Back to Search Start Over

Interim Positron Emission Tomography Response–Adapted Therapy in Advanced-Stage Hodgkin Lymphoma: Final Results of the Phase II Part of the HD0801 Study

Authors :
Caterina Stelitano
Alessandro Levis
Antonio Castagnoli
Gian Mauro Sacchetti
Daniela Gioia
Giovannino Ciccone
Vincenzo Pavone
Umberto Vitolo
Lisa Argnani
Ercole Brusamolino
Maurizio Bonfichi
Andrea Evangelista
Flavia Salvi
Roberto Freilone
Pier Luigi Zinzani
Gianluca Gaidano
Armando Santoro
Umberto Ricardi
Francesco Zaja
Giuseppe Rossi
Chiara Rusconi
Luigi Rigacci
Monica Tani
Eugenio Borsatti
Alessandro Pulsoni
Antonella Anastasia
Alessandro Broccoli
Patrizia Pregno
Zinzani, PIER LUIGI
Broccoli, Alessandro
Gioia, Daniela Maria
Castagnoli, Antonio
Ciccone, Giovannino
Evangelista, Andrea
Santoro, Armando
Ricardi, Umberto
Bonfichi, Maurizio
Brusamolino, Ercole
Rossi, Giuseppe
Anastasia, Antonella
Zaja, Francesco
Vitolo, Umberto
Pavone, Vincenzo
Pulsoni, Alessandro
Rigacci, Luigi
Gaidano, Gianluca
Stelitano, Caterina
Salvi, Flavia
Rusconi, Chiara
Tani, Monica
Freilone, Roberto
Pregno, Patrizia
Borsatti, Eugenio
Sacchetti, Gian Mauro
Argnani, Lisa
Levis, Alessandro
Zinzani, Pier Luigi
Source :
Journal of Clinical Oncology. 34:1376-1385
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2016.

Abstract

Purpose The clinical impact of positron emission tomography (PET) evaluation performed early during first-line therapy in patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma, in terms of providing a rationale to shift patients who respond poorly onto a more intensive regimen (PET response-adapted therapy), remains to be confirmed. Patients and Methods The phase II part of the multicenter HD0801 study involved 519 patients with advanced-stage de novo Hodgkin lymphoma who received an initial treatment with doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD) and who underwent an early ifosfamide-containing salvage treatment followed by stem-cell transplantation if they showed a positive PET evaluation after two cycles of chemotherapy (PET2). The primary end point was 2-year progression-free survival calculated for both PET2-negative patients (who completed a full six cycles of ABVD treatment) and PET2-positive patients. Overall survival was a secondary end point. Results In all, 103 of the 512 evaluable patients were PET2 positive. Among them, 81 received the scheduled salvage regimen with transplantation, 15 remained on ABVD (physician’s decision, mostly because of minimally positive PET2), five received an alternative treatment, and two were excluded because of diagnostic error. On intention-to-treat analysis, the 2-year progression-free survival was 76% for PET2-positive patients (regardless of the salvage treatment they received) and 81% for PET2-negative patients. Conclusion Patients with advanced-stage Hodgkin lymphoma for whom treatment was at high risk of failing appear to benefit from early treatment intensification with autologous transplantation, as indicated by the possibility of successful salvage treatment in more than 70% of PET2-positive patients through obtaining the same 2-year progression-free survival as the PET2-negative subgroup.

Details

ISSN :
15277755 and 0732183X
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dad5b2f0a8b2833740acc975be16f21b