Literature DB >> 7541661

High-dose cyclophosphamide, carmustine (BCNU), and etoposide (VP16-213) with or without cisplatin (CBV +/- P) and autologous transplantation for patients with Hodgkin's disease who fail to enter a complete remission after combination chemotherapy.

D E Reece1, M J Barnett, J D Shepherd, D E Hogge, R J Klasa, S H Nantel, H J Sutherland, H G Klingemann, R N Fairey, N J Voss.   

Abstract

Patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD) who fail to enter a complete remission after an initial course of combination chemotherapy are usually considered to have an induction failure (IF); this subset of patients has an extremely poor outcome with further conventional therapy. Since 1985, we have entered 30 IF patients into protocols using conditioning with high-dose cyclophosphamide, carmustine (BCNU), and etoposide (VP16-213) with or without cisplatin (CBV +/- P) followed by autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) with bone marrow (19 patients), peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs; 8 patients), or both (3 patients). All except 2 patients had previously received chemotherapy regimens for HD that contained at least 7 drugs, and 9 had received prior radiotherapy (RT). After documentation of IF, the majority of patients received some cytoreductive therapy as specified by protocol (local RT in 9, two cycles of conventional chemotherapy in 2, both modalities in 2, or high-dose cyclophosphamide to enhance PBSC collection in 11) before CBV +/- P. Five treatment-related deaths occurred, all before day 150 posttransplant. Eleven patients have had progressive HD at a median of 6 months (range, 0.1 to 45 months) after ASCT. The actuarial progression-free survival (PFS) at a median follow-up of 3.6 years (range, 0.2 to 8.2 years) is 42% (95% confidence intervals, 21% to 61%). The statistical analysis identified only prior clinical bleomycin lung toxicity as an adverse risk factor for PFS, mainly because of the increased nonrelapse mortality seen in these patients. CBV +/- P and ASCT can produce durable remission in a substantial proportion of IF HD patients who otherwise have a poor survival, and we believed ASCT approaches represent the best therapy currently available for these patients. Additional measures are needed to reduce the primary problem of disease progression despite high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7541661

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   22.113


  6 in total

1.  Treatment of refractory Hodgkin's disease with modified Stanford V program.

Authors:  A Avilés; N Neri; E L García; A Talavera; J C Díaz-Maqueo
Journal:  Med Oncol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 3.064

Review 2.  [Transplantation of hematopoietic stem cells. II: Indications for transplantation of hematopoietic stem cells after myeloablative therapy].

Authors:  H Link; H J Kolb; W Ebell; D K Hossfeld; A Zander; D Niethammer; H Wandt; H Grosse-Wilde; U W Schaefer
Journal:  Med Klin (Munich)       Date:  1997-09-15

Review 3.  [Modern pharmacotherapy of Hodgkin disease].

Authors:  A Josting; K Behringer; A Engert; V Diehl
Journal:  Internist (Berl)       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 0.743

Review 4.  Relapsed and refractory Hodgkin lymphoma: transplantation strategies and novel therapeutic options.

Authors:  Kevin A David; Lauren Mauro; Andrew M Evens
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Oncol       Date:  2007-10

5.  Autologous stem cell transplantation as frontline strategy for peripheral T-cell lymphoma: A single-centre experience.

Authors:  Xiao Han; Wei Zhang; Daobin Zhou; Jing Ruan; Minghui Duan; Tienan Zhu; Jian Li; Huacong Cai; Xinxin Cao; Mingqi Ouyang
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2017-01-12       Impact factor: 1.671

Review 6.  The Role of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors in Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma.

Authors:  Nicholas Meti; Khashayar Esfahani; Nathalie A Johnson
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2018-06-15       Impact factor: 6.639

  6 in total

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