• Traitements

  • Combinaison de traitements localisés et systémiques

  • Lymphome

Dose-dense chemotherapy enables elimination of RT for majority of low-risk pediatric Hodgkin lymphoma: PHC study HOD08

Mené sur 72 patients atteints d'un lymphome de Hodgkin de stade IA ou IIA à faible risque (âge : moins de 21 ans), cet essai multicentrique de phase II évalue l'intérêt, du point de vue du taux de réponse complète, d'une intensification de la dose de chimiothérapie (protocole Stanford V modifié) pour réduire l'utilisation de la radiothérapie

The Pediatric Hodgkin Consortium (PHC) hypothesized that increasing chemotherapeutic dose-density for Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) they could increase the complete response rate among favorable risk patients with HL after 8 weeks of Stanford V compared to 8 weeks of VAMP. This would translate to a decrease in patients who required radiation therapy (RT) to achieve a cure. HOD08 (NCT00846742) was a phase II multicenter investigator-initiated single- arm trial for patients ≤ 21 years of age with previously untreated stage IA or IIA HL without mediastinal bulk or extranodal disease extension and fewer than three sites of disease. Treatment consisted of a modified 8-week Stanford V regimen (vinblastine, doxorubicin, vincristine, bleomycin, mechlorethamine, etoposide and prednisone). Modified tailored field RT was administered only to disease sites achieving less than a CR. The primary objective was to increase CR rate after 8 weeks of chemotherapy by at least 20% (from an estimated 44% to 64%) compared to patients treated on a previous trial (HOD99). HOD08 enrolled 85 patients with HL and 72 were evaluable for the primary objective of whom 55 (76.4%) achieved a CR at all sites and did not receive RT. The 5-year event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) rates for the entire cohort were 87.4% (95% confidence interval (CI) 80.4%-95.0%) and 98.7% (95% CI 96.2%-100%), respectively. A dose-dense modified Stanford V regimen reduced the proportion of low-risk pediatric patients with HL who received RT while maintaining excellent outcomes. NCT00846742

Blood , résumé, 2026

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