Rituximab plus concurrent infusional EPOCH chemotherapy is highly effective in HIV-associated B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma

Joseph A Sparano, Jeannette Y Lee, Lawrence D Kaplan, Alexandra M Levine, Juan Carlos Ramos, Richard F Ambinder, William Wachsman, David Aboulafia, Ariela Noy, David H Henry, Jamie Von Roenn, Bruce J Dezube, Scot C Remick, Manisha H Shah, Lawrence Leichman, Lee Ratner, Ethel Cesarman, Amy Chadburn, Ronald Mitsuyasu, AIDS Malignancy Consortium, Joseph A Sparano, Jeannette Y Lee, Lawrence D Kaplan, Alexandra M Levine, Juan Carlos Ramos, Richard F Ambinder, William Wachsman, David Aboulafia, Ariela Noy, David H Henry, Jamie Von Roenn, Bruce J Dezube, Scot C Remick, Manisha H Shah, Lawrence Leichman, Lee Ratner, Ethel Cesarman, Amy Chadburn, Ronald Mitsuyasu, AIDS Malignancy Consortium

Abstract

Rituximab plus intravenous bolus chemotherapy is a standard treatment for immunocompetent patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Some studies have suggested that rituximab is associated with excessive toxicity in HIV-associated NHL, and that infusional chemotherapy may be more effective. We performed a randomized phase 2 trial of rituximab (375 mg/m(2)) given either concurrently before each infusional etoposide, vincristine, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, and prednisone (EPOCH) chemotherapy cycle or sequentially (weekly for 6 weeks) after completion of all chemotherapy in HIV-associated NHL. EPOCH consisted of a 96-hour intravenous infusion of etoposide, doxorubicin, and vincristine plus oral prednisone followed by intravenous bolus cyclophosphamide given every 21 days for 4 to 6 cycles. In the concurrent arm, 35 of 48 evaluable patients (73%; 95% confidence interval, 58%-85%) had a complete response. In the sequential arm, 29 of 53 evaluable patients (55%; 95% confidence interval, 41%-68%) had a complete response. The primary efficacy endpoint was met for the concurrent arm only. Toxicity was comparable in the 2 arms, although patients with a baseline CD4 count less than 50/microL had a high infectious death rate in the concurrent arm. We conclude that concurrent rituximab plus infusional EPOCH is an effective regimen for HIV-associated lymphoma.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00049036.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Consort diagram.
Figure 2
Figure 2
PFS, overall survival, and TTP for the study population. (A) PFS for the entire population by treatment arm (n = 106). (B) Overall survival for the entire population by treatment arm (n = 106). (C) TTP for the entire population by treatment arm (n = 106).

Source: PubMed

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