2020
DOI: 10.1111/bjh.16451
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Induction therapy with the MATRix regimen in patients with newly diagnosed primary diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma of the central nervous system – an international study of feasibility and efficacy in routine clinical practice

Abstract: Summary The MATRix chemoimmunotherapy regimen is highly effective in patients with newly diagnosed primary diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma of the central nervous system (PCNSL). However, nothing is known about its feasibility and efficacy in everyday practice, where patients are more often older/frailer than those enrolled in clinical trials. We conducted a retrospective study addressing tolerability/efficacy of MATRix in 156 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed PCNSL treated outside a clinical trial. Media… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…al. although patients treated within the IELSG43 trial tended to perform better than patients meeting exclusion criteria who were treated with MATRix in clinical routine, this difference was not statistically significant (Figure ) 23 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…al. although patients treated within the IELSG43 trial tended to perform better than patients meeting exclusion criteria who were treated with MATRix in clinical routine, this difference was not statistically significant (Figure ) 23 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Still, therapy of PCNSL in the real‐world setting remains challenging because tumors in the CNS cause severe disturbances of cognitive function and performance status and since many elderly patients are not eligible for clinical trials. A multicenter retrospective analysis of induction therapy with MATRix in routine clinical practice showed significantly worse outcomes for patients not fulfilling the inclusion criteria of the IELSG32 trial 23 . Another single‐center retrospective analysis comparing patients treated with 6 cycles of MTX (4 g/m 2 ) ± whole brain radiotherapy ± ifosfamide in the G‐PCNSL‐SG‐1‐ with patients from clinical routine showed similar trends 24,25 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Historically, the prognosis is poor, with a five-year disease-specific survival of 17% [4]. However, with the introduction of newer treatment modalities, this has improved, as a recent study reports overall survival of 65% at two years [9]. Survival analysis is primarily reported for B-cell PCNSL.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Treatment‐related mortality is around 4–7% with MATRix, with most treatment‐related deaths occurring during the first treatment cycle (Ferreri et al , ; Schorb et al , 2017b). Within the IELSG32 study (median age 57 years), the relative dose intensity of cytarabine and thiotepa during remission induction was 78% and 76% respectively, with protocol‐defined reductions predominantly for haematological toxicity.…”
Section: Remission Inductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the IELSG32 study (median age 57 years), the relative dose intensity of cytarabine and thiotepa during remission induction was 78% and 76% respectively, with protocol‐defined reductions predominantly for haematological toxicity. In a recent real world study of outcomes with MATRix chemotherapy (median age 61 years), 23 of 88 included patients would not have met IELSG32 eligibility criteria due to age, performance status or co‐morbidities (Schorb et al , 2017b). Consequently, chemotherapy modifications were more frequent (40–50%) but survival rates were similar to those in IELSG32, with 2‐year OS of 64%.…”
Section: Remission Inductionmentioning
confidence: 99%