One single dose of rituximab added to a standard regimen of CHOP in primary treatment of follicular lymphoma appears to result in a high clearance rate from circulating bcl-2/IgH positive cells: Is the end of molecular monitoring near?

2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (12) ◽  
pp. 1563-1568 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina Schmitt ◽  
Alexander Grundt ◽  
Christian Buchholtz ◽  
Lars Scheuer ◽  
Axel Benner ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 98 (4) ◽  
pp. 940-944 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline M. P. W. Mandigers ◽  
Jules P. P. Meijerink ◽  
Ewald J. B. M. Mensink ◽  
Evelyn L. R. T. M. Tönnissen ◽  
Konnie M. Hebeda ◽  
...  

In follicular lymphoma, the t(14;18) status of the peripheral blood and bone marrow analyzed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is assumed to correlate with disease activity in patients with relapsed disease. The clinical significance of quantitating circulating lymphoma cells by real-time PCR is reported in patients on first-line treatment. Thirty-four consecutive patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma and detectable t(14;18)-positive cells in pretreatment peripheral blood samples were monitored. All patients were treated with standard chemotherapy in combination with interferon alfa-2b. Before and after induction therapy, blood samples were taken for quantitative analysis of t(14;18). At presentation, a median of 262 t(14;18)-positive cells per 75 000 normal cells was found (range, 1-75 000). Patients with lower numbers of circulating tumor cells more frequently had bulky disease (P = .02). Seventy-nine percent of the patients responded clinically to treatment. In 22 of 28 patients, including 4 patients in whom treatment had failed clinically, the number of circulating t(14;18)-positive cells decreased to undetectable or low levels after therapy. In the remaining responding patients, circulating tumor cells persisted after therapy. These quantitative data on circulating t(14;18)-positive cells call into question the usefulness of molecular monitoring of the blood in a group of patients with follicular lymphoma uniformly treated with a noncurative first-line regimen. T(14;18)-positive cells decreased in peripheral blood after treatment, irrespective of the clinical response. Therefore, the significance of so-called molecular remission should be reconsidered in follicular lymphoma.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1122-1122
Author(s):  
Peter Dreger ◽  
Anja van Biezen ◽  
Kees Brukx ◽  
Marc Boogaerts ◽  
Mauricette Michallet ◽  
...  

Abstract Treatment-related myelodysplastic syndromes and acute myeloblastic leukemia (t-MDS/AML) have emerged as relevant complications of autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) for follicular lymphoma. Given the fact that also fludarabine-cyclophosphamide combination chemotherapy, which is increasingly used for primary treatment in CLL, has been implicated in induction of secondary stem cell disorders, t-MDS/AML might be a substantial problem after ASCT for CLL, too. Therefore the purpose of this study was to analyze the incidence and characteristics of t-MDS/AML among those patients who were autografted for CLL and registered in the EBMT database. For each case submitted between 1992 and 2004, centers received a questionaire asking for follow-up information with particular focus on t-MDS/AML. Results: Of 1139 patients identified from the database, a reply was received for 457. After these 457 autotransplants, 18 cases of t-MDS/AML were observed, giving a crude rate of 3.9%. Median time from ASCT to t-MDS/AML was 28 (10–73) months. Patients with t-MDS/AML had received 2 (1–3) lines of conventional chemotherapy prior to ASCT, containing alkylating agents in 92% and fludarabine in 71% of the patients. Only a single patient had been pretreated with combined fludarabine-cyclophosphamide. High-dose regimens comprised total body irradiation in 71% of the t-MDS/AML cases; and mobilized peripheral blood was used as stem cell source in 92%, containing 2.9 (1.4–7.8) CD34+ cells/kg. Treatment of t-MDS/AML consisted of chemotherapy in 17%, ASCT in 6%, and allo-SCT in 17%, whereas the majority of the patients received supportive care only. Median survival from diagnosis of t-MDS/AML was 8 months with 2 of the 3 allografted patients being alive 10 and 13 months post diagnosis, respectively. Conclusions: The incidence of t-MDS/AML after ASCT for CLL does not seem to exceed the range reported for follicular lymphoma. t-MDS/AML generally occurs within the first 6 years post transplant and has a very poor prognosis. A particular impact of fludarabine-cyclophosphamide pretreatment could not be detected.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1813-1813
Author(s):  
Alessandro Pulsoni ◽  
Irene Della Starza ◽  
Pasqualina D'Urso ◽  
Gianna Maria D'Elia ◽  
Giorgia Annechini ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Stage I or II follicular lymphoma (FL) is an uncommon disease, representing only 20% of FL. Conventional treatment is represented by local radiotherapy (RT), which allows eradication of the disease in about 50% of patients. Despite the negative bone marrow biopsy in all cases, most patients present Bcl-2 rearranged cells in the bone marrow (BM) and/or peripheral blood (PB). The aim of this study was to analyze the prognostic role of Bcl-2 molecular monitoring in a series of stage I-II FL cases followed at a single center. Methods Fifty-seven consecutive patients with a confirmed diagnosis of stage I/II FL were investigated at presentation by PCR in order to identify the presence of Bcl-2 rearranged cells in the BM and/or PB. All patients were treated with involved field RT (30-36 Gy). Subsequently, minimal residual disease (MRD) was evaluated every 6 months after RT in patients positive at baseline; patients negative at baseline were not retested. In part of the patients (after 2005) Rituximab was administered in case of persistently positive Bcl-2 cells in the BM or PB after radiotherapy. The PCR analysis of the Bcl-2/IgH rearrangement was performed according to published methods. It consists in a nested PCR that uses in the first round a couple of primers for the major breakpoint region (MBR) or for the minor cluster region (mcr). After this first step, the amplification products were re-amplified using oligonucleotide primers internal to the original ones. An aliquot of the PCR products was analysed on 2% agarose gel containing ethidium bromide in Tris-borate electrophoresis buffer and visualized under UV light. For MBR and mcr, a reproducible sensitivity level of 10-5 and 10-4 respectively, was obtained. Results 1. Prognostic value of basal PCR in BM/PB: PCR analysis revealed Bcl-2 rearranged cells in the PB and/or BM in 38/57 patients (66.7%) at presentation. After a median follow-up of 55 months, 11 patients (19.3%) had a clinical relapse; of them, 10 belonged to the group with positive PCR at baseline, while only 1 patient with negative basal Bcl-2 (1.7%) experienced a clinical relapse (Pearson’s chi2= 0.058, Fisher exact test = 0.079). Among the 11 patients who showed a clinical relapse, 5 presented a positive Bcl-2 at relapse, 3 were negative (1 already at baseline),while in 3 this information is not evaluable. 2. Effect of local RT: After irradiation of the sole site of the disease, Bcl-2 rearranged cells disappeared in 19 of 38 patients positive at baseline (50%). In 17/38 (44.7%), MRD remained positive, while 2 patients refused to perform the analysis. A negative MRD after RT does not seem to correlate with a lower relapse probability. Only 1 patient died of breast cancer. 3. Effect of rituximab treatment in Bcl-2+ patients: Fourteen patients with persistently positive Bcl-2 after RT were treated with Rituximab 375 mg/m2 for 4 weekly administrations: 9 of them (64%) patients became negative. This result was only temporary in 4/9 cases (1 clinical relapse). Among persistently Bcl-2 positive patients after Rituximab, 1 clinical relapse was also observed. Conclusions In limited stage FL, despite a negative BM biopsy, Bcl-2/IgH rearranged cells can be found in the BM and/or PB, and they can disappear after local RT of the involved lymph node(s) in 50% of cases (19/38). The basal presence of Bcl-2+ cells in the BM/PB has a prognostic role: no clinical relapses were observed in Bcl-2 negative cases at baseline, except for 1 patient. Conversely, a negative MRD after radiotherapy does not seem to correlate with a better prognosis. -Rituximab therapy can induce a negativization of Bcl-2 in MRD-positive patients. Nevertheless, Rituximab treatment was only partially effective: negativization was observed in the majority of MRD-positive patients, but it was only temporary in a proportion of them. In Rituximab-treated patients, clinical relapses occurred only in the presence of MRD. -Not all clinical relapses were preceded by MRD positivity; further data are necessary to establish the usefullness of MRD monitoring over time. Prognosis of patients with early-stage FL treated with local RT + Rituximab in case of MRD persistence, is excellent: cause-specific survival=100%, EFS=70% projected at 10 years. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 551-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
Corrado Tarella ◽  
Fabio Benedetti ◽  
Carola Boccomini ◽  
Caterina Patti ◽  
Anna Maria Barbui ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction A randomized multicenter study of 134 Follicular Lymphoma (FL) patients, selected for age less than 60 yrs. and poor prognostic features according to age-adjusted IPI (2-3) and IIL-score (3 or greater) was conducted between March 2000 and May 2005, among 30 Italian Centers. The study compared efficacy and tolerability of CHOP-R vs. R-HDS with autograft as primary treatment in poor-risk FL. Initial results have been already reported (Ladetto M et al, Blood 2008), showing superior disease control with R-HDS without any survival advantage. We have recently updated the long-term outcome and the results at long-term are here presented at a median follow-up of 9.5 yrs. Patients and Methods Of the original 134 randomized patients, the long-term outcome has been updated for 125 patients, 61 of CHOP-R and 64 of R-HDS arms. Clinical characteristics at study entry and treatment schedules have been already reported. Briefly, the main features of the updated patients included: median age 51 yrs. (22-60), M/F ratio 74/51, aaIPI 2-3 90%, FLIPI >2 (retrospectively assigned) 60%, high LDH 49%, bulky disease 62%, B-symptoms 45%, BM involvement 86%. Clinical characteristics were balanced among the two arms. Treatment schedule consisted of: i. standard arm: 6 courses of cyclo-phosphamide/doxorubicin/vincristine/prednisone followed by 4-weekly rituximab courses (CHOP-R); ii. experimental arm: rituximab-supplemented high-dose sequential chemotherapy with autografting (R-HDS). The analysis was intention to treat with event-free survival as the primary endpoint. Minimal residual disease was evaluated post treatment in 58 patients with a bcl-2/IgH MBR or mcr translocation confirmed at diagnosis by nested PCR. The trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as no. NCT00435955. The long-term outcome has been updated in July 2013 by 28 out of 30 participating Centers accounting for 125 patients (93% of the whole series). Results Complete remission (CR) was achieved by 88 (70.4%) patients, including 35 (57%) with CHOP-R and 53 (83%) with R-HDS (p < .001); in addition, 37 out of 58 (64%) patients achieved a Molecular Remission (MR). At a median follow-up (MFU) of 9.5 yrs., 88 patients (70.4%) are alive. Overall, 19 patients died for lymphoma progression (11 in the CHOP-R, 8 in the R-HDS arms), there were nine deaths for secondary malignancy (3 in the CHOP-R, 6 in the R-HDS arms), nine more patients died for other causes, including four early toxic deaths. The overall survival projection for the whole series is 78% and 70% at 5 and 10 yrs., respectively. As shown in Figure 1, there were no main differences in the long-term OS between the two arms, with 5 and 10 yrs projections respectively of 75% and 70% for CHOP-R and 81% and 70% for R-HDS (p=0.96). Response to primary treatment had a major impact on the OS, with 5 and 10 yr survival projections respectively of 90% and 80% for patients achieving CR, and of 49 and 43 for those with less than CR (p < .001) (Figure 2A). Similarly, MR achievement was associated with prolonged overall survival, with 5 and 10 yr survival projections respectively of 89% and 83% for patients with PCR-ve on BM cells, and of 76 and 57 for those with persistent PCR-positivity (p = .03) (Figure 2B). Conclusion The long-term follow-up of the randomized CHOP-R vs. R-HDS trial indicate that: i. poor risk FL may now experience a prolonged survival, with approximately 70% of patients alive at 10 yrs., due to the combined efficacy of both primary chemo-immunotherapy and salvage treatments; ii. the superior disease control of R-HDS compared to CHOP-R does not translate in any survival advantage, with analogous OS regardless of which treatment is used; iii. also in FL like in other lymphoproliferative malignancies, achieving CR and MR is crucial not only for the disease control but also for long-term overall survival; iv. lymphoma progression remains the major cause of death, while secondary neoplasms, in particular secondary leukemias represent the second cause of treatment failure. Thus, efforts are still needed in order to increase the anti-tumor efficacy while reducing any potential late effect in treatment options for FL. Disclosures: Tarella: Roche Co.: support and honoraria for Conference participation Other. Ladetto:Roche: Honoraria, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau.


1996 ◽  
Vol 40 (9) ◽  
pp. 2137-2141 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Ji ◽  
P Jamet ◽  
E G Perani ◽  
S Sow ◽  
C Lienhardt ◽  
...  

Fifty patients with newly diagnosed lepromatous leprosy were allocated randomly to one of five groups and treated with either a month-long standard regimen of multidrug therapy (MDT) for multibacillary leprosy, a single dose of 600 mg of rifampin, a month-long regimen with the dapsone (DDS) and clofazimine (CLO) components of the standard MDT, or a single dose of 2,000 mg of clarithromycin (CLARI) plus 200 mg of minocycline (MINO), with or without the addition of 800 mg of ofloxacin (OFLO). At the end of 1 month, clinical improvement accompanied by significant decreases of morphological indexes in skin smears was observed in about half of the patients of each group. A significant bactericidal effect was demonstrated in the great majority of patients in all five groups by inoculating the footpads of mice with organisms recovered from biopsy samples obtained before and after treatment. Rifampin proved to be a bactericidal drug against Mycobacterium leprae more potent than any combination of the other drugs. A single dose of CLARI-MINO, with or without OFLO, displayed a degree of bactericidal activity similar to that of a regimen daily of doses of DDS-CLO for 1 month, suggesting that it may be possible to replace the DDS and CLO components of the MDT with a monthly dose of CLARI-MINO, with or without OFLO. However, gastrointestinal adverse events were quite frequent among patients treated with CLARI-MINO, with or without OFLO, and may be attributed to the higher dosage of CLARI or MINO or to the combination of CLARI-MINO plus OFLO. In future trials, therefore, we propose to reduce the dosages of the drugs to 1,000 mg of CLARI, 100 mg of MINO, and 400 mg of OFLO.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 3989-3989
Author(s):  
Corrado Tarella ◽  
Angela Gueli ◽  
Federica Delaini ◽  
Anna Maria Barbui ◽  
Riccardo Bruna ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Follicular lymphoma (FL) is the most common indolent form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. However, FL is a heterogeneous disorder and in a proportion of patients, the disease is very resistant to standard frontline therapies. In the current analysis clinical features and outcome to primary treatment were evaluated in a large series of FL patients who were consecutively treated at the Hematology Centers of Bergamo and Torino, Italy between 1976 and 2012. The aim of the study was to define the rate of refractory disease and the long term survival of patients according to response to their primary treatment. METHODS Medical records of 597 FL patients were reviewed. In front line therapy, rituximab was employed in 330 patients (55%), front-line high dose therapy with autograft (HDS) was administered in 58 patients (9.7%). Primary refractory disease was defined as full refractoriness (stable or progressive disease) or progressive disease within six months after initial response. Univariate analysis was done for prognostic factors including gender, age at diagnosis (age≤60 and >60 years), histological grade, IPI score (low=0-2 versus high=3-5), bone marrow (BM) involvement, rituximab administration in 1st line treatment, lymphocyte to monocyte ratio at diagnosis (>2.6 vs ≤2.6), presence of primary refractory disease, and the administration of front-line HDS. Cox model was also used for multivariate analysis. RESULTS: A total of 375 patients (63%) were older than 60 years (range: 18-88) and 49% were males. There were 476 patients (79.7%) with stage III-IV, 286 patients (48%) with BM involvement, 185 (31%) had a high IPI score and 28 patients (5%) presented with high histological grade. Eighty-seven patients (13%) displayed primary refractory disease. At a median follow-up of 8 years, median overall survival (OS) was 25 years for all patients, 32.6 years for responsive patients compared to 5 years for primary refractory patients (p=<0.0001). Among primary refractory patients, those with fully refractory disease had a shorter survival (median OS: 2.7 years) compared to patients with early progressive disease (median OS: 5 years). The strikingly different outcome of primary refractory vs. responsive patients is shown in the Figure 1. A significant prolonged survival was observed in patients who were treated with rituximab in primary therapy. The median OS is not reached for rituximab treated patients compared to 19 years for those who did not receive rituximab. Median OS was 25 years for patients with low IPI and 14.6 years for the high risk group. By univariate analysis, age and BM involvement were also significant prognostic factors for OS. Median OS for patients 60 years old or younger compared to older patients were 32.6 versus 13 years, respectively. The median survival was not reached for patients without BM involvement vs 19 years for patients with BM involvement (p=0.001). By multivariate analysis high IPI, refractory disease and not receiving rituximab in first line regimens were independent negative prognostic factors for OS, as detailed in Table 1. CONCLUSION: FL patients who display responsive disease to their primary treatment have a very long life expectancy with median survival of 32.6 yrs. Similarly to the aggressive lymphoma subtypes, primary refractory disease is of major concern also for FL. Research studies should be focused on the early identification of primary refractory patients to promptly institute adapted therapy for this unfavorable subgroup, and possibly optimize treatment strategies for patients with high-risk FL. Table 1. Multivariate analysis for overall survival Parameter Hazard Ratio (95% Confidence interval) p-value Age (yrs): >60 vs. ≤ 60 1.54 (1.5-2.3) .03 Histologic grade: 1-2 vs 3 2.25 (0.5-9.1) .3 IPI *Score: low (0-2) vs high(3-5) 0.59 (0.4-0.9) .009 Primary Refractory: yes vs no 4.40 (3.0-6.5) < .0001 Rituximab 1st line: yes vs no 0.56 (0.4-0.8) .005 BM# involvement: yes vs no 1.44 (1.0-2.1) .06 *International prognostic index was used to have a uniform prognostic factors scoring system for patients treated over the three decades of the survey. # Bone marrow Figure 1. Overall Survival in 597 follicular lymphoma patients according to response to primary treatment Figure 1. Overall Survival in 597 follicular lymphoma patients according to response to primary treatment Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2001 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 420-424 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin E. Summers ◽  
Lindsey K. Goff ◽  
A. Gerry Wilson ◽  
Rajnish K. Gupta ◽  
T. Andrew Lister ◽  
...  

PURPOSE: To determine the incidence and frequency of the Bcl-2/IgH rearrangement in the peripheral blood of normal individuals to define the potential complication this may pose for the molecular monitoring of disease in patients with follicular lymphoma (FL). MATERIALS AND METHODS: The incidence and frequency of the major breakpoint cluster region rearrangement in DNA extracted from peripheral blood or lymphoblastoid cell lines from 481 normal individuals was determined using a TaqMan real-time polymerase chain reaction assay (PE Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). RESULTS: Twenty three percent of samples were positive for the Bcl-2/IgH rearrangement, with approximately 3% of these at levels of more than 1 in 104 cells. CONCLUSION: The presence of circulating Bcl-2/IgH+ cells, other than those derived from the malignant clone, could confound the detection and quantitation of minimal residual disease in patients with FL, particularly at low levels of tumor burden.


Author(s):  
Daniel D. Sternlicht ◽  
Jose E. Fernandez ◽  
James L. Prater ◽  
Joshua N. Weaver ◽  
Jason C. Isaacs ◽  
...  

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