From April 1972 to December 1976, 334 patients with Hodgkin's disease, CS IA-IIIB, were prospectively treated with combined chemotherapy and radiation. The 166 stages IA and II2A were clinically staged only; the 168 other patients were randomized to clinical or pathological staging. All patients received 3 or 6 cycles of MOPP followed by Mantle field with or without mediastinal irradiation and/or inverted Y or lumbo-aortic field according to initial stage, presentation and protocol. At completion of therapy, 317 patients were in complete remission. Twenty-six patients relapsed and 43 died including 5 with leukemia and 6 with infection. Overall 12-year survival and relapse-free rates are 86.6 +/- 3.08 per cent and 91.5 +/- 3.2 per cent respectively (IA: 95.3 and 95.3 per cent; IIA: 87.8 and 92.1 per cent; IIIA: 83.3 and 100 per cent; IB, IIB: 81.7 and 89.2 per cent; IIIB: 67.8 and 73.7 per cent). The randomized comparison between clinical staging plus 6 cycles of MOPP and laparotomy staging plus 3 cycles of MOPP in final stage II3+A, IB, IIB patients showed no significant 12-year survival differences (90.8 versus 85.6 per cent). With this combined modality treatment policy, high survival rates are obtained using only 3 cycles of MOPP and radiotherapy in CS IA, II2A and in PS II3+, IB, IIB. Laparotomy staging may be unnecessary if 6 cycles of MOPP are employed before irradiation in CS IIA, IB, IIB disease and if 3 cycles of MOPP are followed by irradiation in CSIA and II2A disease. Mediastinal irradiation can be avoided in patients with supradiaphragmatic disease without mediastinal involvement.
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