Je. Lancet et al., AUTOTRANSPLANTATION FOR RELAPSED OR REFRACTORY HODGKINS-DISEASE - LONG-TERM FOLLOW-UP AND ANALYSIS OF PROGNOSTIC FACTORS, Bone marrow transplantation, 22(3), 1998, pp. 265-271
Seventy consecutive patients with refractory or relapsed Hodgkin's dis
ease who received high-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous stem c
ell rescue were analyzed to identify clinically relevant predictors of
long-term event-free survival. High-dose therapy consisted primarily
of carmustine (BCNU), etoposide, cytarabine and cyclophosphamide (BEAC
). The 5-year Kaplan-Meier event-free survival (EFS) for the entire co
hort was 32% (95% confidence interval; 18-45%) with a median follow-up
of 3.6 years (range 7 months-7.6 years). The most significant predict
or of improved survival was the presence of minimal disease (defined a
s all areas less than or equal to 2 cm) at the time of transplant: the
5 years EFS was 46 vs 10% for patients with bulky disease (P = 0.0002
). Other independent predictors identified by step-wise regression ana
lysis included the presence of non-refractory disease and the administ
ration of posttransplant involved-field radiotherapy (XRT). Treatment-
related mortality occurred in 13 of 70 patients: nine patients (13%) d
ied within the first 100 days, mainly from cardiopulmonary toxicity. H
owever, only one of 24 patients (4%) transplanted during the last 4.5
gears died from early treatment-related complications. While high-dose
therapy followed by autotransplantation led to long-term EFS of 50% f
or patients with favorable prognostic factors, a substantial proportio
n of patients relapsed, indicating that new therapeutic strategies are
needed.