4.6 Article

R-CHOP versus dose-adjusted R-EPOCH in frontline management of primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma: a multi-centre analysis

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY
Volume 180, Issue 4, Pages 534-544

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bjh.15051

Keywords

PMBCL; chemotherapy; non-Hodgkin lymphoma

Categories

Funding

  1. Takeda
  2. Otsuka
  3. Spectrum
  4. Merck
  5. Astellas
  6. BMS
  7. Novartis
  8. curis
  9. Celgene
  10. Seattle Genetics
  11. Pharmacyclics

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Primary mediastinal (thymic) large B-cell lymphoma (PMBCL) is an uncommon subtype of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) that presents with a mediastinal mass and has unique clinicopathological features. Historically, patients with PMBCL were treated with R-CHOP (rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone) chemotherapy +/- involved field radiation. Since a phase II trial, published in April 2013, demonstrated excellent results using dose-adjusted (DA) R-EPOCH (rituximab, etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin), this treatment has gained popularity. We performed a retrospective, multicentre analysis of patients aged >= 18 years with PMBCL since January 2011. Patients were stratified by frontline regimen, R-CHOP versus DA-R-EPOCH. 132 patients were identified from 11 contributing centres (56 R-CHOP and 76 DA-REPOCH). The primary outcome was overall survival. Secondary outcomes included progression-free survival, complete response (CR) rate, and rates of treatment-related complications. Demographic characteristics were similar in both groups. DA-R-EPOCH use increased after April 2013 (79% vs. 45%, P < 0.001), and there was less radiation use after DA-R-EPOCH (13% vs. 59%, P < 0.001). While CR rates were higher with DA-R-EPOCH (84% vs. 70%, P = 0.046), these patients were more likely to experience treatment-related toxicities. At 2 years, 89% of R-CHOP patients and 91% of DA-R-EPOCH patients were alive. To our knowledge, this represents the largest series comparing outcomes of R-CHOP to DA-R-EPOCH for PMBCL.

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