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Results of a trial of PET-directed therapy for early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma

Results of a trial of PET-directed therapy for early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma
Results of a trial of PET-directed therapy for early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma

BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether patients with early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma and negative findings on positron-emission tomography (PET) after three cycles of chemotherapy with doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD) require radiotherapy.

METHODS: Patients with newly diagnosed stage IA or stage IIA Hodgkin's lymphoma received three cycles of ABVD and then underwent PET scanning. Patients with negative PET findings were randomly assigned to receive involved-field radiotherapy or no further treatment; patients with positive PET findings received a fourth cycle of ABVD and radiotherapy. This trial assessing the noninferiority of no further treatment was designed to exclude a difference in the 3-year progression-free survival rate of 7 or more percentage points from the assumed 95% progression-free survival rate in the radiotherapy group.

RESULTS: A total of 602 patients (53.3% male; median age, 34 years) were recruited, and 571 patients underwent PET scanning. The PET findings were negative in 426 of these patients (74.6%), 420 of whom were randomly assigned to a study group (209 to the radiotherapy group and 211 to no further therapy). At a median of 60 months of follow-up, there had been 8 instances of disease progression in the radiotherapy group, and 8 patients had died (3 with disease progression, 1 of whom died from Hodgkin's lymphoma); there had been 20 instances of disease progression in the group with no further therapy, and 4 patients had died (2 with disease progression and none from Hodgkin's lymphoma). In the radiotherapy group, 5 of the deaths occurred in patients who received no radiotherapy. The 3-year progression-free survival rate was 94.6% (95% confidence interval [CI], 91.5 to 97.7) in the radiotherapy group and 90.8% (95% CI, 86.9 to 94.8) in the group that received no further therapy, with an absolute risk difference of -3.8 percentage points (95% CI, -8.8 to 1.3).

CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study did not show the noninferiority of the strategy of no further treatment after chemotherapy with regard to progression-free survival. Nevertheless, patients in this study with early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma and negative PET findings after three cycles of ABVD had a very good prognosis either with or without consolidation radiotherapy. (Funded by Leukaemia and Lymphoma Research and others; RAPID ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00943423.).

Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Bleomycin, Combined Modality Therapy, Dacarbazine, Disease Progression, Doxorubicin, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hodgkin Disease, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Positron-Emission Tomography, Proportional Hazards Models, Recurrence, Survival Analysis, Vinblastine, Young Adult, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
1598-607
Radford, John
10af63a2-6f8d-4305-b150-0e76925a64aa
Illidge, Tim
50e3482f-405f-4534-8062-180bba1c1619
Counsell, Nicholas
bc2d8598-2106-4202-97e2-33ed7f18daa5
Hancock, Barry
0e7922c5-8e69-4a24-b1b1-a51e651c5756
Pettengell, Ruth
28ecc9df-584b-4a52-b6e6-c8e9228d421b
Johnson, Peter
3f6068ce-171e-4c2c-aca9-dc9b6a37413f
Wimperis, Jennie
60ecdfe5-4c22-4b5b-bfb0-682a28fc8d57
Culligan, Dominic
31e9f697-8f5a-4d95-a853-9bca6539922e
Popova, Bilyana
2d2389df-3117-48e1-8f76-85d0a5df3410
Smith, Paul
5971135c-98d0-47e0-9f40-94085befbd20
McMillan, Andrew
9510fdd5-e37d-4143-b284-e4cae7e4ff14
Brownell, Alison
bf1730ec-f58c-4359-ab7e-fa476f7d8314
Kruger, Anton
46199e60-adfa-4865-8c0b-99d074a8a5ee
Lister, Andrew
935476f3-96dc-42d4-aef1-fdfb9240f11e
Hoskin, Peter
33fbd91a-06f5-4bb8-8b4c-41810bd71ed4
O'Doherty, Michael
75cf340a-738b-4e88-9974-23f57017205c
Barrington, Sally
94bd6716-f325-4e8e-9db3-8c35bbfbca69
Radford, John
10af63a2-6f8d-4305-b150-0e76925a64aa
Illidge, Tim
50e3482f-405f-4534-8062-180bba1c1619
Counsell, Nicholas
bc2d8598-2106-4202-97e2-33ed7f18daa5
Hancock, Barry
0e7922c5-8e69-4a24-b1b1-a51e651c5756
Pettengell, Ruth
28ecc9df-584b-4a52-b6e6-c8e9228d421b
Johnson, Peter
3f6068ce-171e-4c2c-aca9-dc9b6a37413f
Wimperis, Jennie
60ecdfe5-4c22-4b5b-bfb0-682a28fc8d57
Culligan, Dominic
31e9f697-8f5a-4d95-a853-9bca6539922e
Popova, Bilyana
2d2389df-3117-48e1-8f76-85d0a5df3410
Smith, Paul
5971135c-98d0-47e0-9f40-94085befbd20
McMillan, Andrew
9510fdd5-e37d-4143-b284-e4cae7e4ff14
Brownell, Alison
bf1730ec-f58c-4359-ab7e-fa476f7d8314
Kruger, Anton
46199e60-adfa-4865-8c0b-99d074a8a5ee
Lister, Andrew
935476f3-96dc-42d4-aef1-fdfb9240f11e
Hoskin, Peter
33fbd91a-06f5-4bb8-8b4c-41810bd71ed4
O'Doherty, Michael
75cf340a-738b-4e88-9974-23f57017205c
Barrington, Sally
94bd6716-f325-4e8e-9db3-8c35bbfbca69

Radford, John, Illidge, Tim, Counsell, Nicholas, Hancock, Barry, Pettengell, Ruth, Johnson, Peter, Wimperis, Jennie, Culligan, Dominic, Popova, Bilyana, Smith, Paul, McMillan, Andrew, Brownell, Alison, Kruger, Anton, Lister, Andrew, Hoskin, Peter, O'Doherty, Michael and Barrington, Sally (2015) Results of a trial of PET-directed therapy for early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma. New England Journal of Medicine, 372 (17), 1598-607. (doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1408648).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether patients with early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma and negative findings on positron-emission tomography (PET) after three cycles of chemotherapy with doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD) require radiotherapy.

METHODS: Patients with newly diagnosed stage IA or stage IIA Hodgkin's lymphoma received three cycles of ABVD and then underwent PET scanning. Patients with negative PET findings were randomly assigned to receive involved-field radiotherapy or no further treatment; patients with positive PET findings received a fourth cycle of ABVD and radiotherapy. This trial assessing the noninferiority of no further treatment was designed to exclude a difference in the 3-year progression-free survival rate of 7 or more percentage points from the assumed 95% progression-free survival rate in the radiotherapy group.

RESULTS: A total of 602 patients (53.3% male; median age, 34 years) were recruited, and 571 patients underwent PET scanning. The PET findings were negative in 426 of these patients (74.6%), 420 of whom were randomly assigned to a study group (209 to the radiotherapy group and 211 to no further therapy). At a median of 60 months of follow-up, there had been 8 instances of disease progression in the radiotherapy group, and 8 patients had died (3 with disease progression, 1 of whom died from Hodgkin's lymphoma); there had been 20 instances of disease progression in the group with no further therapy, and 4 patients had died (2 with disease progression and none from Hodgkin's lymphoma). In the radiotherapy group, 5 of the deaths occurred in patients who received no radiotherapy. The 3-year progression-free survival rate was 94.6% (95% confidence interval [CI], 91.5 to 97.7) in the radiotherapy group and 90.8% (95% CI, 86.9 to 94.8) in the group that received no further therapy, with an absolute risk difference of -3.8 percentage points (95% CI, -8.8 to 1.3).

CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study did not show the noninferiority of the strategy of no further treatment after chemotherapy with regard to progression-free survival. Nevertheless, patients in this study with early-stage Hodgkin's lymphoma and negative PET findings after three cycles of ABVD had a very good prognosis either with or without consolidation radiotherapy. (Funded by Leukaemia and Lymphoma Research and others; RAPID ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00943423.).

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More information

Published date: 23 April 2015
Keywords: Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Bleomycin, Combined Modality Therapy, Dacarbazine, Disease Progression, Doxorubicin, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Hodgkin Disease, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Positron-Emission Tomography, Proportional Hazards Models, Recurrence, Survival Analysis, Vinblastine, Young Adult, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Organisations: Cancer Sciences, Graphics, Fine Art & Media

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 408684
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/408684
PURE UUID: c28acb69-ae8c-4035-b04e-45dee0c93329
ORCID for Peter Johnson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2306-4974

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Date deposited: 26 May 2017 04:02
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:59

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Contributors

Author: John Radford
Author: Tim Illidge
Author: Nicholas Counsell
Author: Barry Hancock
Author: Ruth Pettengell
Author: Peter Johnson ORCID iD
Author: Jennie Wimperis
Author: Dominic Culligan
Author: Bilyana Popova
Author: Paul Smith
Author: Andrew McMillan
Author: Alison Brownell
Author: Anton Kruger
Author: Andrew Lister
Author: Peter Hoskin
Author: Michael O'Doherty
Author: Sally Barrington

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