F, Zijlstra JM, Greil R, Markova J, Sasse S, Fuchs M, Topp MS, Soekler M, Mathas S, Meissner J, Wilhelm M, Koch P, Lindemann HW, Schalk E, Semrau R, Kriz J, Vieler T, Bentz M, Lange E, Mahlberg R, Hassler A, Vogelhuber M, Hahn D, Mezger J, Krause SW, Skoetz N, Böll B, von Tresckow B, Diehl V, Hallek M, Borchmann P, Stein H, Eich H, and Engert A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Dacarbazine administration & dosage, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Vinblastine administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: The role of bleomycin and dacarbazine in the ABVD regimen (ie, doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine) has been questioned, especially for treatment of early-stage favourable Hodgkin's lymphoma, because of the drugs' toxicity. We aimed to investigate whether omission of either bleomycin or dacarbazine, or both, from ABVD reduced the efficacy of this regimen in treatment of Hodgkin's lymphoma., Methods: In this open-label, randomised, multicentre trial (HD13) we compared two cycles of ABVD with two cycles of the reduced-intensity regimen variants ABV (doxorubicin, bleomycin, and vinblastine), AVD (doxorubicin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine), and AV (doxorubicin and vinblastine), in patients with newly diagnosed, histologically proven, classic or nodular, lymphocyte predominant Hodgkin's lymphoma. In each treatment group, 30 Gy involved-field radiotherapy (IFRT) was given after both cycles of chemotherapy were completed. From Jan 28, 2003, patients were centrally randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) with a minimisation method to the four groups. Because of high event rates, assignment to the AV and ABV groups stopped early, on Sept 30, 2005, and Feb 10, 2006; assignment to ABVD and AVD continued (1:1) until Sept 30, 2009. Our primary objective was to show non-inferiority of the experimental variants compared with ABVD in terms of freedom from treatment failure (FFTF), by excluding a difference of 6% after 5 years corresponding to a hazard ratio (HR) of 1.72, via a 95% CI. Analyses reported here include qualified patients only, and between-group comparisons include only patients recruited during the same period. The trial was registered, number ISRCTN63474366., Findings: Of 1502 qualified patients, 566, 198, 571, and 167 were randomly assigned to receive ABVD, ABV, AVD, or AV, respectively. 5 year FFTF was 93.1%, 81.4%, 89.2%, and 77.1% with ABVD, ABV, AVD, and AV, respectively. Compared with ABVD, inferiority of the dacarbazine-deleted variants was detected with 5 year differences of -11.5% (95% CI -18.3 to -4.7; HR 2.06 [1.21 to 3.52]) for ABV and -15.2% (-23.0 to -7.4; HR 2.57 [1.51 to 4.40]) for AV. Non-inferiority of AVD compared with ABVD could also not be detected (5 year difference -3.9%, -7.7 to -0·1; HR 1.50, 1.00 to 2.26). 178 (33%) of 544 patients given ABVD had WHO grade III or IV toxicity, compared with 53 (28%) of 187 given ABV, 142 (26%) of 539 given AVD, and 40 (26%) of 151 given AV. Leucopenia was the most common event, and highest in the groups given bleomycin., Interpretation: Dacarbazine cannot be omitted from ABVD without a substantial loss of efficacy. With respect to our predefined non-inferiority margin, bleomycin cannot be safely omitted either, and the standard of care for patients with early-stage favourable Hodgkin's lymphoma should remain ABVD followed by IFRT., Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe and Swiss State Secretariat for Education and Research., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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27. Relapsed hodgkin lymphoma in older patients: a comprehensive analysis from the German hodgkin study group.
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Böll B, Goergen H, Arndt N, Meissner J, Krause SW, Schnell R, von Tresckow B, Eichenauer DA, Sasse S, Fuchs M, Behringer K, Klimm BC, Naumann R, Diehl V, Engert A, and Borchmann P
- Subjects
- Aged, Cause of Death, Chemoradiotherapy, Cohort Studies, Disease Progression, Female, Germany, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Neoplasm Staging, Outcome Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Recurrence, Risk Factors, Survival Rate, Hodgkin Disease therapy, Salvage Therapy methods, Survivors statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: Progression or relapse of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is common among older patients. However, prognosis and effects of second-line treatment are thus far unknown., Patients and Methods: We investigated second-line treatment and survival in older patients with progressive or relapsed HL. Patients treated within German Hodgkin Study Group first-line studies between 1993 and 2007 were screened for refractory disease or relapse (RR-HL). Patients with RR-HL age ≥ 60 years at first-line treatment were included in this analysis., Results: We identified 105 patients (median age, 66 years); 28%, 31%, and 41% had progressive disease, early relapse, or late relapse, respectively. Second-line treatment strategies included intensified salvage regimens (22%), conventional polychemotherapy and/or salvage-radiotherapy with curative intent (42%), and palliative approaches (31%). Median overall survival (OS) for the entire cohort was 12 months; OS at 3 years was 31% (95% CI, 22% to 40%). A prognostic score with risk factors (RFs) of early relapse, clinical stage III/IV, and anemia identified patients with favorable and unfavorable prognosis (≤ one RF: 3-year OS, 59%; 95% CI, 44% to 74%; ≥ two RFs: 3-year OS, 9%; 95% CI, 1% to 18%). In low-risk patients, the impact of therapy on survival was significant in favor of the conventional polychemotherapy/salvage radiotherapy approach. In high-risk patients, OS was low overall and did not differ significantly among treatment strategies., Conclusion: OS in older patients with RR-HL can be predicted using a simple prognostic score. Poor outcome in high-risk patients cannot be overcome by any of the applied treatment strategies. Our results might help to guide treatment decisions and evaluate new compounds in these patients.
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- 2013
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28. Brentuximab vedotin (SGN-35) in patients with transplant-naive relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma.
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Sasse S, Rothe A, Goergen H, Eichenauer DA, Lohri A, Kreher S, Jäger U, Bangard C, Kuhnert G, Böll B, von Tresckow B, and Engert A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Brentuximab Vedotin, Female, Hodgkin Disease mortality, Hodgkin Disease pathology, Humans, Immunoconjugates administration & dosage, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Recurrence, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Immunoconjugates therapeutic use
- Abstract
Only limited data are available on the role of brentuximab vedotin (SGN-35) in transplant-naive relapsed or refractory patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). We thus retrospectively analyzed 14 patients with primary refractory or relapsed HL who were treated with brentuximab vedotin as single agent in a named patient program, who had not received prior high-dose chemotherapy (HDCT) and autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) due to refractory disease (n = 9), comorbidity (n = 4) and unknown reasons (n = 1). Brentuximab vedotin resulted in an overall response rate of 71% (10/14) with five complete responses (CRs). Five of those patients with refractory disease and four patients with relevant comorbidity responded. Consolidating ASCT (n = 4) or allogeneic SCT (n = 1) was performed in five patients. Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 9 months and the median overall survival (OS) was not reached. These data indicate the therapeutic efficacy of brentuximab vedotin in chemotherapy-refractory transplant-naive patients with HL.
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- 2013
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29. Gonadal function and fertility in survivors after Hodgkin lymphoma treatment within the German Hodgkin Study Group HD13 to HD15 trials.
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Behringer K, Mueller H, Goergen H, Thielen I, Eibl AD, Stumpf V, Wessels C, Wiehlpütz M, Rosenbrock J, Halbsguth T, Reiners KS, Schober T, Renno JH, von Wolff M, van der Ven K, Kuehr M, Fuchs M, Diehl V, Engert A, and Borchmann P
- Subjects
- Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols administration & dosage, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols adverse effects, Bleomycin administration & dosage, Bleomycin adverse effects, Cyclophosphamide administration & dosage, Cyclophosphamide adverse effects, Dacarbazine administration & dosage, Dacarbazine adverse effects, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Doxorubicin adverse effects, Etoposide administration & dosage, Etoposide adverse effects, Female, Fertility Preservation, Follicle Stimulating Hormone blood, Germany epidemiology, Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone analogs & derivatives, Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone therapeutic use, Hodgkin Disease blood, Hodgkin Disease epidemiology, Humans, Inhibins blood, Male, Menstrual Cycle drug effects, Menstrual Cycle physiology, Middle Aged, Oligospermia epidemiology, Prednisone administration & dosage, Prednisone adverse effects, Pregnancy, Procarbazine administration & dosage, Procarbazine adverse effects, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Survivors, Testosterone blood, Vinblastine administration & dosage, Vinblastine adverse effects, Vincristine administration & dosage, Vincristine adverse effects, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Fertility physiology, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Hodgkin Disease physiopathology, Ovary physiology, Testis physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To optimize fertility advice in patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) before therapy and during survivorship, information on the impact of chemotherapy is needed. Therefore, we analyzed gonadal functions in survivors of HL., Patients and Methods: Women younger than age 40 and men younger than 50 years at diagnosis in ongoing remission at least 1 year after therapy within the German Hodgkin Study Group HD13 to HD15 trials for early- and advanced-stage HL were included. Hormone parameters, menstrual cycle, symptoms of hypogonadism, and offspring were evaluated., Results: A total of 1,323 (55%) of 2,412 contacted female and male survivors were evaluable for the current analysis (mean follow-up, 46 and 48 months, respectively). Follicle-stimulating hormone, anti-Müllerian hormone, and inhibin B levels correlated significantly with therapy intensity (P < .001). Low birth rates were observed in survivors after advanced-stage treatment within the observation time (women, 6.5%; men, 3.3%). Regular menstrual cycle was reported by more than 90% of female survivors of early-stage HL (recovery time mostly ≤ 12 months). After six to eight cycles of bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone, menstrual activity was strongly related to age (< v ≥ 30 years: 82% v 45%, respectively; P < .001; prolonged recovery time). Thirty-four percent of women age ≥ 30 years suffered severe menopausal symptoms (three- to four-fold more frequently than expected). In contrast, male survivors had mean levels of testosterone within the normal range and reported no increased symptoms of hypogonadism., Conclusion: The present analysis in a large group of survivors of HL provides well-grounded information on gonadal toxicity of currently used treatment regimens and allows risk-adapted fertility preservation and comprehensive support during therapy and follow-up.
- Published
- 2013
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30. Brentuximab vedotin for relapsed or refractory CD30+ hematologic malignancies: the German Hodgkin Study Group experience.
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Rothe A, Sasse S, Goergen H, Eichenauer DA, Lohri A, Jäger U, Bangard C, Böll B, von Bergwelt Baildon M, Theurich S, Borchmann P, and Engert A
- Subjects
- Adult, Brentuximab Vedotin, Clinical Trials, Phase I as Topic, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Germany, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Recurrence, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Hematologic Neoplasms drug therapy, Hodgkin Disease drug therapy, Immunoconjugates therapeutic use, Ki-1 Antigen metabolism, Retrospective Studies
- Abstract
The CD30-targeting Ab-drug conjugate brentuximab vedotin (SGN-35) was recently approved for the treatment of relapsed Hodgkin lymphoma and anaplastic large-cell lymphoma by the Food and Drug Administration. In the present study, we report the experience of the German Hodgkin Study Group with brentuximab vedotin as single agent in 45 patients with refractory or relapsed CD30(+) Hodgkin lymphoma who were treated either in a named patient program (n = 34) or in the context of a safety study associated with the registration program of this drug. In these very heavily pretreated patients, an objective response rate of 60%, including 22% complete remissions, could be documented. The median duration of response was 8 months. This retrospective analysis supports the previously reported excellent therapeutic efficacy of brentuximab vedotin in heavily pretreated CD30(+) malignancies.
- Published
- 2012
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