| Literature DB >> 33538152 |
Adam S Zayac1, Andrew M Evens2, Alexey Danilov3, Stephen D Smith4, Deepa Jagadeesh5, Lori A Leslie6, Catherine Wei2, Seo-Hyun Kim7, Seema Naik8, Suchitra Sundaram9, Nishitha Reddy10, Umar Farooq11, Vaishalee P Kenkre12, Narendranath Epperla13, Kristie A Blum14, Nadia Khan15, Daulath Singh16, Juan P Alderuccio17, Amandeep Godara18, Maryam Sarraf Yazdy19, Catherine Diefenbach20, Emma Rabinovich21, Gaurav Varma22, Reem Karmali23, Yusra Shao5, Asaad Trabolsi17, Madelyn Burkart23, Peter Martin22, Sarah Stettner21, Ayushi Chauhan19, Yun Kyong Choi20, Allandria Straker-Edwards15, Andreas Klein18, Michael C Churnetski14, Kirsten M Boughan24, Stephanie Berg16, Bradley M Haverkos25, Victor M Orellana-Noia26, Christopher D'Angelo12, David A Bond13, Seth M Maliske11, Ryan Vaca8, Gabriella Magarelli6, Amy Sperling4, Max J Gordon3, Kevin A David2, Malvi Savani27, Paolo Caimi24, Manali Kamdar25, Matthew A Lunning28, Neil Palmisiano29, Parameswaran Venugopal7, Craig A Portell26, Veronika Bachanova27, Tycel Phillips30, Izidore S Lossos17, Adam J Olszewski31.
Abstract
Central nervous system (CNS) involvement in Burkitt lymphoma (BL) poses a major therapeutic challenge, and the relative ability of contemporary regimens to treat CNS involvement remains uncertain. We described prognostic significance of CNS involvement and incidence of CNS recurrence/progression after contemporary immunochemotherapy using real-world clinicopathologic data on adults with BL diagnosed between 2009 and 2018 across 30 US institutions. We examined associations between baseline CNS involvement, patient characteristics, complete response (CR) rates, and survival. We also examined risk factors for CNS recurrence. Nineteen percent (120/641) of patients (age 18-88 years) had CNS involvement. It was independently associated with HIV infection, poor performance status, involvement of ≥2 extranodal sites, or bone marrow involvement. First-line regimen selection was unaffected by CNS involvement (P=0.93). Patients with CNS disease had significantly lower rates of CR (59% versus 77% without; P<0.001), worse 3-year progression-free survival (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.53, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.14-2.06, P=0.004) and overall survival (aHR, 1.62, 95%CI, 1.18-2.22, P=0.003). The 3-year cumulative incidence of CNS recurrence was 6% (95%CI, 4-8%). It was significantly lower among patients receiving other regimens (CODOX-M/IVAC, 4%, or hyperCVAD/MA, 3%) compared with DA-EPOCH-R (13%; adjusted sub-HR, 4.38, 95%CI, 2.16-8.87, P<0.001). Baseline CNS involvement in BL is relatively common and portends inferior prognosis independent of first-line regimen selection. In real-world practice, regimens with highly CNS-penetrant intravenous systemic agents were associated with a lower risk of CNS recurrence. This finding may be influenced by observed suboptimal adherence to the strict CNS staging and intrathecal therapy procedures incorporated in DA-EPOCH-R.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33538152 PMCID: PMC8252937 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2020.270876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941