High-dose therapy with autologous transplantation for Hodgkin's disease: the Bologna experience.

Journal: Haematologica
Published:
Abstract

Objective: In this work we examine the characteristics and outcome of patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD) treated with high-dose therapy (HDT) and autologous transplantation at our Institute between 1982 to 2000.

Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed examining patients' characteristics, prior chemotherapy regimens, pre-transplant disease status, HDT regimen, source of stem cells, time for hematopoietic recovery, complications of transplantation, response rates, overall survival (OS) and relapse-free survival (RFS).

Results: Ninety-seven patients with HD were treated and had estimated 10-year OS and RFS rates of 32% and 60%, respectively. Disease status (sensitive vs. refractory) before HDT was the most powerful predictive parameter for OS and RFS in both univariate and multivariate analyses. The rate of transplant-related mortality in the whole cohort was only 1% whereas the rate of second malignancies was 3%.

Conclusions: Our results confirm that HDT with autologous transplantation is associated with a durable RFS in a remarkable proportion of HD patients and that the procedure has a very low global early and late toxicity.

Authors
Pier Zinzani, Monica Tani, Annalisa Gabriele, Filippo Gherlinzoni, Antonio De Vivo, Paolo Ricci, Giuseppe Bandini, Roberto Lemoli, Maria Motta, Simonetta Rizzi, Valeria Giudice, Maurizio Zompatori, Vittorio Stefoni, Lapo Alinari, Gerardo Musuraca, Simona Bassi, Roberto Conte, Stefano Pileri, Sante Tura, Michele Baccarani