| Literature DB >> 34570876 |
Victor Manuel Orellana-Noia1,2, Daniel R Reed2,3, Ashley Alesia McCook4, Jeremy Michael Sen5, Christian M Barlow2, Mary-Kate Malecek6, Marcus Watkins6, Brad S Kahl6, Michael A Spinner7, Ranjana Advani7, Timothy J Voorhees8,9, Anson Snow8, Natalie Sophia Grover8, Amy Ayers1, Jason Romancik1, Yuxin Liu10, Scott F Huntington10, Julio C Chavez11, Hayder Saeed11, Aleksandr Lazaryan11, Vikram Raghunathan12,13, Stephen E Spurgeon12, Thomas A Ollila14, Christopher Del Prete14, Adam Olszewski14, Emily C Ayers2,15, Daniel J Landsburg15, Benjamin Echalier16, Jun Lee16, Manali Kamdar16, Paolo F Caimi17,18, Timothy Fu19, Jieqi Liu19, Kevin A David19, Hanan Alharthy20, Jennie Law21, Reem Karmali22, Harsh Shah23, Deborah M Stephens23, Ajay Major24, Alexandra E Rojek24, Sonali M Smith24, Amulya Yellala25, Avyakta Kallam25, Shazi Nakhoda26, Nadia Khan26, Mohammad Ahsan Sohail18, Brian T Hill18, Odeth Barrett-Campbell27, Frederick Lansigan27, Jeffrey Switchenko4, Jonathon Cohen1, Craig A Portell2.
Abstract
Prophylaxis is commonly used to prevent central nervous sy stem (CNS) relapse in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), with no clear standard of care. We retrospectively evaluated 1162 adult patients across 21 US academic centers with DLBCL or similar histologies who received single-route CNS prophylaxis as part of frontline therapy between 2013 and 2019. Prophylaxis was administered intrathecally(IT) in 894 (77%) and using systemic high-dose methotrexate (HD-MTX) in 236 (20%); 32 patients (3%) switched route due to toxicity and were assessed separately. By CNS-International Prognostic Index (IPI), 18% were considered low-risk, 51% moderate, and 30% high. Double-hit lymphoma (DHL) was confirmed in 243 of 866 evaluable patients (21%). Sixty-four patients (5.7%) had CNS relapse after median 7.1 months from diagnosis, including 15 of 64 (23%) within the first 6 months. There was no significant difference in CNS relapse between IT and HD-MTX recipients (5.4% vs 6.8%, P = .4), including after propensity score matching to account for differences between respective recipient groups. Weighting by CNS-IPI, expected vs observed CNS relapse rates were nearly identical (5.8% vs 5.7%). Testicular involvement was associated with high risk of CNS relapse (11.3%) despite most having lower CNS-IPI scores. DHL did not significantly predict for CNS relapse after single-route prophylaxis, including with adjustment for treatment regimen and other factors. This large study of CNS prophylaxis recipients with DLBCL found no significant difference in CNS relapse rates between routes of administration. Relapse rates among high-risk subgroups remain elevated, and reconsideration of prophylaxis strategies in DLBCL is of critical need.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34570876 PMCID: PMC8777199 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2021012888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476