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Query: UMLS:C0019829 (
Hodgkin's disease
)
30,247
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Between October 1985 and October 1989, 75 previously untreated patients with stage III and IV non
Hodgkin's lymphoma
, large cell type, were treated with an alternating weekly chemotherapy regimen including the following drugs: week 1:
Doxorubicin
, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, bleomycin, and intrathecal (i.th.) methotrexate and cytarabine; week 2: Methotrexate with leucovorin rescue; week 3:
Doxorubicin
, ifosfamide with mesna, etoposide, and i.th. methotrexate and cytarabine; week 4: Methotrexate with leucovorin rescue. Complete responders after three cycles according to this schedule (12 weeks) were given 18 gys cranial irradiation and randomized between one additional cycle or three monthly CHOP (consolidation treatment). Among 66 evaluable patients, 53 achieved a complete remission (CR 80 per cent) and seven a partial remission (11 per cent). There were six failures, and nine early deaths during the initial phase, mostly due to septic problems. Forty-one of the 53 CR patients (77.3 per cent) have remained free of disease with a median follow-up of 15 months (1-49). Eight of the 12 relapses occurred during the first year, the four others at 13, 14, 16 and 38 months respectively. The 2-year survival was 63 per cent for the whole group, and 77 per cent for the CR group. No difference has been observed up until now between the two groups with different consolidation treatment. Therefore, this protocol seems to be able to produce a high rate of complete and durable remission. The analysis of prognostic factors suggests that some high-risk patients should be considered for intensification therapy with the support of autologous bone marrow transplantation.
...
PMID:Multicentre combined chemotherapy protocol for large cell advanced non Hodgkin's lymphoma. 172 Jul 59
The Pediatric Oncology Group compared two regimens that employed involved field radiotherapy 3,500 rad and either MOPP + Bleo or A-COPP chemotherapy, given in a sandwich fashion, as treatments for stage III Hodgkin's disease in children under the age of 18 years. Eighty-four surgically staged children from the United States and Mexico who had been randomly assigned to treatment during the period from July 1976 through October 1982 were evaluated. Unfavorable disease characteristics were distributed equally between the treatment groups. The percentages of children achieving complete remission by regimen were 84% for MOPP + Bleo and 92% for A-COPP. For those continuing in complete remission, the percentages were 71% for MOPP + Bleo and 72% for A-COPP. For those surviving 9 years, the percentage was 84% for MOPP + Bleo and 85% for A-COPP. The presence of low abdominal disease at diagnosis did not adversely influence response to therapy or survival. All deaths among MOPP + Bleo cases occurred within 4 years of study entry; 3 late deaths in A-COPP cases at 8-10 years were due to osteosarcoma, cardiopathy, and recurrent
Hodgkin's disease
. The preferred treatment regimen for future use cannot be determined until the cardiotoxicity of
Adriamycin
is eliminated by the development of drug delivery techniques that reduce cardiotoxicity or anthracycline congeners that are not cardiotoxic.
...
PMID:Comparative effectiveness of two combined modality regimens in the treatment of surgical stage III Hodgkin's disease in children. An 8-year follow-up study by the Pediatric Oncology Group. 178 72
Twenty patients with relapsed
Hodgkin's disease
have been treated with a weekly regimen of chemotherapy (VAPEC-B) comprising
Adriamycin
35 mg/m2 i.v. weeks 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11; cyclophosphamide 350 mg/m2 i.v. weeks 1, 5, 9; etoposide 100 mg/m2 p.o. daily for 5 days, weeks 3, 7, 11; vincristine 1.4 mg/m2 i.v. weeks 2, 4, 6, 8, 10; bleomycin 10 mg/m2 i.v. weeks 2, 6, 10 and prednisolone 50 mg p.o. daily weeks 1-5, 25 mg p.o. daily weeks 6-11. All had previously received an
Adriamycin
containing combination and in nine cases this was for relapse following MVPP. In all but one case relapse occurred less than one year after the completion of previous treatment and in 14 cases, disease recurred within 24 weeks. Thirteen patients had extra-nodal involvement. Following six weeks of treatment 14 patients had responded (6 CR; 4 CR, uncertain; 4 PR), four had stable disease, one had progressed and one had died of sepsis. Fourteen patients proceeded to high dose cyclophosphamide and BCNU with autologous bone marrow rescue and seven of these are progression free between 4 and 156 weeks later. High dose therapy was not possible in five patients, three of whom achieved CR. Of these, two (one with bulky nodal disease and skin infiltration; one with extensive bone marrow involvement) are alive and relapse free without further treatment at 95 and 114 weeks. Overall, the regimen was well tolerated but haematological toxicity was moderate or severe in ten patients and four were admitted to hospital for treatment of suspected or confirmed septicaemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Treatment of relapsed Hodgkin's disease using a weekly chemotherapy of short duration: results of a pilot study in 20 patients. 191 58
The clinical significance of immunophenotyping of the non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas (NHL) is still controversial. Therefore, we evaluated the prognostic significance of T- and B-cell phenotype in 102 patients having diffuse non-Hodgkin's lymphoma who had been treated in a majority with
Adriamycin
-containing regimens. The significant differences in pretreatment clinical variables between the two patient groups were the higher frequency of markedly elevated LDH (greater than or equal to X 2 normal) and the lower frequency of decreased cholesterol level in B-NHL (p less than 0.05). Patients with B-NHL had a higher complete remission (CR) rate (77% vs 59%: p = NS), a significantly better overall survival (62% vs 34% at 3-years: p less than 0.05) and longer duration of remission for all patients (50% vs 27% at 3-years: p less than 0.05). Among forty-five patients with stages III and IV disease of nodal origin (excluding those with diffuse small cleaved histology), the B-cell group was associated with a better prognosis; a higher CR rate (68% vs 41%: p = NS) and a longer duration of remission for all patients (44% vs 12% at 2-years: p less than 0.05). Furthermore, for patients with T-cell phenotype, the primary site was the only prognostic factor; the patients whose disease originated from Waldeyer's ring, nasal cavity, and paranasal sinuses, achieved a better CR rate (92% vs 40%: p less than 0.05) and a longer duration of remission for all patients (48% vs 15% at 2-years: p less than 0.05). We conclude that advanced T-cell lymphoma of nodal origin is a subgroup of patients with very poor prognosis if treated with less intensive chemotherapeutic regimens.
...
PMID:[Clinical significance of immunophenotype in diffuse non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: with special emphasis on the clinical characteristics of T-cell lymphoma]. 206 1
Testicular function was evaluated in 75 boys after treatment for
Hodgkin's disease
with involved-field or extended-field irradiation and stage-dependent chemotherapy (vincristine, prednisone, procarbazine,
Adriamycin
[doxorubicin], and cyclophosphamide [OPPA/COPP]). Although pubertal development and testosterone levels were normal in all patients, 18 of 75 (24.0%) had elevated basal and 65/74 (87.8%) elevated stimulated luteinizing hormone (LH) levels, demonstrating chemotherapy-induced Leydig cell damage. In addition, there was a 40.5% and 53.4% incidence of elevated basal and stimulated FSH values, respectively, indicating severe impairment of spermatogenesis as confirmed by azoospermia in four patients. Testicular dysfunction was observed in patients treated before as well as during puberty. The incidence of elevated basal follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and LH values was significantly higher in patients who had received higher cumulative doses of chemotherapy, i.e., 28.9% and 13.2% with two OPPA, 45.5% and 36.4% with two OPPA/two COPP, and 62.5% and 43.8% with two OPPA/four to six COPP, respectively. Chemotherapy for
Hodgkin's disease
causes a high and apparently dose-related incidence of testicular dysfunction in prepubertal as well as in pubertal boys affecting Leydig cell function as well as spermatogenesis. Circumstantial evidence indicates that procarbazine is the major gonadotoxic agent involved.
...
PMID:The effects of different cumulative doses of chemotherapy on testicular function. Results in 75 patients treated for Hodgkin's disease during childhood or adolescence. 210 84
Dose intensity defined as the amount of drug used per unit time, expressed as mg/m2/week, was reported to be a significant determinant of antitumor activity of single or combined drugs in cancer chemotherapy. We formulated a 12 week high dose intensity chemotherapy (CAMBO-VIP) for the treatment of advanced non
Hodgkin's lymphoma
with aggressive histology. The treatment consists of weekly alternate administration of myelosuppressive and non-myelosuppressive agents.
Doxorubicin
was administered every other week in combination with either cyclophosphamide, etoposide or ifosfamide. On the weeks in between, non-myelosuppressive vincristine was given with either methotrexate with leucovorin rescue or bleomycin. Prednisolone was given for the first and the last 4 weeks. Dose reduction and treatment delay were kept minimal for the purpose not lowering dose intensity. As of February 1990, 32 patients (pts), median age 52, entered the study, 29 of whom completed the treatment. There were 3 incomplete cases, in which 2 were due to interruption of the treatment at 5 and 6 weeks, respectively and 1 due to a half dose given because of the old age. CR was obtained in 29 pts (90.6%). Relapse occurred in 3 (10.4%) with the median follow-up of 12 months. Two year disease-free survival (DFS) was estimated to be 76.0% for all the patients and 83.9% for CR patients. Toxicity of CAMBO-VIP was moderate with no chemotherapeutic death. Myelosuppression was severe but of short duration, requiring virtually no dose reduction. Treatment delay was 3 days, median, and maximally 28 days. The average actual dose intensity calculated from given amount of drugs and treatment duration was as high as 90% of the protocol dose intensity. Dose intensity of CAMBO-VIP protocol is highest, equaling to that of MACOP-B, among representative series of reported lymphoma protocols. A highly significant correlation was observed between 9 drug relative dose intensity and DFS of the patients treated with each protocol. Significance of dose intensity as an independent prognostic factor, however, should be determined, by a prospective carefully designed stratified randomized studies.
...
PMID:[Alternating non-cross resistant multi-drug chemotherapy against malignant lymphoma (CAMBO-VIP)--consideration of the dose intensity]. 222 23
Forty-seven previously untreated patients with intermediate- or high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma were treated with four courses of a regimen that consisted of high-dose (120 mg/m2)
Adriamycin
(doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH), vincristine (2 mg), cytarabine (3 gm/m2), and dexamethasone (50 mg intravenously [IV] on day 1 and 20 mg/day orally on days 2 to 5) (AVAD), which was administered every 3 to 4 weeks. The median age of the patients was 58 years; 72% were Ann Arbor stage IV, 49% had "B" symptoms, 62% had masses larger than 7 cm, 40% had masses at least 10 cm in diameter, and 49% had serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) greater than 250 U/L. Overall, 72% of the patients (89% of diffuse large-cell lymphoma [DLCL] patients) attained complete (CR) or probable complete responses (PCR), and relapses occurred in 32%. There were no episodes of clinical congestive heart failure, but one patient developed recurrent ventricular arrhythmias. Fever during neutropenia occurred with 65% of treatment courses. Three deaths were attributed primarily to complications of therapy. The lymphoma-free survival of all entered patients is 51% (24 of 47), with a follow-up of 30 to 67 months (median, 58 months). These results confirm that high CR/PCR and long-term survival rates can be achieved in patients with aggressive histologies of non-
Hodgkin
's lymphomas, even in groups with poor prognostic factors, using high-dose anthracycline-containing chemotherapy regimens delivered over a short period of time. However, the apparently higher relapse rate in comparison to our previous study leads us to speculate that consolidation with noncross-resistant agents may be helpful in increasing even further the cure rate in this group of patients.
...
PMID:Chemotherapy of intermediate- and high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphomas with a high-dose doxorubicin-containing regimen. 229 68
Aggressive non
Hodgkin lymphoma
(NHL) occurs frequently in the elderly and because of drug related toxicity treatment remains controversial. Seventy-two patients over 65 years (68-83 y, median 73 y) with intermediate and high grade NHL were retrospectively studied. We found 22 cases of high grade NHL and diffuse large cell the most frequent type encountered (54%). Seven patients had stage I, 8 stage II, 14 stage III, and 43 stage IV disease. Treatment for localized disease was radiotherapy or chlorambucil, and disseminated stage patients were treated by three different chemotherapy regimens, group I: classic dose chemotherapy without
Adriamycin
(15 pts), group II: same type of regimen with
Adriamycin
(45 mg/m2) (42 pts), group III: high dose chemotherapy with
Adriamycin
(75 mg/m2) (8 pts). Overall complete response (CR) rate was 53% without significant differences between treatment groups. Median duration of survival was 38 months and estimated 5 year survival at 40%. Following complete remission, 15 patients (40%) relapsed. Thirty-seven patients have died, 6 from toxic deaths (5 toxic deaths in group II and III), 28 from NHL, and 3 from other diseases. Toxicity was greater among patients treated with
Adriamycin
. In a multivariate analysis, the attainment of complete remission was the only factor influencing survival. Our data shows that classical dose chemotherapy leads to the same CR rate and survival as more intensive regimens.
...
PMID:Aggressive non Hodgkin lymphoma in the elderly. A retrospective study of 72 patients with clinical features and treatment. 237 47
Seventy patients with advanced
Hodgkin's disease
, 54 with new disease, and 16 in first relapse after initial radiotherapy, have been treated with a seven-drug, 8-month program: MOPP (nitrogen mustard, vincristine, procarbazine, prednisone)/ABV (
Adriamycin
[Adria Laboratories of Canada, Mississauga, Ontario], bleomycin, vinblastine) hybrid. A single involved field of radiotherapy was given to selected partial responders after 6 months of chemotherapy. Forty-six of the 52 (88%) evaluable new-disease patients and 14 of the 16 (87%) evaluable patients with relapsing disease reached a complete response. The actuarial overall survival at 49 months for the patients with new disease was 90% (median follow-up from diagnosis was 27 months). For the patients with relapsing disease, the actuarial survival at 54 months was 79% (median follow-up from diagnosis was 27 months). The actuarial relapse-free survival at 41 months for complete responders was 93% for patients with new disease (median follow-up after treatment was 20 months) and 80% for those with relapsing disease (median follow-up after treatment was 27 months). Toxicity was moderate, with two treatment-related deaths and eight episodes of serious infection. These results compare favorably with the best results reported in the literature. Furthermore, they were achieved with a moderate level of toxicity, high drug delivery rates, and a relatively short duration of treatment. The efficacy and toxicity data of the MOPP/ABV hybrid program will now be evaluated in a prospectively randomized multicenter study.
...
PMID:MOPP/ABV hybrid program: combination chemotherapy based on early introduction of seven effective drugs for advanced Hodgkin's disease. 241 81
A randomized clinical trial of combination chemotherapy for patients who relapsed following primary radiation therapy for
Hodgkin's disease
was conducted from 1975 to 1981 by the Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB). One hundred thirteen patients were prospectively randomized to receive 12 cycles of either CVPP (CCNU, vinblastine, procarbazine, and prednisone), ABOS (bleomycin, vincristine [Oncovin; Lilly, Indianapolis], doxorubicin [
Adriamycin
, Adria Laboratories, Columbus, Ohio], and streptozotocin), or alternating cycles of CVPP and ABOS. The median length of observation for patients in this report is 4 years. Toxicities of the three treatment programs were primarily hematologic. Frequencies of complete response were 72% for CVPP, 70% for ABOS, and 82% for CVPP/ABOS (P = .37). Females and patients who had nodular sclerosing disease at initial diagnosis had significantly higher complete response rates. The 5-year disease-free survival for the complete responders was 55%; the 5-year overall survival was 60%. There were no significant differences among the treatments on disease-free survival (P = .78) or overall survival (P = .18). Age under 40 years was the only significant positive prognostic factor for disease-free survival (P = .095) and overall survival (P = .003). This study demonstrates no statistically significant advantage for alternating cycles of combination chemotherapy in affecting complete response frequency, disease-free survival, or overall survival as compared with therapy with CVPP or ABOS alone. However, the power to detect differences in these outcome parameters is somewhat limited by the sample sizes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Alternating cycles of combination chemotherapy for patients with recurrent Hodgkin's disease following radiotherapy. A prospectively randomized study by the Cancer and Leukemia Group B. 242 52
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