Abstract
Objective: The effectiveness and prognosis of a BTki-containing regimen in first-line treatment and relapsed/refractory patients were assessed in this study. Methods: There were 26 patients with DLBCL. BTKi was administered to patients with newly diagnosed, relapsed, refractory primary PCNSL and high-risk/refractory systemic DLBCL, and the effectiveness and PFS were evaluated. Results: The BTKi therapy study included 26 participants (16 PCNSL, 10 DLBCL). Among PCNSL,3 patients who had achieved PR following MTX-based first-line chemotherapy were given BTKi as a monotherapy for disease recurrence. BTKi patients lived for an average of 5 (1–8) months before dying from disease progression, which is 5 months longer than the typical patient survival period following chemotherapy recurrence. After three rounds of MTX-based chemotherapy, none of the six patients with refractory PCNSL achieved PR. After BTKi was utilized as second-line therapy, the average survival time was increased by 12 (2–21) months. Three patients received early treatment, while the remaining three received BTKi after the third round of medicine. Early patients had a longer average survival period than late ones (11 months vs. 10 months). The remaining seven high-risk patients received first-line chemotherapy and BTKi treatment. The median follow-up duration was 5 months, the ORR was 100%, and neither the median PFS nor the median OS were achieved. The mean maintenance time was 8 months. Among 10 patients with DLBCL, 8 of them are high risk group, and 2 had refractory disease. When the disease of two SCNSL patients advanced, BTKi was used in conjunction with chemotherapy as a salvage treatment, and BTKi was kept up for an average of 5 months. The efficacy was evaluated as PD. The ORR was 80% (4/5, 1 case was not assessed) and CR rate was 100% in high risk group. Four of these CNS-IPI high-risk DLBCL patients had adrenal involvement and a high IPI score, with BTKi maintained for an average of 6 months, two of them achieved CR, one of PD, and 1 case was not evaluated. The efficacy evaluation was CR in the other two high-risk CD5+ patients, whose BTKi was sustained for 12 months and 6 months, respectively. After receiving standard chemotherapy, the remaining 2 refractory patients kept getting worse. One patient with hepatitis B cirrhosis had elevated AST and ALT levels after one course of medication, so BTKi was stopped. The other patient was kept on BTKi alone for 4 months, but the efficacy was still PD. Patients with PCNSL have a dismal prognosis, in particular, the average survival time for R/R patients is less than two months. The research was funded by: National Natural Science Foundation of China (8226010026), Natural Science Foundation of Gansu Province (22JR11RA053) Keywords: aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma, molecular targeted therapies, combination therapies No conflicts of interests pertinent to the abstract.
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