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Impact of Treatment Beyond Progression with Immune Checkpoint Blockade in Hodgkin Lymphoma

Authors :
James Godfrey
Pallawi Torka
Sonali M. Smith
Suman Paul
Madelyn Burkart
Raoul Santiago
Robert T. Chen
Ranjana H. Advani
Frederick Lansigan
Alex F. Herrera
Catherine Wei
Julio C. Chavez
Sarit Assouline
Reem Karmali
Kevin A. David
N Nina Wagner-Johnston
Catherine Diefenbach
Jakub Svoboda
Steven M. Bair
Sarah Tomassetti
Yang Liu
Daniel O. Persky
Lukas Emery
Sunita Nathan
Reid W. Merryman
Nicole A. Carreau
Muhammad Hamid
Andrea B. Troxel
Philippe Armand
Stefan K. Barta
Radhakrishnan Ramchandren
Jonathan B. Cohen
Michael A. Spinner
Source :
Oncologist
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020.

Abstract

Atypical response patterns following immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) led to the concept of continuation of treatment beyond progression (TBP); however, the longitudinal benefit of this approach is unclear. We therefore performed a retrospective analysis of 64 patients treated with ICB; 20 who received TBP (TBP cohort) and 44 who stopped ICB at initial progression (non-TBP cohort). The TBP cohort received ICB for a median of 4.7 months after initial progression and delayed subsequent treatment by a median of 6.6 months. Despite receiving more prior lines of therapy, the TBP cohort achieved longer progression-free survival with post-ICB treatment (median, 17.5 months vs. 6.1 months, p = .035) and longer time-to-subsequent treatment failure, defined as time from initial ICB progression to failure of subsequent treatment (median, 34.6 months vs. 9.9 months, p = .003). With the limitations of a retrospective study, these results support the clinical benefit of TBP with ICB for selected patients.

Details

ISSN :
1549490X and 10837159
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Oncologist
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d899998d7650200ca27390b065e0b776
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1634/theoncologist.2020-0040