Interventions for mycosis fungoides

Arash Valipour, Manuel Jäger, Peggy Wu, Jochen Schmitt, Charles Bunch, Tobias Weberschock, Arash Valipour, Manuel Jäger, Peggy Wu, Jochen Schmitt, Charles Bunch, Tobias Weberschock

Abstract

Background: Mycosis fungoides (MF) is the most common type of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, a malignant, chronic disease initially affecting the skin. Several therapies are available, which may induce clinical remission for a time. This is an update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2012: we wanted to assess new trials, some of which investigated new interventions.

Objectives: To assess the effects of interventions for MF in all stages of the disease.

Search methods: We updated our searches of the following databases to May 2019: the Cochrane Skin Specialised Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, and LILACS. We searched 2 trials registries for additional references. For adverse event outcomes, we undertook separate searches in MEDLINE in April, July and November 2017.

Selection criteria: Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of local or systemic interventions for MF in adults with any stage of the disease compared with either another local or systemic intervention or with placebo.

Data collection and analysis: We used standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. The primary outcomes were improvement in health-related quality of life as defined by participants, and common adverse effects of the treatments. Key secondary outcomes were complete response (CR), defined as complete disappearance of all clinical evidence of disease, and objective response rate (ORR), defined as proportion of patients with a partial or complete response. We used GRADE to assess the certainty of evidence and considered comparisons of psoralen plus ultraviolet A (PUVA) light treatment as most important because this is first-line treatment for MF in most guidelines.

Main results: This review includes 20 RCTs (1369 participants) covering a wide range of interventions. The following were assessed as either treatments or comparators: imiquimod, peldesine, hypericin, mechlorethamine, nitrogen mustard and intralesional injections of interferon-α (IFN-α) (topical applications); PUVA, extracorporeal photopheresis (ECP: photochemotherapy), and visible light (light applications); acitretin, bexarotene, lenalidomide, methotrexate and vorinostat (oral agents); brentuximab vedotin; denileukin diftitox; mogamulizumab; chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, etoposide, and vincristine; a combination of chemotherapy with electron beam radiation; subcutaneous injection of IFN-α; and intramuscular injections of active transfer factor (parenteral systemics). Thirteen trials used an active comparator, five were placebo-controlled, and two compared an active operator to observation only. In 14 trials, participants had MF in clinical stages IA to IIB. All participants were treated in secondary and tertiary care settings, mainly in Europe, North America or Australia. Trials recruited both men and women, with more male participants overall. Trial duration varied from four weeks to 12 months, with one longer-term study lasting more than six years. We judged 16 trials as at high risk of bias in at least one domain, most commonly performance bias (blinding of participants and investigators), attrition bias and reporting bias. None of our key comparisons measured quality of life, and the two studies that did presented no usable data. Eighteen studies reported common adverse effects of the treatments. Adverse effects ranged from mild symptoms to lethal complications depending upon the treatment type. More aggressive treatments like systemic chemotherapy generally resulted in more severe adverse effects. In the included studies, CR rates ranged from 0% to 83% (median 31%), and ORR ranged from 0% to 88% (median 47%). Five trials assessed PUVA treatment, alone or combined, summarised below. There may be little to no difference between intralesional IFN-α and PUVA compared with PUVA alone for 24 to 52 weeks in CR (risk ratio (RR) 1.07, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.87 to 1.31; 2 trials; 122 participants; low-certainty evidence). Common adverse events and ORR were not measured. One small cross-over trial found once-monthly ECP for six months may be less effective than twice-weekly PUVA for three months, reporting CR in two of eight participants and ORR in six of eight participants after PUVA, compared with no CR or ORR after ECP (very low-certainty evidence). Some participants reported mild nausea after PUVA but no numerical data were given. One participant in the ECP group withdrew due to hypotension. However, we are unsure of the results due to very low-certainty evidence. One trial comparing bexarotene plus PUVA versus PUVA alone for up to 16 weeks reported one case of photosensitivity in the bexarotene plus PUVA group compared to none in the PUVA-alone group (87 participants; low-certainty evidence). There may be little to no difference between bexarotene plus PUVA and PUVA alone in CR (RR 1.41, 95% CI 0.71 to 2.80) and ORR (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.61 to 1.44) (93 participants; low-certainty evidence). One trial comparing subcutaneous IFN-α injections combined with either acitretin or PUVA for up to 48 weeks or until CR indicated there may be little to no difference in the common IFN-α adverse effect of flu-like symptoms (RR 1.32, 95% CI 0.92 to 1.88; 82 participants). There may be lower CR with IFN-α and acitretin compared with IFN-α and PUVA (RR 0.54, 95% CI 0.35 to 0.84; 82 participants) (both outcomes: low-certainty evidence). This trial did not measure ORR. One trial comparing PUVA maintenance treatment to no maintenance treatment, in participants who had already had CR, did report common adverse effects. However, the distribution was not evaluable. CR and OR were not assessable. The range of treatment options meant that rare adverse effects consequently occurred in a variety of organs.

Authors' conclusions: ​​There is a lack of high-certainty evidence to support decision making in the treatment of MF. Because of substantial heterogeneity in design, missing data, small sample sizes, and low methodological quality, the comparative safety and efficacy of these interventions cannot be reliably established on the basis of the included RCTs. PUVA is commonly recommended as first-line treatment for MF, and we did not find evidence to challenge this recommendation. There was an absence of evidence to support the use of intralesional IFN-α or bexarotene in people receiving PUVA and an absence of evidence to support the use of acitretin or ECP for treating MF. Future trials should compare the safety and efficacy of treatments to PUVA, as the current standard of care, and should measure quality of life and common adverse effects.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00030589 NCT00050999 NCT01578499 NCT00630903 NCT00091208 NCT01386398 NCT01625455 NCT01738594 NCT02213861 NCT02301494 NCT02323659 NCT02448381 NCT02811783 NCT02943642 NCT02953301 NCT03011814 NCT03292406 NCT03454945 NCT03713320.

Conflict of interest statement

Arash Valipour: I received travel expenses and accommodation for the annual German Dermatology Society Meeting 2019 from UCB Pharma, but this company is not involved in the development of drugs for mycosis fungoides. I attended a meeting called 'Inflammation campus' (a dermatology/rheumatology‐oriented medical meeting) in July 2015, which was organised by Pfizer. Pfizer paid for my travel expenses and accommodation. Manuel Jäger: nothing to declare. Peggy Wu: nothing to declare. Jochen Schmitt: I acted as a consultant for Lilly and Sanofi and received institutional grants for investigator‐initiated trials outside the submitted work from Novartis, Sanofi, ALK, and Pfizer. Charles Bunch: nothing to declare. Tobias Weberschock: nothing to declare.

Clinical referee, Prof Sean Whittaker: "I led and co‐authored the updated U.K. Cutaneous Lymphoma Group guidelines for the management of primary cutaneous lymphomas, which were published in 2018 (Gilson 2019)."

Copyright © 2020 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Figures

1
1
Skin changes in mycosis fungoides. Left: Patch; Middle: Plaque; Right: Tumour Copyright © 2018. Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Frankfurt am Main: reproduced with permission.
2
2
Study flow diagram.
3
3
'Risk of bias' graph: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
4
4
'Risk of bias' summary: review authors' judgements about each 'Risk of bias' item for each included study.
5
5
Forest plot of comparison: 6 IFN‐α + PUVA versus PUVA alone, outcome: 6.1 Complete response.
1.1. Analysis
1.1. Analysis
Comparison 1: Topical peldesine versus placebo, Outcome 1: Common adverse effects
1.2. Analysis
1.2. Analysis
Comparison 1: Topical peldesine versus placebo, Outcome 2: Complete response
1.3. Analysis
1.3. Analysis
Comparison 1: Topical peldesine versus placebo, Outcome 3: Objective response rate
2.1. Analysis
2.1. Analysis
Comparison 2: Topical hypericin versus placebo, Outcome 1: Objective response rate
3.1. Analysis
3.1. Analysis
Comparison 3: IFN‐α versus placebo, Outcome 1: Common adverse effects
3.2. Analysis
3.2. Analysis
Comparison 3: IFN‐α versus placebo, Outcome 2: Complete response
4.1. Analysis
4.1. Analysis
Comparison 4: Mechlorethamine gel vs mechlorethamine ointment, Outcome 1: Common adverse event
4.2. Analysis
4.2. Analysis
Comparison 4: Mechlorethamine gel vs mechlorethamine ointment, Outcome 2: Complete response
4.3. Analysis
4.3. Analysis
Comparison 4: Mechlorethamine gel vs mechlorethamine ointment, Outcome 3: Objective response rate
5.1. Analysis
5.1. Analysis
Comparison 5: IFN‐α + PUVA versus PUVA alone, Outcome 1: Complete response
6.1. Analysis
6.1. Analysis
Comparison 6: Denileukin diftitox high versus low dose, Outcome 1: Common adverse effects
6.2. Analysis
6.2. Analysis
Comparison 6: Denileukin diftitox high versus low dose, Outcome 2: Complete response
6.3. Analysis
6.3. Analysis
Comparison 6: Denileukin diftitox high versus low dose, Outcome 3: Objective response rate
7.1. Analysis
7.1. Analysis
Comparison 7: Bexarotene high versus low dose, Outcome 1: Common adverse effects
7.2. Analysis
7.2. Analysis
Comparison 7: Bexarotene high versus low dose, Outcome 2: Complete response
7.3. Analysis
7.3. Analysis
Comparison 7: Bexarotene high versus low dose, Outcome 3: Relapse
7.4. Analysis
7.4. Analysis
Comparison 7: Bexarotene high versus low dose, Outcome 4: Objective response rate
8.1. Analysis
8.1. Analysis
Comparison 8: Bexarotene + PUVA vs PUVA alone, Outcome 1: Common adverse events
8.2. Analysis
8.2. Analysis
Comparison 8: Bexarotene + PUVA vs PUVA alone, Outcome 2: Complete response
8.3. Analysis
8.3. Analysis
Comparison 8: Bexarotene + PUVA vs PUVA alone, Outcome 3: Objective response rate
9.1. Analysis
9.1. Analysis
Comparison 9: Lenalidomide maintenance versus observation after debulking therapy, Outcome 1: Common adverse effects
10.1. Analysis
10.1. Analysis
Comparison 10: Brentuximab vedotin vs. physician's choice (MTX or bexarotene), Outcome 1: Complete response
10.2. Analysis
10.2. Analysis
Comparison 10: Brentuximab vedotin vs. physician's choice (MTX or bexarotene), Outcome 2: Objective response rate
11.1. Analysis
11.1. Analysis
Comparison 11: Extracorporeal photopheresis versus PUVA, Outcome 1: Complete response
11.2. Analysis
11.2. Analysis
Comparison 11: Extracorporeal photopheresis versus PUVA, Outcome 2: Objective response rate
12.1. Analysis
12.1. Analysis
Comparison 12: Combined therapy versus conservative therapy, Outcome 1: Common adverse effects
12.2. Analysis
12.2. Analysis
Comparison 12: Combined therapy versus conservative therapy, Outcome 2: Complete response
12.3. Analysis
12.3. Analysis
Comparison 12: Combined therapy versus conservative therapy, Outcome 3: Relapse
12.4. Analysis
12.4. Analysis
Comparison 12: Combined therapy versus conservative therapy, Outcome 4: Overall survival
12.5. Analysis
12.5. Analysis
Comparison 12: Combined therapy versus conservative therapy, Outcome 5: Objective response rate
13.1. Analysis
13.1. Analysis
Comparison 13: IFN‐α + acitretin versus IFN‐α + PUVA, Outcome 1: Common adverse effects
13.2. Analysis
13.2. Analysis
Comparison 13: IFN‐α + acitretin versus IFN‐α + PUVA, Outcome 2: Complete response
14.1. Analysis
14.1. Analysis
Comparison 14: Topical nitrogen mustard with active transfer factor versus topical nitrogen mustard with inactivated transfer factor, Outcome 1: Complete response
14.2. Analysis
14.2. Analysis
Comparison 14: Topical nitrogen mustard with active transfer factor versus topical nitrogen mustard with inactivated transfer factor, Outcome 2: Overall survival
14.3. Analysis
14.3. Analysis
Comparison 14: Topical nitrogen mustard with active transfer factor versus topical nitrogen mustard with inactivated transfer factor, Outcome 3: Objective response rate
15.1. Analysis
15.1. Analysis
Comparison 15: Mogamulizumab vs. Vorinostat, Outcome 1: Objective response rate
16.1. Analysis
16.1. Analysis
Comparison 16: PUVA maintenance vs. no maintenance, Outcome 1: Disease‐free survival

Source: PubMed

3
Suscribir