Identification of pharmacogenomic markers of clinical efficacy in a dose-dense therapy regimen (R-CHOP14) in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma

2014 ◽  
Vol 55 (9) ◽  
pp. 2071-2078 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefania Nobili ◽  
Cristina Napoli ◽  
Benedetta Puccini ◽  
Ida Landini ◽  
Gabriele Perrone ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 343-355.e6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Colosia ◽  
Annete Njue ◽  
Peter C. Trask ◽  
Robert Olivares ◽  
Shahnaz Khan ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 98-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Violaine Safar ◽  
Jehan Dupuis ◽  
Fabrice Jardin ◽  
Christophe Fruchart ◽  
Stéphane Bardet ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 98 Background: 18Fluorodeoxyglucose PET has been quickly integrated to the diagnostic and therapeutic armamentarium in diffuse large-B cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Moreover, early PET appears a promising prognostic tool for tailoring treatment strategies. We evaluated the predictive value of early PET in a large prospective cohort of patients treated with immunochemotherapy. Patients and methods: 112 previously untreated patients from three institutions were treated between January 2000 and October 2008 for DLBCL using an anthracycline-based regimen plus Rituximab. Chemotherapy was either an R-CHOP21 regimen (n=57) or a dose-dense regimen (R-ACVBP, n=31 or R-CHOP14, n= 24). PET was performed at diagnosis and after two cycles of treatment. Early PET results were interpreted visually as positive (PET2p) or negative (PET2n), as previously described1, but did not modify the scheduled therapy. Results: Median age at diagnosis was 59 years (range 20–79 years) and 67% of patients were males, 44% were over 60 years, 81% presented with an advanced Ann Arbor stage (III–IV), 29% had a poor performance status (ECOG 2-4), 36% had more than one extra-nodal site involved and LDH were elevated in 68%. The repartition on the basis of the International Prognosis Index was the following: low=5%, low-intermediate =35%, intermediate-high=37% and high risk=23%. After two cycles, 70 patients (63%) were PET2n and 42 (38%) were PET2p (38 patients in partial response and 4 with stable disease). Median follow-up was 38 months for living patients. Ten of 70 (14%) PET2n patients showed progression versus 22 of 42 (52%) PET2p patients. The estimated 5-year progression free survival (PFS) was 81% for PET2n and 47% for PET2p patients (log rank test, p<0.0001). Prognostic value of early PET was significant in terms of PFS whether patients were treated with R-CHOP21 (p=0.0006) or with dose-dense regimens (p=0.0056). Nine of 70 (13%) PET2n and 15 of 42 (36%) PET2p patients died. The estimated 5-year overall survival (OS) was 88% for PET2n and 62% for PET2p patients (log rank test, p<0.0034). Prognostic value of early PET was significant in terms of OS for patients treated with R-CHOP21 (p=0. 0225) but not for those treated with dose-dense regimens (p=0.133). Conclusion: Early PET after 2 cycles of treatment is a powerful tool to predict outcome in DLBCL patients treated with Rituximab combined with an anthracycline-based chemotherapy. It brings promising opportunities in the designing of new treatment strategies for DLBCL. Reference : 1 Haioun et al. Blood 2005; 106(4):1376–81. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 2955-2955 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sirpa Leppa ◽  
Judit Jørgensen ◽  
Leo Meriranta ◽  
Klaus Beiske ◽  
Jan M.A. Delabie ◽  
...  

Abstract Background. Survival of patients with high-risk diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is suboptimal, and the risk of central nervous system (CNS) progression is relatively high. We investigated the efficacy of dose-dense chemoimmunotherapy and systemic CNS prophylaxis in two Nordic trials including patients less than 65 years with high-risk DLBCL. We combined individual patient data from these trials to compare clinical outcome and biological prognostic factors in patients treated with CNS prophylaxis given in the beginning (CHIC) versus at the end (CRY-04) of therapy. Patients and methods. In CRY-04 study, patients were treated with six courses of R-CHOEP14 followed by HD-Mtx and HD-Ara-C. In CHIC trial, treatment started with two courses of HD-Mtx in combination with R-CHOP14, followed by four courses of R-CHOEP-14 and one course of R-HD-AraC. In addition, liposomal AraC was administered intrathecally at courses 1, 3 and 5. For the correlative studies, formalin fixed paraffin embedded pretreatment tumor samples were analyzed by fluorescent in situ hybridization for BCL2 and c-MYC breakpoints and by immunochemistry for CD10, BCL6, MUM1, MYC and BCL2 expression. Germinal center B-cell-like (GCB)/non-GCB) subclassification was performed according to Hans algorithm. Results. Among 303 patients enrolled in the trials (CRY-04, n=160 and CHIC, n=143), 295 (CRY-04, n=154 and CHIC, n=139) were evaluable for baseline characteristics and outcome. Median age (54 and 56 years, p=0.222), male/female ratio, stage, and aaIPI scores were comparable in the two cohorts. CHIC regimen improved outcome over CRY-04; the findings included 4-year estimates of PFS (81% vs 66%, p=0.003), OS (83% and 79%, p=ns) and cumulative incidence rates of CNS progression (2.4% and 5.0%, p=ns). Treatment with the CHIC regimen reduced the risk of systemic progression (aaIPI adjusted RR=0.489, 95%CI 0.308-0.777, p=0.002). PFS benefit with CHIC over CRY-04 was observed across pre-specified subgroups, and particularly in patients less than 60 years old (p=0.008). In the entire study population, dual protein expression (DPE) of BCL2 and MYC was the only parameter to be significantly correlated with a worse PFS (4-y PFS 77% vs 50%, p=0.024; RR=2.300, 95% CI 1.088-4.860, p=0.029). Neither any single immunohistochemical marker nor the GCB/non-GCB subtype or MYC/BCL2-translocations significantly affected outcome. However, when treatment interaction was tested, MYC/BCL2 double hit status (DHL; 13%) predicted poor outcome among patients treated with CRY-04 regimen compared with patients who received CHIC regimen (4-y PFS; 38% vs 78%, p=0.086). GCB subtype and BCL2 positivity were also associated with better outcome in the CHIC cohort (4 y PFS; 63% vs 84%, p=0.011 and 61% vs 80%, p=0.007, respectively), whereas there were no significant survival differences between these regimens among the patients with non-GCB subtype, BCL2 negative DLBCL or DPE lymphomas. Conclusions. Our results derived from trial data with homogenous treatment support the use of HD-Mtx in the beginning rather than at the end of therapy. The survival benefit related to CHIC regimen over CRY-04 is due to better systemic control of the disease, and at least partly linked to improved survival among patients with GCB subtype, BCL2 positivity and DHL. Disclosures Leppa: Takeda: Consultancy, Research Funding; Janssen: Consultancy, Research Funding; Bayer: Research Funding; Roche: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Celgene: Consultancy. Holte:Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Roche, Norway: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 420-420 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig Moskowitz ◽  
Paul A Hamlin ◽  
Jocelyn Maragulia ◽  
Jessica Meikle ◽  
Andrew D Zelenetz

Abstract Abstract 420 Introduction: Primary Mediastinal Large B cell lymphoma (PMBL) is a distinct subtype of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) that is more common in women and presents at a similar age as classical Hodgkin lymphoma (HL); and in fact gene expression profiling suggests it is more similar to HL (Blood 102: 3871–3879, 2003) than DLBCL. Patients (pts) typically present with bulky mediastinal disease and combined modality therapy (CMT) has been the mainstay of treatment; however given the risk of secondary breast cancer and coronary artery disease associated with the 36–40Gy radiation therapy to the mediastinum, programs that use chemotherapy alone are desirable provided that the favorable progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS) rates can be maintained. Methods: We evaluated our dose-dense R-CHOP/ICE consolidation chemotherapy program (MSKCC protocol 01–142, J Clin Oncology 28:1896-1903, 2010) for pts with PMBL. The initial 28 pts were treated on study and the subsequent 26 were treated as per protocol. No radiation therapy was permitted. All pts underwent CT and FDG-PET imaging as well as bone marrow evaluation. Therapy was administered every 2 weeks. Induction chemotherapy: four cycles of accelerated R-CHOP (rituximab 375 mg/m2; cyclophosphamide 1000 mg/m2; doxorubicin 50 mg/m2 vincristine 1.4 mg/m2 (uncapped) IVP; and prednisone 100 mg/day orally for 5 days); growth factor support was required. Consolidation chemotherapy: three cycles of ICE+/−Rituximab (J Clin Oncology 12: 3776–3785, 1999). Pt characteristics: Fifty-four pts receive treatment. Median age was 34 (range 19–59); 30 were female (56%). An elevated LDH, Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) <80 and stage IV disease was seen in 87%, 24% and 52% respectively. Extranodal disease (ENS) was present in 74% of pts; 21 (39%) pts had lung involvement. Bulky disease defined as a mediastinal mass of at least 10 cm. was present in 36 pts (67%) of which 16 (30%) had clinical evidence of superior vena cava obstruction at presentation; the median SUV uptake in the mediastinum on the FDG-PET scan was 19. No patient had bone marrow or CNS involvement at diagnosis. Positive Immunohistochemistry markers were as follows: CD10 (6.7%), BCL6 (72.7%), BCL2 (51.2%) and MUM1 (50%). The median Ki-67 [MIB-1] expression was 60%, of which 26.7 % was ≥80%. Outcome: At a median followup for surviving pts of 3 years, the Kaplan-Meier estimates of the proportion of patients alive and progression-free are 88% and 78% respectively. Eleven pts failed therapy. Five are now progression-free after a salvage autotransplant that included radiation therapy to the mediastinum. Six pts have died; one from transplant-related mortality, one from secondary AML and 4 from PMBL, two of which had CNS disease at relapse despite intrathecal prophylaxis. None of the standard clinical or immunohistochemical risk factors predicted for PFS including: KPS (p=.79), LDH (p=.92), Stage (p=.25), ENS (p=.36), IPI (p=.18) or bulky disease (p=.42), Ki-67 [MIB-1] expression ≥80 (.34). An interim FDG-PET scan was performed on 51/54 pts; 24 (47%) of these scans were abnormal; however, this did not predict for PFS (p=.42). We also evaluated the change in SUV between the initial and interim scan with a positive cutoff of >66% (J Nucl Med 48:1626-1632, 2007) as being favorable; this also did not predict outcome (p=.21). Conclusion: This is the largest reported series of pts with PMBL treated with a uniform chemotherapy-only strategy. The MSKCC dose-dense R-CHOP/ICE program is highly effective in these pts, it avoids radiotherapy, and importantly 50% of pts who fail can be salvaged with a radiation-based transplant. Based upon these results an interim FDG-PET scan is not warranted in pts with PMBL. Disclosures: Zelenetz: GSK: Consultancy; CTI:.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2478-2478
Author(s):  
Cristina Napoli ◽  
Stefania Nobili ◽  
Ida Landini ◽  
Gabriele Perrone ◽  
Angela Valenti ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2478 Diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is one of the most common types of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Approximately half of patients will be cured of their disease by primary therapy, including the R-CHOP regimen (rituximab, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, desamethasone). The remaining die of the disease, mainly because of the occurrence of tumor drug resistance. Many efforts have been made to explain the biochemical and molecular mechanisms involved in resistance to the drugs used in the treatment of cancer patients, including those with DLBCL. A dose-intense therapy regimen (e.g. R-CHOP14) may help to improve the treatment outcome of DLBCL patients. We have carried out a retrospective study aimed at correlating the mRNA expression levels of genes involved in metabolism, mechanisms of action and resistance to doxorubicin (i.e. MDR1, GSTP1, TOPO-2a, Bcl-2, PKC-b2) that represents the backbone of the R-CHOP regimen with treatment outcome data of 54 patients at various stages of disease. The expression of the 5 above mentioned genes was determined in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded samples from DLBCL using real time RT-PCR. A threshold analysis to identify a cut-off distinguishing recurrent or non-recurrent disease was used. The correlations between gene expression data and clinical/pathological characteristics as well as survival parameters have been evaluated by standard statistical tests. The case series included 32 males and 22 females; 6 patients had follicular lymphoma grade IIIb and 48 diffuse large B cell lymphoma; 19 presented symptoms at diagnosis. Thirty patients showed abnormal LDH values, the IPI was intermediate-high risk or high risk in 14 patients. Forty-six patients (85.2%) obtained a complete remission and 8 (14.8%) a partial response. The median overall survival (OS) as well as the median progression free survival (PFS) have not yet been reached after a median follow-up of 43.6 months. The mRNA expression levels of TOPO-2a and GSTP1 were detectable in all samples, that of PKC-b2 in 52 samples, that of MDR1 and bcl-2 in 34 and 29 samples, respectively. A high degree of interpatient variation in relative tumor expression of the study gene was observed: from 0.008 for TOPO-2a to >100.000 for PKCbII. Threshold analysis indicated significant inverse relationships between PKC-b2 and PFS (p=0.046): higher gene expression was associated with shorter PFS. Conversely, higher expression of ABCB1 was associated with prolonged PFS (p=0.039). This kind of analysis also showed associations between OS and TOPO-2a, GSTP1and PKC-b2: higher gene expression was associated with shorter OS. Overall, our results confirm that the high expression of some genes such as TopoIIa, GSTP1 and PKCβII may represent a prognostic factor in case of an intensified anthracycline-based chemotherapy with immunotherapy. Moreover, our results suggest that intensified immunochemotherapy could affect the role of bcl2, ABCB1, GSTP1 and TopoIIa in predicting tumor response. These results and others from related studies may help to identify gene profiles useful for selecting patients eligible for more intensified or personalized chemotherapy. Prospective larger studies are warranted. Supported by a grant from Associazione Giacomo Onlus, Castiglioncello (LI). Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2010 ◽  
Vol 00 (04) ◽  
pp. 75
Author(s):  
Umberto Vitolo ◽  
Annalisa Chiappella ◽  
Chiara Frairia ◽  
Barbara Botto ◽  
◽  
...  

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common type of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. The International Prognostic Index, gene profiling and early positron-emission tomography (PET) evaluation are important prognostic factors, each with a different role in predicting outcome. The addition of rituximab to standard chemotherapy – cyclophosphamide, doxorubicine, vincristine and prednisone (CHOP) – improved the outcome in elderly newly diagnosed DLBCL patients and in young patients with favourable prognostic profiles. The best treatment of young poorprognosis patients affected by DLBCL is controversial. Several phase II trials have demonstrated that the addition of rituximab to dose-dense chemotherapy CHOP14 or the addition of rituximab to high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) with peripheral stem cell transplantation were feasible and effective. The question of whether rituximab–HDC may be more effective compared with rituximab–dose-dense chemotherapy is under investigation in randomised phase III trials by major international groups. Novel therapeutic options should be investigated to increase the outcome in poor-prognosis DLBCL patients, both as single agents and in combination with standard therapy. Radioimmunotherapy, immunomodulating agents (IMiDs), dacetuzumab (SGN-40), mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inihibitors, proteasome inhibitors, histone deacetylase inhibitors and anti-angiogenetic agents (anti-vascular endothelial growth factor [VEGF]) are under evaluation in clinical trials. The results will provide new insights into the treatment of DLBCL following poor prognosis.


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