Abstract
Objective: In this pilot study we evaluated the clinical activity, toxicity and mobilizing capacity of a new short-course (bi-weekly), dose intensive, cytoreductive/mobilizing salvage regimen (R-GIFOX) combining the cross-synergistic agents Gemcitabine (G), Ifosfamide (Ifo), Oxaliplatin (Ox) and Rituximab (R), in patients with relapsed and refractory CD20+ NHL. Based on the predicted clinical activity, tolerability and synergy among drugs, the R-GIFOX regimen may offer an effective and less toxic alternative to Cisplatin/ARA-C-based salvage regimens, also for patients aged or unfit for high-dose procedures.
Patients and methods: Patients were scheduled to receive three courses of therapy followed by mobilization and ASCT or three more courses if ineligible for ASCT. Therapy was delivered on a compassionate basis after written informed consent. R-GIFOX consisted of R (375 mg/m2, d 1), G (1000 mg/m2, d 2), Ox (130 mg/m2, d 3) and Ifo (5 g/m2, d 3), as a 24-hour single infusion in patients aged ≤ 65 years, or fractionated over 3 days (dd 3–5) in older patients. Treatment was given every two weeks with G-CSF support (5 mcg/kg/day, dd 6–11; 10 mcg/kg/day at the 3rd course for stem cells mobilization). Responses were evaluated after three courses by the integrated FDG-PET/IWC criteria, and reassessed at the end of the entire program.
Results: Fourteen patients (median age 63 years, range 37–78 years) with relapsed (n = 9) or primary progressive (n = 5) aggressive [diffuse large cell (n=7), mantle cell (n=4), follicular G3b (n=3)], advanced (stage IV = 71%), poor risk (IPI 3–5 = 50%; median number of previous therapy=2, r 1–4) NHL, were accrued. Forty-nine total courses were delivered (median 4, range 1–6); thirteen patients completed at least 3 courses of therapy and were evaluable for response. Actual dose intensity of the first 3 courses was 81%, 83.5%, and 86.5% for G, Ifo and Ox, respectively. CTCAE v3.0 G3/G4 thrombocytopenia was present in 26 % of courses, G3/G4 neutropenia in 22%; febrile neutropenia and infections in 8% and 6% of cycles, respectively. The ORR assessed after three courses of R-GIFOX was 77%, with 7 complete responses (54%; CR=5; CRu=2) and 3 partial; CRu converted to CR at BM biopsy after 6 courses. According to age, the ORR was 67% (4 CR, 2 PR) and 80% (3 CR, 1 PR) for patients aged ≤ 65 years and those older, respectively. According to disease status, the ORR was 40% (1 CR, 1 PR) and 89% (6 CR, 2 PR) for primary refractory and relapsed patients, respectively. Among CRs no patient has relapsed at a median time of 5 months (range, 2+ − 10+). Effective CD34+ cell mobilization was obtained in 4 out of 6 eligible patients and 2 already received ASCT. Failure free survival was 79.6%. In mantle cell lymphoma 2 CRs and 1 PR were obtained, including 2 molecular remissions (BM, PB).
Conclusions: Based on the results of this pilot study, R-GIFOX was feasible, tolerable, effective and able to mobilize peripheral stem cells in patients with reccurrent aggressive NHL. It enabled the achievement of effective dose-intensities and high response rates also in the older patients. Finally, the R-GIFOX regimen showed clinical activity also in ’difficult’ histotypes such as mantle cell lymphomas.
Author notes
Corresponding author
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal