The hypothesis that the "down-regulated" gonad is less vulnerable to the effects of cytotoxic chemotherapy for advanced Hodgkin's disease has been investigated. Thirty men and eighteen women were randomly allocated to receive an agonist analogue of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone prior to, and for the duration of, cytotoxic chemotherapy. Buserelin (d-Ser-[TBU]6 LHRH ethylamide) was prescribed in two different dosage schedules to twenty men, and in a single dosage schedule to eight women. A standard gonadotrophin-releasing hormone test (GnRH 100 micrograms) was performed 1 week prior to and on day 1 of each cycle of chemotherapy. In all patients peak luteinizing hormone responses to GnRH were suppressed throughout treatment. The higher of the two dosage schedules used in the men caused more effective suppression of luteinizing hormone, and both regimens led to an initial suppression of peak follicle-stimulating hormone responses to GnRH, which was not maintained. At follow-up assessment up to 3 years from the completion of treatment, all men treated with buserelin were profoundly oligospermic and four of the eight women were amenorrhoeic. All ten male controls were profoundly oligospermic, and six of nine female controls were amenorrhoeic. In the dosages and schedules investigated, buserelin was ineffective in conserving fertility.
One hundred forty-eight patients with newly diagnosed follicular lymphoma were treated over a 12-year period. Twenty-two patients received radiotherapy for stage I and II disease, followed by adjuvant chemotherapy in 14 patients. One hundred thirteen were treated at presentation with short courses of chemotherapy, most often with single-agent chlorambucil for bulky stage II and stages III and IV disease. Thirteen patients were managed expectantly until there was evidence of disease progression. The median survival was 9 years. Patients treated with radiotherapy for stage I and II disease had an 83% relapse-free survival, but those with bulky stage II or stages III and IV disease treated with chemotherapy pursued a remitting and relapsing course with a 70% response rate at initial and subsequent retreatments, but a median duration of remission of 4 years in stage III and 1 year in stage IV disease (P = .041). Patients were observed in relapse and retreatment was administered as appropriate, once every 33 months on average. Poor prognosis patients could be identified by a combination of the presentation characteristics: B symptoms, hepatosplenomegaly, anemia, and abnormal liver function. These factors predicted a poor response to treatment and correlated with a short survival. Histologic subgroups were not associated with differences in survival, but transformation to a diffuse high-grade lymphoma was observed in 23 of the 72 patients (32%) at risk, with a median follow-up of 6 years and 6 months, and was associated with a very poor prognosis. The present treatment strategy has proved successful for most patients with localized disease and those older patients with indolent small volume disseminated follicular lymphoma. New approaches are being investigated for the younger poor prognosis patients.
These results imply that M + P is superior for patients with an intrinsically good prognosis and inferior for those patients with a poor prognosis. If reliable prognostic factors can be established for this disease, they could be used to select therapy for individual patients.
Myeloma patients who are able to receive HDM plus ABMT following conventional chemotherapy achieve a high proportion of CRs, which may be associated with prolonged survival.
Summary. High-dose chemotherapy (melphalan) with autologous marrow stem cell support (AMSCS) results in high response rates in multiple myeloma (MM), with up to 50% of patients achieving complete remission. However, these remissions are generally not durable. As the cytokine interferon alpha has been shown to prolong partial response following conventional chemotherapy, this trial was conducted to evaluate its role following high-dose chemotherapy. 85 patients were randomly assigned to maintenance treatment with interferon alpha, 3 × 10 6 units/m 2 subcutaneously three times weekly until relapse or no further treatment following recovery from high-dose chemotherapy (melphalan 140-200 mg/m 2 or busulphan 16 mg/kg) combined with AMSCS. At 5·8 years following the accrual of the last patient in this trial, 38 patients had died, 17 in the interferon arm and 21 in the control arm. The median progression-free survival (PFS) in the 42 patients randomized to interferon alpha was 46 months versus 27 months in the controls. Both overall survival and PFS, which were highly significant at median follow-up of 52 months, have now ceased to be significant, because most patients have ultimately succumbed to their disease. Interferon was tolerated by the majority of patients with very good compliance. Toxicity consisted mainly of flu-like symptoms and malaise which were usually self-limiting. The results of such a pilot study should be carefully interpreted and the benefits of interferon should be confirmed in larger multicentre studies in the setting of minimal residual disease following autologous transplantation.
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