Rituximab maintenance for patients with aggressive B-cell lymphoma in first remission: results of the randomized NHL13 trial

Ulrich Jaeger, Marek Trneny, Helen Melzer, Michael Praxmarer, Weerasak Nawarawong, Dina Ben Yehuda, David Goldstein, Bilijana Mihaljevic, Osman Ilhan, Veronika Ballova, Michael Hedenus, Liang-Tsai Hsiao, Wing-Yan Au, Sonja Burgstaller, Gerhard Weidinger, Felix Keil, Christian Dittrich, Cathrin Skrabs, Anton Klingler, Andreas Chott, Michael A Fridrik, Richard Greil, AGMT-NHL13 Investigators, Ulrich Jaeger, Marek Trneny, Helen Melzer, Michael Praxmarer, Weerasak Nawarawong, Dina Ben Yehuda, David Goldstein, Bilijana Mihaljevic, Osman Ilhan, Veronika Ballova, Michael Hedenus, Liang-Tsai Hsiao, Wing-Yan Au, Sonja Burgstaller, Gerhard Weidinger, Felix Keil, Christian Dittrich, Cathrin Skrabs, Anton Klingler, Andreas Chott, Michael A Fridrik, Richard Greil, AGMT-NHL13 Investigators

Abstract

We investigated rituximab maintenance therapy in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (n=662) or follicular lymphoma grade 3b (n=21) in first complete remission. Patients were randomized to rituximab maintenance (n=338) or observation (n=345). At a median follow-up of 45 months, the event-free survival rate (the primary endpoint) at 3 years was 80.1% for rituximab maintenance versus 76.5% for observation. This difference was not statistically significant for the intent-to-treat population (likelihood ratio P=0.0670). The hazard ratio by treatment arm was 0.79 (95% confidence interval 0.57-1.08; P=0.1433). The secondary endpoint, progression-free survival was also not met for the whole statistical model (likelihood ratio P=0.3646). Of note, rituximab maintenance was superior to observation when treatment arms only were compared (hazard ratio: 0.62; 95% confidence interval 0.43-0.90; P=0.0120). Overall survival remained unchanged (92.0 versus 90.3%). In subgroup analysis male patients benefited from rituximab maintenance with regards to both event-free survival (84.1% versus 74.4%) (hazard ratio: 0.58; 95% confidence interval 0.36-0.94; P=0.0267) and progression-free survival (89.0% versus 77.6%) (hazard ratio: 0.45; 95% confidence interval 0.25-0.79; P=0.0058). Women had more grade 3/4 adverse events (P=0.0297) and infections (P=0.0341). Men with a low International Prognostic Index treated with rituximab had the best outcome. In summary, rituximab maintenance in first remission after R-CHOP-like treatment did not prolong event-free, progression-free or overall survival of patients with aggressive B-non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The significantly better outcome of men warrants further studies prior to the routine use of rituximab maintenance in men with low International Prognostic Index. This trial is registered under EUDRACT #2005-005187-90 and www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00400478.

Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
CONSORT 2010 study flow diagram.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Survival analysis of all patients by treatment arm (intention-to-treat population) (n=683). (A) Event-free survival: the effect of treatment [rituximab maintenance (RM) vs. observation (obs.)] is indicated by hazard ratio (HR), 95% confidence interval (CI), and the corresponding P value; (B) Progression-free survival; (C) Relapses and cumulative event-free rate by treatment arm; (D) Overall survival.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Forest plot of univariate analysis on EFS of selected subgroups. A shift to the left favors rituximab maintenance. X-axis: hazard ratio.
Figure 4.
Figure 4.
Subgroup analysis by sex, IPI, and treatment arm. (A) EFS: all female patients; (B) EFS: all male patients; (C) PFS: all female patients; (D) PFS: all male patients. RM: rituximab maintenance; Obs: observation.
Figure 5.
Figure 5.
Subgroup analysis by IPI and treatment arm. (A) EFS: all patients; (B) EFS: all female patients; (C) EFS: all male patients; (D) PFS: male patients with IPI≤1. RM: rituximab maintenance; Obs: observation.

Source: PubMed

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