Favorable outcome of patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin's disease treated with high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell rescue at the time of maximal response to conventional salvage therapy (Dex-BEAM).

Journal: Annals Of Oncology : Official Journal Of The European Society For Medical Oncology
Published:
Abstract

Background: Disease status before high-dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) or peripheral blood stem cell transplantation (PBSCT) is an important predictor of transplantation-related toxicity and event-free survival (EFS) for patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin's disease (HD). We performed a phase II study in patients with relapsed or refractory HD to evaluate the feasibility of four cycles of Dexa-BEAM followed by high-dose chemotherapy with ABMT or PBSCT.

Methods: Twenty-six patients (median age 30, range 20-40 years) were treated with 2-4 courses of dexamethasone, carmustine, etoposide, cytarabine and melphalan (Dexa-BEAM) as salvage chemotherapy in order to attain maximal response. Patients achieving complete response (CR) or partial response (PR) received high-dose chemotherapy with ABMT or PBSCT. The conditioning regimen used was CVB (cyclophosphamide, carmustine, etoposide).

Results: Eighteen patients responded to Dexa-BEAM, resulting in a response rate of 69%. At the time of transplant 16 patients were in CR two patients in PR. At present 14 patients transplanted are in continuous CR (median follow-up 40 months, range 14-60 months). Two patients with PR after four courses of Dexa-BEAM relapsed and died three months posttransplantation. Two patients with CR at the time of transplant relapsed after nine and 13 months respectively. Eight patients had rapid progressive disease after 2-4 cycles of Dexa-BEAM. One patient with progressive disease died in gram-negative sepsis after four cycles of Dexa-BEAM. There was no transplantation-related death.

Conclusions: These data suggests the use of high-dose chemotherapy followed by stem cell transplantation at the time of maximal response.

Authors
A Josting, I Kàtay, U Rueffer, S Winter, H Tesch, A Engert, V Diehl, P Wickramanayake