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Impact Of Dose-Density Delays In Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) Treated With R-CHOP21 Or R-CHOP14

Authors :
Antonio Gutierrez
Antonia M Bautista-Gili
Leyre Bento
Ines Herraez
Lucia Garcia
Jordi Martinez-serra
Antonia Sampol
Rafael Ramos
Jordi Gines
Carmen Ballester
Albert Perez
Paloma Lopez-Perezagua
Jaime Daumal
Jose Rodriguez
Juan Besalduch
Source :
Blood. 122:4374-4374
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2013.

Abstract

Background DLBCL is the more common non Hodgkin lymphoma. This is an aggressive lymphoma that is treated with a standard chemotherapy regimen: R-CHOP. In the last years attempts have been done to improve the outcome both increasing dose-density (DD) (CHOP14) or intensity (CHOEP, ACVBP, frontline high dose therapy followed by autologous stem cell transplantation). Although phase 2 studies of these interventions suggested promising results, when randomized phase 3 trials have been conducted, there is no demonstrated benefit of these higher toxicity approaches when compared with R-CHOP alone. Only addition of rituximab to CHOP has proved a survival advantage. This has allowed setting R-CHOP administered every 21 days (R-CHOP21) as the standard treatment for DLBCL patients. The purpose of this study is further analyzing the prognostic impact of DD delays in two cohorts of DLBCL patients treated with R-CHOP21 or R-CHOP14. Methods All patients diagnosed between 1999 and 2013 of DLBCL in University Hospital Son Espases were identified from Pathology Department registry. Only patients treated with R-CHOP21 or R-CHOP14 +/- radiotherapy were included. Patients receiving other chemotherapy regimens or consolidations were excluded. DD delay was calculated as follows: DD delay = real number of days from first to last cycle of chemotherapy / expected number of days from first to last cycle in every regimen. Results A total of 166 cases were identified: considering inclusion and exclusion criteria finally 111 cases were selected (71 in the R-CHOP21 cohort and 40 in the R-CHOP14 cohort). Respectively for R-CHOP21 and R-CHOP14, 61% and 37% were older than 60 years (p=0.02), 26% and 35% had an ECOG PS higher than 1 (p=0.3), 49% and 62% had an Ann Arbor stage III-IV (p=0.09), 44% and 51% an a-IPI higher than 1 (p=0.47). Median DD delay was 2% versus 14% for R-CHOP21 and R-CHOP14 groups (p Conclusions Overall in our series there were no differences in terms of response or survival between patients treated with R-CHOP21 or R-CHOP14. Significantly higher rates of DD delay were observed in the R-CHOP14 group. However, the impact of DD delays on response and survival was only observed in the R-CHOP21 group but not in patients treated with R-CHOP14. We can conclude that R-CHOP21 and R-CHOP14 are equivalent regimens in terms of response and survival only if DD delays are avoided. For patients receiving R-CHOP21 we recommend using clinical and support measures in order to avoid DD delays. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2d410417dd820c29c8193ac3cfe7ae75