Affiliation:
1. From the Departments of Clinical Therapeutics, Internal Medicine, and the Second Department of Propedeutic Medicine, University of Athens School of Medicine; Department of Hematology, Sismanoglion Hospital; Department of Hematology, Metaxa Hospital; Department of Hematology, Evangelismos Hospital; Department of Hematology, Erikos Dynan Hospital; Department of Hematology, Genimata General Hospital; Department of Hematology, General Airforce Hospital, Athens; Department of Hematology, Theagenion Cancer...
Abstract
PurposeAlkylating agents and the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab are among appropriate choices for the primary treatment of symptomatic patients with Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM), and they induce at least a partial response in 30% to 50% of patients. To improve these results, we designed a phase II study that included previously untreated symptomatic patients with WM who received a combination of dexamethasone, rituximab, and cyclophosphamide (DRC).Patients and MethodsSeventy-two patients were treated with dexamethasone 20 mg intravenously followed by rituximab 375 mg/m2intravenously on day 1 and cyclophosphamide 100 mg/m2orally bid on days 1 to 5 (total dose, 1,000 mg/m2). This regimen was repeated every 21 days for 6 months. Patients' median age was 69 years and many had features of advanced disease such as anemia (57%), hypoalbuminemia (40%), and elevated serum beta2-microglobulin (43%).ResultsOn an intent-to-treat basis, 83% of patients (95% CI, 73% to 91%) achieved a response, including 7% complete, 67% partial, and 9% minor responses. The median time to response was 4.1 months. The 2-year progression-free survival rate for all patients was 67%; for patients who responded to DRC, it was 80%. The 2-year disease-specific survival rate was 90%. Treatment with DRC was well tolerated, with 9% of patients experiencing grade 3 or 4 neutropenia and approximately 20% of patients experiencing some form of toxicity related to rituximab.ConclusionOur large, multicenter trial showed that the non–stem-cell toxic DRC regimen is an active, well-tolerated treatment for symptomatic patients with WM.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
241 articles.
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