Mature results of the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center risk-adapted transplantation strategy in mantle cell lymphoma

Constantine S. Tam(St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne), Roland L. Bassett(Cancer Research And Biostatistics), Celina Ledesma(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Martin Körbling(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Amin Alousi(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Chitra Hosing(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Partow Kebraei(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Robyn K. Harrell(Cancer Research And Biostatistics), Gabriela Rondón(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Sergio Giralt(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Paolo Anderlini(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Uday Popat(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Barbara Pro(Lymphoma Research Foundation), Barry I. Samuels, Frederick Hagemeister(Lymphoma Research Foundation), L. Jeffrey Medeiros(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Richard E. Champlin(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), Issa F. Khouri(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom))
Blood
January 23, 2009
Cited by 192

Abstract

In this study, we analyzed the long-term outcome of a risk-adapted transplantation strategy for mantle cell lymphoma in 121 patients enrolled in sequential transplantation protocols. Notable developments over the 17-year study period were the addition of rituximab to chemotherapy and preparative regimens and the advent of nonmyeloablative allogeneic stem cell transplantation (NST). In the autologous transplantation group (n = 86), rituximab resulted in a marked improvement in progression-free survival for patients who received a transplant in their first remission (where a plateau emerged at 3-8 years) but did not change the outcomes for patients who received a transplant beyond their first remission. In the NST group, composed entirely of patients who received a transplant beyond their first remission, durable remissions also emerged in progression-free survival at 5 to 9 years. The major determinants of disease control after NST were the use of a peripheral blood stem cell graft and donor chimerism of at least 95%, whereas the major determinant of death was immunosuppression for chronic graft-versus-host disease. Our results show that long-term disease-free survival in mantle cell lymphoma is possible after rituximab-containing autologous transplantation for patients in first remission and after NST for patients with relapsed or refractory disease.


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