| Literature DB >> 33641019 |
James Russell1, Angela Collins2, Alexis Fowler3, Mamatha Karanth4, Chandan Saha1, Suzanne Docherty2, Joseph Padayatty1, Kyaw Maw5, Isabel Lentell4, Lisa Cooke6, Andrew Hodson7, Nimish Shah2, Shalal Sadullah5, Nicholas Grigoropoulos1, Wendi Qian1, Amy A Kirkwood8, Benjamin J Uttenthal1, Peter Johnson9, George A Follows10.
Abstract
Treatment with ABVD (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine) or escalated(e)-BEACOPP (bleomycin, etoposide, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisolone) remains the international standard of care for advanced-stage classical Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). We performed a retrospective, multicentre analysis of 221 non-trial ("real-world") patients, aged 16-59 years, diagnosed with advanced-stage HL in the Anglia Cancer Network between 2004 and 2014, treated with ABVD or eBEACOPP, and compared outcomes with 1088 patients in the Response-Adjusted Therapy for Advanced Hodgkin Lymphoma (RATHL) trial, aged 18-59 years, with median follow-up of 87.0 and 69.5 months, respectively. Real-world ABVD patients (n=177) had highly similar 5-year progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) compared with RATHL (PFS 79.2% vs 81.4%; OS 92.9% vs 95.2%), despite interim positron-emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT)-guided dose-escalation being predominantly restricted to trial patients. Real-world eBEACOPP patients (n=44) had superior PFS (95.5%) compared with real-world ABVD (HR 0.20, p=0.027) and RATHL (HR 0.21, p=0.015), and superior OS for higher-risk (international prognostic score ≥3 [IPS 3+]) patients compared with real-world IPS 3+ ABVD (100% vs 84.5%, p=0.045), but not IPS 3+ RATHL patients. Our data support a PFS, but not OS, advantage for patients with advanced-stage HL treated with eBEACOPP compared with ABVD and suggest higher-risk patients may benefit disproportionately from more intensive therapy. However, increased access to effective salvage therapies might minimise any OS benefit from reduced relapse rates after frontline therapy.Entities:
Keywords: ABVD; Advanced stage; Escalated BEACOPP; Hodgkin lymphoma; Real-world data; Response-adapted therapy
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33641019 PMCID: PMC7960595 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-021-04460-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673