| Literature DB >> 31069789 |
Alexey Maschan1, Natalia Myakova1, Olga Aleinikova2, Yulia Abugova1, Natalia Ponomareva3, Margarita Belogurova4, Larisa Fechina5, Alina Fedorova2, Natalia Grigor'eva6, Vladimir Lebedev7, Olga Nikonova8, Anastassia Shamardina9, Guzel Sharapova10, Nadezhda Smirnova1, Anastassia Rudneva1, Egor Volchkov1, Elena Samochatova1.
Abstract
The value of adding rituximab to chemotherapy in children with aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (B-NHL) is still insufficiently studied. We enrolled 231 patients [mean age 9 years old (range 2-17); male:female ratio 3·4:1] with Burkitt (BL, 179 patients, 76·7%), diffuse large B-cell (32 patients, 14%), primary mediastinal B-cell (14 patients, 6%), and other (6 patients, 2·6%) B-cell lymphomas in a prospective study of immuno-chemotherapy. Stages were I-II in 32% and III-IV in 68% of the patients. Four doses of 375 mg/m2 rituximab were added to the Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster-NHL-90-like chemotherapy, with methotrexate being reduced or omitted in the first 2 induction blocks. The complete remission rate was 100% in limited-stage and 91·4% in advanced-stage patients. Five advanced-stage patients (2·2%) died in induction and 1 patient with stage 2 B-NHL died in remission; 11 patients in the high-risk group progressed on therapy (3 non-BL are alive after salvage) and 5 relapsed. Sixteen patients (9·7%) with advanced stage disease proceeded to transplant. With a median follow-up of 46 months, 98·5 ± 1% of patients with limited disease and 88·1 ± 2% (88·1% in Risk Group 3; 82·6% in Risk Group 4) in advanced stages are alive. This study confirmed that combined immunochemotherapy for B-lymphomas is highly effective in children, despite reducing the intensity of the induction blocks.Entities:
Keywords: chemotherapy; children; mature B-cell lymphoma; rituximab
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31069789 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.15944
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998