Secondary central nervous system (CNS) lymphoma (SCNSL) is a rare but clinically challenging scenario with historically disappointing outcomes. SCNSL refers to lymphoma that has spread into the CNS concurrently with systemic disease or CNS relapse during or after frontline immunochemotherapy, presenting with or without systemic lymphoma. Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) denotes the most common entity, but an increased incidence is observed in other histologies, such as Burkitt lymphoma and mantle-cell lymphoma. The incidence, timing in disease course, location, evidence supporting the use of CNS prophylaxis, and treatment pathways vary according to histology. No randomized data exist to delineate the best treatment approaches with current recommendations based on retrospective and single-arm studies. However, a regimen comprising immunochemotherapy, incorporating agents that cross the blood-brain barrier, followed by thiotepa-containing conditioning and autologous stem-cell transplant outlined in the international MARIETTA study demonstrated improvement in outcomes, representing a major accomplishment in the care of patients with DLBCL with SCNSL. Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T cell denotes a paradigm shift in the treatment of patients with systemic aggressive lymphomas, with emerging data also demonstrating efficacy without higher neurotoxicity in those with SCNSL. In this manuscript we discuss 5 clinical scenarios and review the evidence supporting our recommendations.

Secondary central nervous system (CNS) involvement by aggressive lymphoma (SCNSL) is an unusual but clinically challenging event historically associated with shorter survival. SCNSL refers to lymphoma spread to the CNS simultaneously with a new diagnosis or during or after treatment of systemic lymphoma. CNS relapse may occur isolated in the CNS or with concurrent systemic involvement.1 The incidence and timing for SCNSL varies based on histology. Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) accounts for the majority of cases across aggressive histologies, with an incidence of SCNSL of ∼4% to 6%.2-4 It usually occurs at first relapse within 1 year from diagnosis, with a median time of 5 months (interquartile range [IQR], 2-8).5 In contrast, this event occurs at diagnosis in ∼20% of patients with Burkitt lymphoma (BL).6 SCNSL in mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) is rare, accounting for 4%, typically occurring at relapse and beyond a year from diagnosis.7,8 The distribution of CNS involvement differs with the histological subtype, with more frequent parenchymal involvement in DLBCL, whereas leptomeningeal infiltration is more common in BL and MCL.4,6,7,9-11 

Clinical6,12-16 and biological7,17-20 factors have been associated with a higher risk of SCNSL. The CNS relapse risk in DLBCL is commonly estimated with the CNS International Prognosis Index (IPI) guiding the use of prophylaxis16; however, several recent studies have questioned the efficacy of this practice.4,9,21,22 Recent data suggest that MYC and BCL2 rearrangements only modestly increase the risk of CNS relapse in DLBCL if standard treatments are used.21,23 Two studies implementing multiplatform genomic profiling have refined molecular DLBCL subtypes demonstrating MYD88 L265P, CD79b, ETV6, PIM1, BTG1, and TBL1XR1 mutations in patients assigned to the C5 and MCD subtypes, which suggests the association of these signatures with CNS involvement.30,31 Histological subtype influences decisions to use systemic chemotherapy agents capable of crossing the brain-blood barrier (BBB; eg, high-dose methotrexate [MTX], cytarabine, ifosfamide, or thiotepa), intrathecal (IT) chemotherapy, or novel agents. The risk of SCNSL in BL is substantial with treatment regimens uniformly incorporating CNS-directed therapy.32,33 

SCNSL remains a therapeutic challenge commonly characterized by acute neurological symptoms requiring urgent treatment with agents that cross the BBB. Concurrent systemic disease, if/when present, requires rationalization of such therapies. The rarity of this entity as well as the frequent exclusion of patients with SCNSL in clinical trials limits prospective data, delineating optimal management of such patients. In this article, we discuss 5 clinical cases representing the most frequent scenarios of patients with SCNSL by DLBCL, BL, and MCL. Data to support such approaches as well as clinical recommendations are provided for each scenario.

Clinical case 1: systemic DLBCL with parenchymal CNS involvement at diagnosis

Presentation

A 48-year-old woman presented with left arm weakness and unintentional weight loss associated with neck lymphadenopathy. Positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) revealed widespread fluorodeoxyglucose-avid lymphadenopathy associated with liver and bone lesions. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with contrast showed an enhancing lesion in the right parietal lobe. Excisional neck and stereotactic brain needle biopsy specimen demonstrated non-germinal center B-cell-like (GCB) DLBCL with BCL6 rearrangement. Her Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status (PS) was 1, and serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) level elevated with an IPI of 3.

Discussion

The initial assessment of patients with CNS involvement requires PET/CT associated with neuroimaging, including MRI of the brain with contrast and spinal MRI for those with symptoms. Data supporting PET/CT to appropriately assess testicular involvement in patients with SCNSL is insufficient, and assessment with testicular ultrasound is recommended.1,34 Imaging features of leptomeningeal involvement include focal or diffuse abnormal enhancement of the leptomeninges, cranial nerves, or periventricular region.35 Single or multiple periventricular, uniformly enhancing lesions are characteristic of parenchymal involvement. Lumbar puncture for cytology and flow cytometry analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) remain as critical steps in the initial assessment of these patients and are recommended when there is no apparent clinical or contraindication on neuroimaging. Molecular analysis of immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangement and MYD88 L265P mutation are not essential but may help support the diagnosis.36-39 Circulating tumor DNA in the CSF and blood is an emerging biomarker in CNS lymphomas, with a potential to better identify, risk-stratify, and monitor response to treatment, although it is not yet readily available for clinical use.40-42 Initial workup should include confirmatory brain biopsy when feasible, commonly obtained by stereotactic biopsy. For clinical scenarios in which this is not possible, a diagnosis of SCNSL may be made if a systemic biopsy confirms high-grade lymphoma and MRI appearances are consistent with SCNSL, as determined by expert neuro-radiology review. Steroids may reduce or eliminate abnormal contrast enhancement in the MRI and disrupt cellular morphology, resulting in a nondiagnostic pathologic specimen. Thus, steroids should be postponed, if clinically feasible, until diagnostic workup concludes.43 Finally, ophthalmological examination is recommended to determine vitreoretinal involvement.44 Our approach in the diagnostic workup of patients with SCNSL is described in Figure 1.

Figure 1.

Diagnostic evaluation and treatment approach for patients with secondary CNS lymphoma. Secondary CNS involvement in aggressive lymphomas can be leptomeningeal or parenchymal, with symptoms related to disease location. Initial assessment includes neuroimaging and PET/CT associated with CSF evaluation (cytology and flow cytometry) and appropriate tissue biopsies. Testicular ultrasound is also required to complete the assessment for male patients. Treatment options comprise systemic immunochemotherapy with agents capable to cross the BBB and IT chemotherapy associated with ASCT, anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy, or BTKis, when appropriate.

Figure 1.

Diagnostic evaluation and treatment approach for patients with secondary CNS lymphoma. Secondary CNS involvement in aggressive lymphomas can be leptomeningeal or parenchymal, with symptoms related to disease location. Initial assessment includes neuroimaging and PET/CT associated with CSF evaluation (cytology and flow cytometry) and appropriate tissue biopsies. Testicular ultrasound is also required to complete the assessment for male patients. Treatment options comprise systemic immunochemotherapy with agents capable to cross the BBB and IT chemotherapy associated with ASCT, anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy, or BTKis, when appropriate.

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Patient-determined factors, such as age, ECOG PS, comorbidities, and overall neurological status influence the choice of frontline therapy. Expeditious control of CNS disease is crucial.45 Hence, patients presenting with acute neurological symptoms may benefit from the use of steroids with high-dose MTX with or without rituximab after a confirmatory biopsy. Frontline DLBCL regimens often include agents such as R-CHOP (rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) and dose-adjusted EPOCH-R (etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and rituximab), which do not cross the BBB; therefore, the incorporation of systemic agents with this capability are required.

The IELSG42 trial incorporating the MARIETTA regimen is the largest clinical trial focused on patients with SCNSL (Table 1).5 This international phase 2 study evaluated an intensive CNS-directed approach composed of 3 cycles of MATRix (rituximab, high-dose MTX, cytarabine, and thiotepa), followed by 3 cycles of R-ICE (rituximab, ifosfamide, carboplatin, and etoposide) and consolidation with carmustine-thiotepa autologous stem-cell transplant (ASCT) for 77 patients with SCNSL (43% at diagnosis). The rationale to include MATRix for patients with SCNSL was based on the impressive results observed in the randomized phase 2 IELSG32 trial for patients with primary CNS lymphoma (PCNSL), for whom this regimen demonstrated better complete response (CR) rates than high-dose MTX and cytarabine with or without rituximab (49% vs 30% vs 23%, respectively).46,47 Superior progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) rates were also observed with MATRix. R-ICE is an effective regimen to control systemic lymphoma, with some data also supporting its use in CNS lymphoma.48-50 After MATRix-R-ICE, the overall response rate (ORR) was 65% with a CR of 39%. The 1-year PFS (study primary end point) was 58% across the entire study population, reaching 100% for those receiving consolidation with ASCT. Toxicity was largely hematologic with grade ≥3 neutropenia (61%), thrombocytopenia (60%), and anemia (35%). The treatment-related mortality of this regimen was 5%, predominantly secondary to sepsis.

Caveats of the MATRix-R-ICE-thiotepa-ASCT (MARIETTA) study include the lack of anthracyclines in the MATRix-R-ICE regimen and exclusion of patients aged >70 years and people living with HIV (PLWH). Anthracyclines have been a key component of frontline regimens in aggressive lymphomas, and the absence of this agent is a concern for treatment-naïve patients. However, this regimen allowed for disease debulking with up to 2 cycles of R-CHOP without decreasing the efficacy of this approach (2-year PFS of 89%). Furthermore, the main cause of death in this population is the lack of control of CNS disease; thus, such regimens that address this are recommended. Although the MARIETTA trial excluded PLWH, a retrospective study demonstrated the feasibility of using the MATRix regimen for these patients.51 The same analysis showed poorer tolerability and inferior outcome for patients aged >70 years, highlighting the need for alternative strategies for older patients.

The National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines suggest systemic high-dose MTX with or without IT chemotherapy in combination with R-CHOP for patients with concomitant systemic and CNS lymphoma.52 The combination of high-dose MTX with R-CHOP (MR-CHOP) was evaluated in a small clinical trial including 7 patients with PCNSL.53 Patients received high-dose MTX, rituximab, and prednisone on day 1, with successive administration of CHOP backbone on day 3. Subsequently, patients underwent high-dose chemotherapy with ASCT. MR-CHOP demonstrated an ORR of 100% with a CR of 86%. Adverse events were mainly hematologic. Several retrospective studies (n = 21-60) analyzed outcomes with MR-CHOP–like regimens in SCNSL, reporting an ORR range from 66% to 80% and a CR from 57% to 68%.54-58 Consolidation with ASCT was commonly associated with an improved 3-year PFS (75% vs 26%; P = .001) and OS (75% vs 29%; P = .002).54 Presence of active CNS lymphoma before ASCT has been consistently associated with worse outcomes54,59,60; however, the use of thiotepa-based regimens demonstrated similar outcomes between patients achieving partial responses (CNS or systemic) and those in CR before ASCT.61 

Data from 10 patients with exclusively leptomeningeal SCNSL evaluating the dose-dense R-CODOX-M (rituximab, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, and high-dose MTX)/R-IVAC (rituximab, ifosfamide, etoposide, and high-dose cytarabine) regimen for patients with high IPI DLBCL demonstrated a 2-year PFS of 70%.27 Most common nonhematologic grade ≥3 toxicities included infections (71%), mucositis (32%), and febrile neutropenia (18%). Importantly, patients with an ECOG PS of 3 and age ≥50 years experienced higher early treatment discontinuation, including 5 treatment-related deaths, underscoring the need for caution in this population. Furthermore, high-dose MTX was delivered over 24 hours in the original protocol. The regimen has been revised at many centers, administering MTX over a 3-hour period because better BBB penetration has been demonstrated and is regularly recommended in PCNSL protocols.47,62,63 Contrary to MARIETTA and MR-CHOP regimens in which thiotepa-based ASCT consolidation is a key component, the role of this approach after R-CODOX-M/R-IVAC has not been evaluated. Finally, several studies have confirmed the feasibility of intensive regimens for PLWH.51,64,65 Hence, effective treatment strategies should always be considered for those receiving appropriate combination antiretroviral therapy.

Guided decision-making

MARIETTA regimen and MR-CHOP represent appropriate options for patients aged <70 years. For those treated with MR-CHOP who have adequate renal function (creatinine clearance [CrCl] ≥ 40 mL/min),66 we recommend at least 3 g/m2 of systemic MTX delivered over 3 hours,67,68 followed by thiotepa-based ASCT consolidation for responders (Figure 2). MR-CHOP also emerges as an option and consideration of consolidation, with dose-modified thiotepa–conditioned ASCT for older patients.69 However, close monitoring for toxicity, dose adjustment based on CrCl before each cycle, and possible drug omissions may be required for this population.

Figure 2.

Treatment approach for 3 possible clinical scenarios of secondary CNS involvement by DLBCL. PR, partial response.

Figure 2.

Treatment approach for 3 possible clinical scenarios of secondary CNS involvement by DLBCL. PR, partial response.

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Recommendation

The patient received 1 cycle of debulking R-CHOP, followed by 3 cycles of MATRix and R-ICE. After developing neutropenic fever with the first course of MATRix, 1 dose of cytarabine (fourth dose) was omitted for subsequent cycles. The patient achieved systemic and CNS CR, proceeding with thiotepa-containing conditioning and ASCT, achieving an ongoing remission 26 months after diagnosis.

Clinical case 2: DLBCL with CNS relapse without systemic disease

Presentation

A 52-year-old woman presented with a pathological fracture of the left ankle, and a surgical bone biopsy helped confirm GC-DLBCL. Staging PET/CT demonstrated fluorodeoxyglucose-avid paranasal, liver, and left ankle lesions associated with pelvic lymphadenopathy. Brain MRI with contrast and CSF assessment showed normal results. Serum LDH level was elevated, with an ECOG PS of 2 and IPI and CNS-IPI scores of 4. She achieved CR on PET/CT after 6 cycles of R-CHOP and CNS prophylaxis with IT chemotherapy and 2 cycles of high-dose MTX. Three months after finishing therapy, the patient developed acute-onset left sided weakness. Brain MRI showed an enhancing lesion in the right basal ganglia, with stereotactic biopsy confirming CNS DLBCL relapse, without systemic lesion on PET/CT.

Discussion

CNS recurrence in DLBCL usually occurs during or within a few months of completing frontline therapy, suggesting subclinical disease at diagnosis.10 The addition of rituximab to frontline regimens appears to have reduced the risk of CNS relapse.3,70-73 MTX-based therapies, including R-MPV (rituximab, MTX, procarbazine, and vincristine), MTR (MTX, temozolomide, and rituximab), and MATRix have demonstrated high efficacy in PCNSL, with CR rates >60%.74,75 Furthermore, the use of these regimens followed by ASCT as consolidation of frontline therapy or in the relapse setting is associated with durable remissions.76-82 Similar results were also observed in patients with CNS relapse of aggressive lymphomas.61,83 Korfel et al reported a 2-year time-to-treatment failure of 58%, with the median OS not reached, after induction chemotherapy followed by carmustine-thiotepa-ASCT (n = 30).25 Grade ≥3 toxicity was largely hematologic, with 1 death occurring during treatment. The MARIETTA trial enrolled patients with isolated CNS relapse, reporting better survival than those with systemic and CNS relapse, as described recently.61 Although the outcome in the MARIETTA trial for this group of patients was inferior to those with CNS-systemic disease at initial diagnosis, the numbers were small (n = 15 [20%]).5 

CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell represents a paradigm shift in the treatment of aggressive lymphomas; however, because of concerns about potential severe immune effector cell–associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS), patients with SCNSL were excluded from the ZUMA-1 and JULIET studies.84,85 Subsequent small series (n = 5-9) reported CR rates from 55% to 60%, with a single case of grade 4 ICANS after axicabtagene ciloleucel (axi-cel).86,87 Studies in acute lymphoblastic leukemia demonstrated CAR T-cell trafficking, expansion, and persistence into the CSF supporting the use of this approach in SCNSL.88-90 Consequently, Frigault et al investigated tisagenlecleucel (tisa-cel) in 12 patients with relapsed/refractory (r/r) PCNSL.91 All required bridging therapy to address symptomatic disease after leukapheresis. Grade 1 cytokine release syndrome (CRS) occurred in 7 (58%) and ICANS in 6 (50%) patients, with a single case of grade 3 associated with peak CAR T-cell expansion. Encouraging efficacy was observed in this study, with an ORR of 58% and a CR of 50%. CAR T-cell advancement into the CSF was observed in all patients and higher levels of CAR transgene RNA in the CSF of those achieving CR. From a retrospective series in SCNSL, responses appear better with axi-cel (ORR of 86% with all responders achieving CR) than with tisa-cel (ORR of 50% with a CR rate of 25%), although neurotoxicity (grade 3 ICANS, 37.5%) rates were higher.92,93 

Genomic interrogation of patients with PCNSL determined frequent 9p24.1 alterations, attracting interest in checkpoint inhibitors.94 Single-agent nivolumab showed encouraging efficacy in a small cohort of patients with r/r PCNSL and primary testicular lymphoma with CNS relapse, but this was not replicated in a multicenter trial.95,96 Furthermore, checkpoint inhibitors have failed to demonstrate significant activity in systemic DLBCL, questioning its use in SCNSL.97,98 Other novel agents have also been evaluated for this population. Lenalidomide in combination with rituximab demonstrated a CR rate of 33% among 6 patients with SCNSL.99 Similar results were observed in PCNSL (n = 34), with a CR rate of 35% but a median PFS of only 3.9 months, underscoring the limited efficacy of this combination.100 The Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitors (BTKis) ibrutinib and zanubrutinib have demonstrated encouraging preliminary activity in PCNSL and SCNSL, with responses >67%; however, durability with single-agent ibrutinib was also limited (<6 months).28,101-103 In a response-adapted approach, temozolomide, etoposide, liposomal doxorubicin, dexamethasone, ibrutinib, and rituximab demonstrated encouraging results in SCNSL, particularly for those with CD10 tumors (1-year PFS 50.5% vs 15.4%; P = .03).29 

Clinical decision-making

For patients with isolated CNS relapse of DLBCL, the MATRix regimen (with/without R-ICE), MTR, and R-MPV have demonstrated excellent results and should be considered standard approaches. Rituximab with high-dose MTX combination therapy is an appropriate alternative, especially for older patients. Consistent with our recommendation in case 1, we favor the use of MTX with a dose >3 g/m2 for older patients with normal CrCl.81 Those patients with responsive disease should be considered for consolidation with thiotepa-ASCT, if appropriate. For patients with residual CNS disease after ASCT or disease progression during treatment, whole-brain radiation therapy may be considered because it is a valuable option with the potential to improve outcomes. Further data are advocated for CAR T-cell therapy and BTKi/lenalidomide-containing approaches.

Recommendation

The patient received 8 cycles of MTR without related toxicity. She achieved CR, proceeding with thiotepa-containing conditioning and ASCT, remaining in ongoing remission for 3 years.

Clinical case 3: relapsed DLBCL with concomitant systemic and CNS disease after frontline therapy

Presentation

A 59-year-old man with prior history of stage II non-GCB DLBCL treated with 6 cycles of R-CHOP presented with new abdominal lymphadenopathy associated with headache and left visual field deficit 4 months after the end of therapy. Brain MRI demonstrated a right parieto-occipital enhancing lesion, with stereotactic biopsy confirming DLBCL relapse.

Discussion

Patients with early concomitant relapse of SCNSL remain a therapeutic challenge, with worse outcomes compared with those with isolated CNS relapse.61 In this setting, CNS involvement is more commonly characterized by leptomeningeal involvement, and CNS progression during frontline therapy is associated with even shorter survival.104 Patients with concomitant CNS and systemic relapse in MARIETTA study achieved lower response (ORR = 43% with a CR rate of 32%) and survival rates (2 year PFS, 14%) than those in other subgroups.5 

Contrary to the ZUMA-1 and JULIET studies,84,85 the TRANSCEND trial treated 7 patients with SCNSL, demonstrating the feasibility of CAR T-cell in this scenario (Table 2).105 The randomized TRANSFORM trial allowed for the enrollment of patients with SCNSL; however, only 1 patient was enrolled in the lisocabtagene maraleucel (liso-cel) cohort.110 For patients with SCNSL, with and without concomitant systemic disease, CAR T-cell therapy does not seem to be associated with increased risk of neurotoxicity.108,111 Across all CAR T-cell products, patients with SCNSL demonstrated an incidence of CRS of 72% (grade ≥3, 11%) and ICANS of 48% (grade ≥3, 26%). In the registrational trials, axi-cel recorded higher rates of CRS and ICANS than tisa-cel and liso-cel.111 Furthermore, bridging strategies can be challenging and may include radiation therapy techniques, and evaluation of long-term neurocognitive outcomes of this approach are awaited.107 In a postapproval analysis, patients with and without SCNSL treated with axi-cel achieved similar response (CR at 12 months, 50% vs 65%; P = .210) and survival rates (12-month PFS rate, 44% vs 47%, respectively; P = .230).106,112 Furthermore, CAR T-cell therapy appears efficacious in both parenchymal and leptomeningeal disease.108 Limited data support the use of allogeneic-SCT in SCNSL, although a retrospective analysis (n = 20) reported a median PFS of 3.8 years but was associated with a 4-year nonrelapse mortality rate of 30%.113 

For patients with concomitant systemic and CNS lymphoma relapse, CAR T-cell is emerging as an approach capable of overcoming the dismal historically reported outcomes. Axi-cel and liso-cel are presently approved for refractory DLBCL or relapse within 12 months of frontline therapy, although patients with SCNSL were either excluded or poorly represented in the pivotal randomized trials ZUMA-7 and TRANSFORM.

Clinical decision-making

Immunochemotherapy regimens have not been associated with significant survival benefit, yet CAR T-cell therapy appears effective in this scenario. For the treatment of concomitant systemic and CNS relapse, we recommend CAR T-cell therapy, if accessible. In cases in which CAR T-cell is not an option, we favor the use of MARIETTA regimen.

Recommendation

High-dose MTX (3.5 g/m2) and cytarabine were initiated as a bridge to CAR T-cell therapy. He subsequently received axi-cel with CRS grade 2 and ICANS grade 1. PET/CT on day +30 demonstrated CR and no evidence of disease on brain MRI or CSF. The patient remains in ongoing systemic and CNS remission 6 months after CAR T-cell therapy.

Clinical case 4: BL associated with CNS involvement at diagnosis

Presentation

A 36-year-old man was evaluated for severe back pain and hypoesthesia of the chin compatible with mental nerve infiltration. Workup demonstrated widespread lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly associated with serum LDH level >3 times upper limit of normal. Lymph node and bone marrow biopsies demonstrated involvement by BL, and CSF analysis confirmed leptomeningeal involvement. The patient was diagnosed with HIV infection with a CD4 count of 400/μL and initiated combination antiretroviral therapy. His ECOG PS was 1 (BL-IPI score = 2).

Discussion

BL is a malignancy associated with a substantial risk of SCNSL and affinity for leptomeninges. At diagnosis, ∼20% to 30% of the patients demonstrate CNS disease.6,114 Historical literature reports a risk of CNS relapse of up to 50% without CNS prophylaxis.115,116 Therefore, contemporary immunochemotherapy regimens regularly incorporate CNS prophylaxis, decreasing this risk to ∼6%.6 SCNSL is a high-risk factor in BL despite the use of modern regimens and universally occurs within the first year from diagnosis.6,114,117 Risk factors associated with SCNSL are HIV infection, elevated LDH level, poor ECOG PS, ≥2 extranodal sites, and bone marrow involvement.2,6 Presence of SCNSL represents an independent prognostic factor for shorter survival, without significant differences between parenchymal and leptomeningeal disease. Common factors associated with CNS relapse after frontline therapy are advanced-stage disease and prior CNS involvement.

The treatment landscape of BL can be classified into high-intensity immunochemotherapy regimens with systemic CNS-penetrating agents and IT chemotherapy, such as R-CODOX-M/R-IVAC and hyper-CVAD-R (hyperfractionated cyclophosphamide, vincristine, adriamycin, and dexamethasone with rituximab alternating with high-dose MTX and cytarabine), and the low-intensity regimen dose-adjusted EPOCH-R (Table 3). The latter provides CNS prophylaxis by IT MTX, with both intensity approaches recommending an enhanced CNS-directed therapy in the presence of SCNSL.32,122 Prospective single-arm studies have demonstrated the ability of high-intensity immunochemotherapy regimens to appropriately address SCNSL.118,119,122 The incidence of CNS relapse with dose-adjusted EPOCH-R in clinical trials is 2%.32,120 However, patients with parenchymal CNS disease were not enrolled into clinical trials evaluating this approach, and those with baseline leptomeningeal disease experienced significantly shorter 4-year event-free survival (45.5% vs 90%; P = .0004).

The use of dose-adjusted EPOCH-R compared with high-intensity regimens is an attractive strategy aiming to decrease toxicity. The Dutch-Belgian Hemato-Oncology Cooperative Group (HOVON) and Swiss Group for Clinical Cancer Research (SAKK) study compared R-CODOX-M/R-IVAC with dose-adjusted EPOCH-R, and although the study closed early, they have reported similar 2-year OS rates but higher toxicity in the R-CODOX-M/R-IVAC arm.123 This study also excluded patients with baseline CNS involvement; therefore, prospective studies have not addressed whether dose-adjusted EPOCH-R addresses SCNSL similar to high-intensity regimens. Furthermore, in a large retrospective study, dose-adjusted EPOCH-R was associated with higher risk (13%; subhazard ratio = 3.6) of CNS relapse than high-intensity regimens (4%; P < .001).6 

Achievement of CR in BL is strongly associated with survival, and patients with r/r disease have a dismal prognosis independent of salvage approach, and no standard second-line regimen exists.64,124,125 Emerging data demonstrated encouraging efficacy of CAR T-cell therapy for pediatric patients with SCNSL, demonstrating an 18-month PFS of 60%.126 The ZUMA-25 study (NCT05537766) is currently enrolling patients with r/r BL and will provide data on the efficacy of CAR T-cell in this setting; however, this study excludes patients with SCNSL.

Clinical decision-making

We suggest the use of high-intensity immunochemotherapy regimens with systemic CNS-penetrating agents for patients with SCNSL in BL. We favor R-CODOX-M/R-IVAC over hyper-CVAD-R based on retrospective data reporting lower treatment-related mortality.124 

Recommendation

The patient initiated immunochemotherapy with R-CODOX-M/R-IVAC and appropriate IT chemotherapy schedule. He is in an ongoing remission for 24 months.

Clinical case 5: MCL with isolated CNS relapse

Presentation

A 52-year-old man with a diagnosis of stage IV MCL characterized by bone marrow involvement, widespread lymphadenopathy, and associated weight loss received alternating R-CHOP with rituximab, dexamethasone, cytarabine, and cisplatin (R-DHAP) followed by ASCT and rituximab maintenance. The patient relapsed 3 years later with cervical lymphadenopathy, confirmed upon biopsy, and without evidence of TP53 mutation. He initiated second-line treatment with bendamustine and rituximab. He remained in remission for 11 months, when he developed an intractable headache associated with unstable gait. Brain MRI demonstrated leptomeningeal enhancement, with CSF flow cytometry–positive results for neoplastic B-cell population compatible with MCL.

Discussion

SCNSL in MCL is a rare event commonly occurring at relapse with predominant leptomeningeal involvement. Factors associated with higher risk for SCNSL are blastoid histology, advanced-stage, B-symptoms, elevated LDH level, ECOG PS ≥ 2, high MCL International Prognostic Index (MIPI) score, and Ki67 ≥ 30.7,17,127 No standard therapy exists for MCL with SCNSL, but as observed in systemic MCL, ibrutinib also demonstrates activity in CNS disease.128,129 In a retrospective study including 88 patients, ibrutinib at 560 mg daily was associated with better response (ORR 78% with a CR rate of 46% vs ORR 46% with a CR rate of 21%; P = .031) and survival rates (median PFS, 13.1 vs 3 months; P = .009) than those with BBB-penetrating chemotherapy.8 The addition of IT chemotherapy did not translate into better survival, irrespective of treatment approach. Despite the success of ibrutinib, multiple mechanisms of resistance have been described, including the emergence of C481S-BTK mutation. Data from noncovalent BTKis are awaited in this setting. Selective BTK degraders represent a novel approach to overcome emergent resistance mutations. These compounds possess the capability to degrade wild-type and C481S-BTK mutation in preclinical models, and some agents are capable of penetrating the BBB, with activity described in CNS lymphomas.130,131 Clinical trials testing selective BTK degraders in CNS lymphomas are ongoing, and these compounds may represent an option for patients progressing with ibrutinib in the future. In MCL, similar to DLBCL, the ZUMA-2 trial led to the approval of brexucabtagene autoleucel, but patients with SCNSL were excluded.132 The role of CAR T-cell therapy in this setting remains unclear; however, a postapproval study demonstrated a CR rate of 75% without shorter PFS or higher grade ≥3 neurotoxicity in 16 patients with SCNSL.133 

Clinical decision-making

For patients with SCNSL by MCL, we favor the use of ibrutinib over immunochemotherapy regimens. For those progressing with ibrutinib, enrollment to BTK degraders or CAR T-cell clinical trials emerge as an attractive option.

Outcome

The patient initiated ibrutinib 560 mg daily, remaining in ongoing remission for 8 months.

SCNSL is a serious event associated with shorter survival regardless of histology. For those with concomitant systemic and CNS DLBCL relapse, the prognosis remains especially unsatisfactory. The treatment of patients with SCNSL has improved considerably with the development of more effective therapies, such as the MARIETTA regimen, demonstrating improved outcomes for patients with secondary CNS at diagnosis and relapse. CAR T-cell therapy represents a major advance in the treatment of r/r aggressive lymphomas with recent data also demonstrating efficacy in treating CNS lymphoma; however, durability of response remains to be established. Furthermore, immunochemotherapy followed by thiotepa-based ASCT demonstrated durable remissions, highlighting the need for randomized data exhibiting a survival benefit before CAR T-cell therapy becomes the new standard-of-care. Regimens incorporating systemic agents capable of penetrating the BBB better serve patients with BL presenting with SCNSL. However, outcomes remain unsatisfactory representing an unmet need in the field. In contrast, the efficacy of immunochemotherapy appears limited for patients with SCNSL involvement by MCL, with improved outcomes with BTKis. Currently, there are no prospective data supporting the use of CD3 × CD20 bispecific antibodies in SCNSL.134-136 Future clinical trials assessing novel agents in aggressive lymphomas should regularly include those with SCNSL to expand the treatment landscape for a population with limited treatment options with the aim of improving outcomes.

Figures 1 and 2 were created with BioRender.com.

J.P.A. is supported by the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center National Cancer Institute core grant (P30CA240139), Peykoff Initiative from the Lymphoma Research Foundation, the Dwoskin Family Foundation, and the US Department of Defense (grant CA220385). L.N. is supported by a Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Career Development Program grant (2322-19).

The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Cancer Institute or US Department of Defense.

Contribution: J.P.A., L.N., and K.C. wrote, edited, and approved the manuscript.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: J.P.A. provided consultancy for ADC Therapeutics, AbbVie, and Genentech; received research funding from ADC Therapeutics; and had an immediate family member serve on the advisory boards of Servier and Forma Therapeutics. L.N. has consulted for Ono Pharmaceutical, Brave Bio, Genmab, and Kite/Gilead; has received clinical trial research support from Bristol Myers Squibb, Ono, Merck, Kazia, and AstraZeneca; and delivered continuing medical education lectures for Oakstone Medical Publishing and Neurology Audio Digest. K.C. has played a consulting/advisory role for Roche, Takeda, Celgene, Atara, Gilead, Kite, Janssen, AbbVie, and Incyte; served on speakers bureaus for Roche, Takeda, Kite, Gilead, and Incyte; and received conference/travel support from Roche, Takeda, Kite, Janssen, and Bristol Myers Squibb.

Correspondence: Juan Pablo Alderuccio, Division of Hematology, Department of Medicine, Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, 1475 NW 12th Ave, Miami, FL 33136; e-mail: jalderuccio@med.miami.edu.

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Author notes

All authors contributed equally to this work.

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