ORLANDO-Presentations at
the 43rd Annual Meeting of the
American Society of Hematology
(ASH) showed increased survival for
patients with aggressive and indolent
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
(NHL) who received the anti-CD20
monoclonal antibody rituximab(Drug information on rituximab)
(Rituxan) in addition to standard
CHOP chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin(Drug information on doxorubicin), vincristine, prednisone(Drug information on prednisone)).
At a median of 24 months follow-
up, the Groupe d'Etude des
Lymphomes de l'Adulte (GELA)
phase III study showed a 23% relative
increase in overall survival in
patients with aggressive NHL treated
with rituximab plus CHOP vs
CHOP alone (abstract 3025). In a
phase II indolent NHL study of
rituximab plus CHOP, progression-
free survival has not been reached at
more than 5.4 years of follow-up
(abstract 2519).
In the GELA study, 399 previously
untreated patients age 60 and
older with stage II to IV diffuse large
B-cell lymphomas were randomized
to receive either standard CHOP
alone every 3 weeks for eight cycles
or rituximab 375 mg/m2 plus
CHOP. Rituximab was administered
on day 1 of each cycle.
Two-year event-free survival improved
significantly from 37% in
the CHOP alone arm to 57% in the
combination arm, a relative increase
of 54%. Event-free survival was defined
as ongoing survival without
events, including disease progression
or relapse, death, or initiation
of new alternative treatment.
Overall survival at 2 years was
increased from 57% in the CHOP
alone arm to 70% in the rituximab/
CHOP arm, a relative increase of
23%. "This is the first new drug
combination in more than 20 years
to show an improvement in overall
survival for patients with aggressive
NHL," said principal investigator
Bertrand Coiffier, MD, of the Hospices
Civils de Lyon, France.
At 18 months, complete response
rate increased from 64% in the
CHOP alone arm to 77% in the
combination arm, a relative increase
of 20% (P = .007).
Apart from grade 3-4 first-infusion
events, experienced by approximately
10% of patients in the
rituximab/CHOP arm, toxicity was
not increased by the addition of
rituximab to CHOP chemotherapy,
Dr. Coiffier said.
Indolent NHL
Myron Czuczman, MD, chief of
the Division of Lymphoma/Myeloma,
Roswell Park Cancer Institute, reported
updated results of a multi-institution
single-arm phase II clinical trial
of rituximab plus CHOP in new and
previously treated patients with advanced-
stage indolent B-cell NHL.
The study, initiated in 1994, was
the first clinical trial of rituximab in
combination with CHOP. It showed
the safety and efficacy of the combination
in low-grade NHL and enabled
progression to further phase
II and III trials.
CHOP was administered at standard
doses every 3 weeks for six cycles
along with six infusions of
Overall survival
was 70% in the
rituximab/
CHOP arm
rituximab 375 mg/m2. Forty patients
were enrolled; nine had received previous
treatment. The median age was
48 (range, 29 to 77 years); 88% were
stage III/IV at diagnosis. Of the 40
patients enrolled, 38 were treated
and 35 completed all planned therapy.
All treated patients responded,
and the complete response rate
among the 35 patients who completed
treatment was 63%.
Among the 38 evaluable patients,
the new analysis found that median
duration of response had not been
reached at 5.3 years of follow-up
(range, 2.9 to 85.8 months); 21 patients
have an ongoing remission.
Median progression-free survival
had not been reached at follow-up
of more than 5.4 years (range, 4.5 to
86.3 months) and exceeds that reported
with CHOP alone, he said.
Eight patients were bcl-2 posi-
tive at baseline. Post-treatment, one
patient remained positive and is in
complete remission at 68+ months.
Three patients converted to and remain
negative, and all are in complete
remission at 71+, 79+, and 84+
months of follow-up. Four patients
converted to negative and then reverted
to positive; three are in complete
remission, and one progressed
at 29 months of follow-up.
Conversion of bcl-2 from positive
to negative in blood and bone
marrow indicates clearance of minimal
residual disease, Dr. Czuczman
commented.
"The prolonged progression-free
survival is noteworthy and provides
important data for this therapy," Dr.
Czuczman said. "These results suggest
that Rituxan helps to sensitize
cancer cells to chemotherapy, improving
patient benefit without adding
significant toxicity."
