FDG-PET after two cycles of chemotherapy predicts treatment failure and progression-free survival in Hodgkin lymphoma

Martin Hutchings(Copenhagen University Hospital), Annika Loft(Aarhus University Hospital), Mads Hansen(Aarhus University Hospital), Lars Møller Pedersen(Aarhus University Hospital), Thora Buhl(Aarhus University Hospital), Jesper Jurlander(Aarhus University Hospital), Simon Buus(Aarhus University Hospital), Susanne Keiding(Aarhus University Hospital), Francesco d’Amore(Aarhus University Hospital), A. M. Boesen(Aarhus University Hospital), Anne Kiil Berthelsen(Aarhus University Hospital), Lena Specht(Aarhus University Hospital)
Blood
September 9, 2005
Cited by 720Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Risk-adapted lymphoma treatment requires early and accurate assessment of prognosis. This investigation prospectively assessed the value of positron emission tomography with 2-[18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG-PET) after two cycles of chemotherapy for prediction of progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). Seventy-seven consecutive, newly diagnosed patients underwent FDG-PET at staging, after two and four cycles of chemotherapy, and after completion of chemotherapy. Median follow-up was 23 months. After two cycles of chemotherapy, 61 patients had negative FDG-PET scans and 16 patients had positive scans. Eleven of 16 FDG-PET-positive patients progressed and 2 died. Three of 61 FDG-PET-negative patients progressed; all were alive at latest follow-up. Survival analyses showed strong associations between early FDG-PET after two cycles and PFS (P < .001) and OS (P < .01). For prediction of PFS, interim FDG-PET was as accurate after two cycles as later during treatment and superior to computerized tomography (CT) at all times. In regression analyses, early interim FDG-PET was stronger than established prognostic factors. Other significant prognostic factors were stage and extranodal disease. Early interim FDG-PET is a strong and independent predictor of PFS in HL. A positive early interim FDG-PET is highly predictive of progression in patients with advanced-stage or extranodal disease.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis