Abstract

Introduction: Current combined intensive chemotherapy and radiation regimens yield excellent survival rates in advanced classic Hodgkin’s lymphoma (cHL). However, acute toxicity in elderly, comorbid patients can be challenging and long-term survival in refractory patients remains poor. Patients and Methods: We report on six patients with r/r HL, three patients with long-term follow-up, three newly treated, after biomodulatory therapy. All patients received MEPED (treosulfan 250 mg p.o. daily, everolimus 15 mg p.o. daily to achieve serum trough levels of 15 ng/ml, pioglitazone 45 mg p.o. daily, etoricoxib 60 mg p.o. daily and dexamethasone 0.5 mg p.o. daily). Patients had either received every at that time approved systemic treatment or were ineligible for standard treatment, including immune checkpoint inhibition (ICPi) due to prior demyelinating autoimmune polyneuropathy, myasthenia gravis and previous allogeneic hematopoietic-stem-cell transplant (alloHSCT). Medication was administered continuously from day 1. One patient with relapse after alloHSCT received trofosfamide 50 mg daily instead of treosulfan to avoid risk of increased myelotoxicity. The patients were treated in individual healing attempts outside a clinical trial after institutional review board approval. 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography scan (FDG-PET/CT) was performed to monitor treatment and follow-up. Results: In the three newly treated patients, CT scans showed partial remissions after 2–5 months on MEPED treatment. Two patients had achieved PET Deauville score 2 and 3, while the third remained positive at Deauville score 5. One patient achieving PR became eligible for alloHSCT, while the other two patients continued treatment with MEPED. All patients eventually achieved continuous complete remission (cCR), one after consecutive alloHSCT, one after discontinuing MEPED consolidation for >1 year and one on on-going MEPED consolidation, respectively. Only one patient experienced Grade 3 toxicity (bacterial pneumonia) requiring temporary discontinuation of MEPED for 10 days. All three previously published patients received allo HSCT for consolidation and have achieved cCR. Conclusions: MEPED is well tolerated with low toxicity and highly efficacious in relapsed/refractory cHL, including severely comorbid patients. Due to its immunomodulatory components, MEPED might also have a synergistic potential when combined with ICPi but requires further evaluation within a clinical trial.

Highlights

  • Current combined intensive chemotherapy and radiation regimens yield excellent survival rates in advanced classic Hodgkin’s lymphoma

  • Classical Hodgkin’s lymphoma usually occurs in adolescents and younger adults with the age peak being around 32 years

  • In the three newly treated patients, we show a continuous complete remission, achieved without any dose-intensive consolidation treatment in an elderly, severely comorbid patient, a patient with relapsed Classical Hodgkin’s lymphoma (cHL) after allogenic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and a third patient who received MEPED (Table 1) as a salvage therapy to become eligible for allo-HSCT

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Summary

Introduction

Current combined intensive chemotherapy and radiation regimens yield excellent survival rates in advanced classic Hodgkin’s lymphoma (cHL). Classical Hodgkin’s lymphoma (cHL) usually occurs in adolescents and younger adults with the age peak being around 32 years. An annual incidence of 2–3/100,000 per year makes it the most frequent lymphoma in young adults in the Western World (Mottok and Steidl, 2018). In people aged >60 years there is an increase in incidence, making this disease a disease of the elderly, especially in light of a rising life expectancy in the Western World. Modern anthracycline-based treatment regimens with or without radiation currently cure beyond 80% of patients, especially in low-risk situations and in early stages of disease. Patients with high risk/advanced stages on the other hand are only cured in 70% of cases (Rathore und Kadin 2010; Dalal et al, 2020). While chemotherapy can be used in patients >60 years of age with good treatment results, some of the elderly patients do not tolerate ABVD, the least aggressive and commonly used chemotherapeutic treatment approach for this age group

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