Randomized comparison of gemcitabine, dexamethasone, and cisplatin versus dexamethasone, cytarabine, and cisplatin chemotherapy before autologous stem-cell transplantation for relapsed and refractory aggressive lymphomas: NCIC-CTG LY.12

Michael Crump, John Kuruvilla, Stephen Couban, David A MacDonald, Vishal Kukreti, C Tom Kouroukis, Morel Rubinger, Rena Buckstein, Kevin R Imrie, Massimo Federico, Nicola Di Renzo, Kang Howson-Jan, Tara Baetz, Leonard Kaizer, Michael Voralia, Harold J Olney, A Robert Turner, Jonathan Sussman, Annette E Hay, Marina S Djurfeldt, Ralph M Meyer, Bingshu E Chen, Lois E Shepherd, Michael Crump, John Kuruvilla, Stephen Couban, David A MacDonald, Vishal Kukreti, C Tom Kouroukis, Morel Rubinger, Rena Buckstein, Kevin R Imrie, Massimo Federico, Nicola Di Renzo, Kang Howson-Jan, Tara Baetz, Leonard Kaizer, Michael Voralia, Harold J Olney, A Robert Turner, Jonathan Sussman, Annette E Hay, Marina S Djurfeldt, Ralph M Meyer, Bingshu E Chen, Lois E Shepherd

Abstract

Purpose: For patients with relapsed or refractory aggressive lymphoma, we hypothesized that gemcitabine-based therapy before autologous stem-cell transplantation (ASCT) is as effective as and less toxic than standard treatment.

Patients and methods: We randomly assigned 619 patients with relapsed/refractory aggressive lymphoma to treatment with gemcitabine, dexamethasone, and cisplatin (GDP) or to dexamethasone, cytarabine, and cisplatin (DHAP). Patients with B-cell lymphoma also received rituximab. Responding patients proceeded to stem-cell collection and ASCT. Coprimary end points were response rate after two treatment cycles and transplantation rate. The noninferiority margin for the response rate to GDP relative to DHAP was set at 10%. Secondary end points included event-free and overall survival, treatment toxicity, and quality of life.

Results: For the intention-to-treat population, the response rate with GDP was 45.2%; with DHAP the response rate was 44.0% (95% CI for difference, -9.0% to 6.7%), meeting protocol-defined criteria for noninferiority of GDP (P = .005). Similar results were obtained in a per-protocol analysis. The transplantation rates were 52.1% with GDP and 49.3% with DHAP (P = .44). At a median follow-up of 53 months, no differences were detected in event-free survival (HR, 0.99; stratified log-rank P = .95) or overall survival (HR, 1.03; P = .78) between GDP and DHAP. Treatment with GDP was associated with less toxicity (P < .001) and need for hospitalization (P < .001), and preserved quality of life (P = .04).

Conclusion: For patients with relapsed or refractory aggressive lymphoma, in comparison with DHAP, treatment with GDP is associated with a noninferior response rate, similar transplantation rate, event-free survival, and overall survival, less toxicity and hospitalization, and superior quality of life.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00078949.

© 2014 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Source: PubMed

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