Abstract

The first line treatment for primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMLBCL) still remains a matter of debate even if the literature confirms that an anthracycline-containing regimen should be the main choice. The European experience shows the superiority of “third-generation” dose-dense regimen like MACOP-B (methotrexate, doxurubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, bleomycin, prednisone) or VACOP-B (same as MACOP-B, with etoposide instead of methotrexate) over CHOP (cyclophosphamide, adriamycin, vincristine and prednisone) or CHOP-like regimen. The addition of rituximab to third-generation regimen does not seem to cause any advantages in terms of overall survival (OS) and progression free-survival (PFS), while external radiotherapy (RT) has shown a good efficacy as a consolidation strategy at the end of induction chemotherapy, especially in converting partial responses (PR) into complete responses (CR).Between October 1989 and April 2010, 98 (58 females and 40 males) previously untreated PMLBCL patients were diagnosed and subsequently treated at our Institution. All patients were treated with MACOP-B regimen, concurrent rituximab was administered in 57 patients (58.2%) and 67 patients (68.4%) received mediastinal RT. Among 57 patients who received rituximab, 37 (64.9%) underwent RT whereas, among 41 who did not receive rituximab, RT was delivered in 30 (group 4, 73.2%) patients. 11 patients (group 1, 11.2%) received chemotherapy alone and 37 (group 3, 37.8%) received besides immunotherapy and RT (Table 1). All patients were assessed at the diagnosis and after the treatment with computed tomography and positron emission tomography (after 2001) scan.Main aims of our study were the effectiveness of the regimen measured as overall response rate (ORR) and patients survival. Sixty-one (62.2%) out of 98 patients achieved a CR and 27 (27.6%) were in PR after 12 cycles of MACOP-B regimen (with or without rituximab). Twenty-one patients in PR after (immuno)chemotherapy converted the response into CR with mediastinal RT. At the end of the scheduled treatment, 82 patients (83.7%) achieved a CR and 6 a PR (6.1%), yielding an ORR of 89.8%. At a median follow-up of 5.6 years, 9 patients relapsed within the first 2 years of treatment. During the follow-up 15 patients died, of whom 13 as a consequence of disease relapse or progression. The projected OS at 17 years is 72% with a PFS and a disease free survival (DSF) of 86.8% and 88.4% respectively (Figure 1 A-C). The subgroup analysis shows a statistically significant difference in term of OS (p=0.0003) but not in term of PSF and DFS among the four groups of treatment (Figure 1 D-F). All the patients receiving consolidation RT obtained a CR without differences between subgroup 3 and 4. RT seems to have a small consolidative potential in patients who obtained CR after chemo-immunotherapy alone: there are no differences in term of DFS between subgroup 2 and 3. No statistically significant differences in terms of OS, PFS and DSF occurred among patients received rituximab or not, regardless of a subsequent RT. Our monocentric experience spans a period of 20 years and indicates that a third-generation regimen like MACOP-B is feasible and could be a standard of first line treatment for PMLBCL. In agreement with the literature, adding rituximab doesn’t improve the outcome. Mediastinal RT, delivered as a consolidative strategy, impacts on global survival and on CR rates. In particular, RT after third-generation regimen remains a good strategy to convert PR into CR, but it may be avoided in patients obtaining CR after (immuno)chemotherapy.Table 1GroupMACOP-BRituximabRadiotherapyN (%)1YesNoNo11 (11.2%)2YesYesNo20 (20.4%)3YesYesYes37 (37.8%)4YesNoYes30 (30.6%)TOTALN (%)98 (100%)57 (58.2%)67 (68.4%)98 (100%) [Display omitted] DisclosuresNo relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the most suitable first-line approach and the best combination treatment for primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMLBCL) as they have been matter of debate for at least two decades

  • Broccoli et al BMC Cancer (2017) 17:276 with autotransplantation for patients in first remission [3]; 2) the value of a rituximab-based immunotherapy in this subset of patients, on the basis of the results obtained in randomized studies involving diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients [4, 5]; 3) the role of external beam radiotherapy (RT), as an adjuvant strategy through which consolidate a response to chemotherapy and produce an eradication of the disease [6]

  • In terms of first-line chemotherapy, if on the one hand the CHOP regimen has been mainly adopted by American centers, the European experience has carried out the evidence that MACOP-B or VACOP-B, both weekly-based “third-generation” dose-dense regimens, may be superior to CHOP [7,8,9]

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of this study is to investigate the most suitable first-line approach and the best combination treatment for primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMLBCL) as they have been matter of debate for at least two decades. The 1994 Revised European American Lymphoma (REAL) Classification firstly recognizes primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMLBCL) as a subtype of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), it has been regarded as a specific clinical and biological entity since the 2001 World Health Organization classification [1, 2]. As a consequence of the application of dosedense regimens, remission rates and survival functions have appeared to be at least as good as – or probably even better than – those observed for DLBCL patients, retracting the initial impression that PMLBCL was per se a prognostically unfavorable subset of DLBCL This conclusion is drawn from existing reports, no randomized clinical trial have been carried on so far. That an anthracycline-containing regimen should be regarded as the first approach to PMBCL [10]

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