The efficacy and tolerability of adriamycin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine and Stanford V in older Hodgkin lymphoma patients: a comprehensive analysis from the North American intergroup trial E2496

Andrew M Evens, Fangxin Hong, Leo I Gordon, Richard I Fisher, Nancy L Bartlett, Joseph M Connors, Randy D Gascoyne, Henry Wagner, Mary Gospodarowicz, Bruce D Cheson, Patrick J Stiff, Ranjana Advani, Thomas P Miller, Richard T Hoppe, Brad S Kahl, Sandra J Horning, Andrew M Evens, Fangxin Hong, Leo I Gordon, Richard I Fisher, Nancy L Bartlett, Joseph M Connors, Randy D Gascoyne, Henry Wagner, Mary Gospodarowicz, Bruce D Cheson, Patrick J Stiff, Ranjana Advani, Thomas P Miller, Richard T Hoppe, Brad S Kahl, Sandra J Horning

Abstract

There is a lack of contemporary prospective data examining the adriamycin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine (ABVD) and Stanford V (SV; doxorubicin, vinblastine, mechlorethamine, vincristine, bleomycin, etoposide, prednisone) regimens in older Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients. Forty-four advanced-stage, older HL patients (aged ≥60 years) were treated on the randomized study, E2496. Toxicities were mostly similar between chemotherapy regimens, although 24% of older patients developed bleomycin lung toxicity (BLT), which occurred mainly with ABVD (91%). Further, the BLT-related mortality rate was 18%. The overall treatment-related mortality for older HL patients was 9% vs. 0·3% for patients aged <60 years (P < 0·001). Among older patients, there were no survival differences between ABVD and SV. According to age, outcomes were significantly inferior for older versus younger patients (5-year failure-free survival: 48% vs. 74%, respectively, P = 0·002; 5-year overall survival: 58% and 90%, respectively, P < 0·0001), although time-to-progression (TTP) was not significantly different (5-year TTP: 68% vs. 78%, respectively, P = 0·37). Furthermore, considering progression and death without progression as competing risks, the risk of progression was not different between older and younger HL patients (5 years: 30% and 23%, respectively, P = 0·30); however, the incidence of death without progression was significantly increased for older HL patients (22% vs. 9%, respectively, P < 0·0001). Altogether, the marked HL age-dependent survival differences appeared attributable primarily to non-HL events.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00003389.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest disclosure: none (all authors).

© 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Figures

Figure 1. Older Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patient…
Figure 1. Older Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patient survival
The (A) failure-free survival (FFS) and (B) overall survival (OS) for all older HL patients. The (C) 3- and 5-year FFS for older patients who received ABVD was 58% and 53%, respectively, which compared with 54% and 42%, respectively, for patients who received Stanford V (p=0.99); while the (D) 3- and 5-year OS for older patients who received ABVD was 73% and 64%, respectively, which compared with 67% and 51%, respectively, for patients who received Stanford V (p=0.90).
Figure 2. Survival for older Hodgkin lymphoma…
Figure 2. Survival for older Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients based on International Prognostic Score (IPS) and including competing risk analysis
There were no significant differences in (A) failure-free survival and (B) overall survival according to IPS for older HL patients. The (C) cumulative incidence of death due to HL/progression and death due to HL treatment/toxicity (i.e., treatment-related mortality) vs death incidence rate due to all other causes. The associated cumulative incidence of death at 3 and 5 years for older HL patients was 23% and 30%, respectively vs 7% and 12%, respectively, for all other causes. The (D) cumulative incidence of death due to HL treatment/toxicity was plotted separately. The associated 3- and 5-year incidences of death was 16% and 21%, respectively, due to HL/progression, 7% and 9%, respectively, due to toxicity, and 7% and 12%, respectively, due to other causes.
Figure 3. Outcomes comparing older HL with…
Figure 3. Outcomes comparing older HL with younger patients
The (A) 3- and 5-year failure-free survival for patients aged ≥60 years was 56% and 48%, respectively, which compared with 76% and 74%, respectively, for patients aged <60 years (p=0.002); while (B) the 3- and 5-year overall survival for patients aged ≥60 years was 70% and 58%, respectively, which compared with 93% and 90%, respectively, for patients aged <60 years (p<0.0001). (C) The 2- and 5-year time-to-progression (TTP) for patients aged ≥60 years was 80% and 68%, respectively; this compared with 81% and 78%, respectively, for patients aged <60 years (p=0.37). (D) The rates of progression were determined with competing risk analysis because death without progression is a competing risk for disease progression. The incidence rates of progression including competing risks for patients aged ≥60 years at 2 and 5 years were 19% and 30%, respectively, compared with 19% and 23%, respectively, for patients aged <60 years (p=0.30); however, the incidence rates of death without progression for patients aged ≥60 years at 2 and 5 years were 13% and 22%, respectively, compared with 2% and 9%, respectively, for patients aged <60 years (p=<0.0001).

Source: PubMed

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