Abstract
Background. Peripheral T cell Lymphoma (PTCL) represent a major therapeutic challenge. In the previous Verona experience (
Results. Upfront patients: after 2 cycles of HyperCHiDAM, CR were 82.3% (14/17), early toxic deaths 0 (1 late toxic death occurred after SCT, due to CMV pneumonia), relapses 3/14. With a median follow-up of 21 months (3–90+), 11/17 (64.7%) patients are disease-free, 10 in first CR, 1 after rescue with stem cell transplant. Three of the CCR patients received HyperCHiDAM alone. Refractory/relapsed patients: CR were 5/16 (31.2%), CCR 4/16 (25%), with a median follow-up of 24 months (5–64+). The progression-free survival was significantly superior in upfront patients (p=0.036). Overall, toxic deaths were 3/33 (9%), 1/17 (5.8%) in upfront and 2/16 (12.5%) in refractory/relapsed patients. One patient had major cerebellar toxicity.
Conclusions. The intensive regimen HyperCHiDAM Verona897 is effective in inducing CR in aggressive PTCL, in particular as upfront therapy. The intensiveness of this treatment requires a careful supportive therapy. Following these results, HyperCHiDAM has been included in a national trial for treatment of PTCL, after 2 cycles of Campath-CHOP and before stem cell transplant (allogeneic or autologous depending on the availability of an HLA-matched sibling). The co-operative study is recruiting.
Author notes
Disclosure: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.