Publication Date:
2005-11-16
Description:
We examined the feasibility and efficacy of a salvage strategy of intensive re-induction chemotherapy followed by autologous or allogeneic hematopoetic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for children and adolescents suffering from relapsed anaplastic large cell lymphoma after BFM front-line therapy. From 4/1990 to 2/2003, 75 evaluable patients, median age at relapse 9.8 (range 0.4–22.2) years, were enrolled. The median time from the start of first therapy to failure was 7.1 (range 1–76) months. 17 pts suffered from progressive disease during front-line chemotherapy. ALK staining was positive in 57 pts, negative in 5 pts and not available in 13 pts. CD3 reactivity was positive in 24, negative in 42 pts and not available in 7 pts. 2 pts had B-cell ALCL. Salvage therapy consisted of 2 or 3, 5-day chemotherapy courses based upon dexa, vindesine, cytarabine, etoposide, MTX 5g/m2, cyclophosphamide/ifosfamide, vincristine, doxorubicine, intrathecal therapy followed by HSCT. Conditioning regimen: total body irradiation (2x2 Gy day −7,−6,−5), etoposide 40 mg/kg day -4, cyclophosphamide 60 mg/kg/d days −3,−2. Data were updated as of April 1st, 2004. With a median follow-up of 6.9 [0.8–13.2] years, the probability of survival at 3 years after first relapse is 54+6%. 28 pts died of lymphoma, 6 pts of toxicity. 41 pts are alive in ≥CR2. 21 pts received no salvage or chemotherapy only (2 TRM, 18 death of disease, 1 CR). 39 pts received autologous HSCT (21 CR, 2 TRM, 16 re-relapses [6 〉CR2]). 15 pts received allogeneic HSCT (10 CR, 3 TRM, 2 relapses). 3/17 pts with relapse during front-line survived compared to 37/57 pts who relapsed later (p
Print ISSN:
0006-4971
Electronic ISSN:
1528-0020
Topics:
Biology
,
Medicine
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