Follow-up of the GHSG HD16 trial of PET-guided treatment in early-stage favorable Hodgkin lymphoma.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
January 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Fuchs, Michael | |
Jacob, Anne Sophie | |
Kaul, Helen | |
Kobe, Carsten | |
Kuhnert, Georg | |
Greil, Richard | |
Bröckelmann, Paul J | |
Topp, Max S | |
Just, Marianne | |
Hertenstein, Bernd | |
Soekler, Martin | |
Vogelhuber, Martin | |
Zijlstra, Josée M | |
Keller, Ulrich Bernd | |
Krause, Stefan W | |
Dührsen, Ulrich | |
Meissner, Julia | |
Viardot, Andreas | |
Eich, Hans-Theodor | |
Baues, Christian | |
Diehl, Volker | |
Rosenwald, Andreas | |
Buehnen, Ina | |
von Tresckow, Bastian | |
Dietlein, Markus | |
Borchmann, Peter | |
Engert, Andreas | |
Eichenauer, Dennis A |
Subject(s)
Series
Leukemia
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1476-5551
Publisher
Springer Nature
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
37845285
Description
The primary analysis of the GHSG HD16 trial indicated a significant loss of tumor control with PET-guided omission of radiotherapy (RT) in patients with early-stage favorable Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). This analysis reports long-term outcomes. Overall, 1150 patients aged 18-75 years with newly diagnosed early-stage favorable HL were randomized between standard combined-modality treatment (CMT) (2x ABVD followed by PET/CT [PET-2] and 20 Gy involved-field RT) and PET-2-guided treatment omitting RT in case of PET-2 negativity (Deauville score [DS] < 3). The study aimed at excluding inferiority of PET-2-guided treatment and assessing the prognostic impact of PET-2 in patients receiving CMT. At a median follow-up of 64 months, PET-2-negative patients had a 5-year progression-free survival (PFS) of 94.2% after CMT (n = 328) and 86.7% after ABVD alone (n = 300; HR = 2.05 [1.20-3.51]; p = 0.0072). 5-year OS was 98.3% and 98.8%, respectively (p = 0.14); 4/12 documented deaths were caused by second primary malignancies and only one by HL. Among patients assigned to CMT, 5-year PFS was better in PET-2-negative (n = 353; 94.0%) than in PET-2-positive patients (n = 340; 90.3%; p = 0.012). The difference was more pronounced when using DS4 as cut-off (DS 1-3: n = 571; 94.0% vs. DS ≥ 4: n = 122; 83.6%; p < 0.0001). Taken together, CMT should be considered standard treatment for early-stage favorable HL irrespective of the PET-2-result.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| s41375-023-02064-y.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.46 MB | published |