Risk of central nervous system versus systemic relapse in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma treated with R-CHOP: What should we focus on?

IF 14.6 2区 医学 Q1 HEMATOLOGY
HemaSphere Pub Date : 2025-09-09 DOI:10.1002/hem3.70201
Magdalena Klanova, Samuel Hricko, Michal Masar, Prokop Vodicka, David Salek, Natasa Kopalova, Petra Blahovcova, Daniela Kuruczova, Katerina Benesova, Jozef Michalka, Jan Koren, Pavel Klener, Andrea Janikova, Marek Trneny
{"title":"Risk of central nervous system versus systemic relapse in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma treated with R-CHOP: What should we focus on?","authors":"Magdalena Klanova,&nbsp;Samuel Hricko,&nbsp;Michal Masar,&nbsp;Prokop Vodicka,&nbsp;David Salek,&nbsp;Natasa Kopalova,&nbsp;Petra Blahovcova,&nbsp;Daniela Kuruczova,&nbsp;Katerina Benesova,&nbsp;Jozef Michalka,&nbsp;Jan Koren,&nbsp;Pavel Klener,&nbsp;Andrea Janikova,&nbsp;Marek Trneny","doi":"10.1002/hem3.70201","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common hematological malignancy in adults. Although clinical outcomes of patients with DLBCL have improved over the past two decades, a significant proportion of DLBCL patients remain at risk of lymphoma relapse/progression or death due to relapse.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span> Patients with high international prognostic index (IPI) or central nervous system IPI (CNS-IPI) scores face the greatest risks of systemic and CNS relapse.<span><sup>3-5</sup></span> The CNS-IPI model has been validated in numerous studies and is widely used in clinical practice to guide decisions regarding CNS prophylaxis.<span><sup>6-8</sup></span> However, the effectiveness of CNS prophylaxis has been repeatedly questioned in the recent retrospective studies focusing on both intrathecal (IT) and intravenous high-dose methotrexate (HD MTX).<span><sup>9-14</sup></span> There is a lack of robust, prospective clinical trials evaluating the impact of CNS prophylaxis on the incidence of CNS relapse. As such, CNS prophylaxis may still be considered for high-risk patients, in accordance with international guidelines (NCCN v5.2025). However, patients classified as high-risk by IPI or CNS-IPI are at risk of not only CNS relapses but also systemic relapses. The risk proportion of these two types of relapse in the same patient population has not been formally studied to date. To address this, we analyzed the competing risks of systemic versus CNS relapse in a real-world cohort of patients with DLBCL.</p><p>Using data from the prospective observational NiHiL project (NCT03199066), we identified consecutively diagnosed adult patients with histologically confirmed DLBCL not otherwise specified or DLBCL/high-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBL) with BCL2/MYC or BCL6 rearrangements, HGBL NOS, or T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma. Patients were diagnosed between January 2010 and December 2021 at two academic centers in the Czech Republic and were treated with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody plus CHOP chemotherapy as first-line therapy. Patients with biopsy-proven, treatment-naïve transformed indolent lymphoma (excluding Richter's transformation) were included. Patients with CNS involvement at diagnosis were excluded. Causes of death were uniformly categorized as CNS (±systemic) relapse-related, systemic relapse-related, first-line treatment toxicity-related, other, or unknown. Deaths were considered first-line treatment toxicity-related if they occurred during first-line therapy or shortly thereafter (up to Day +60 after the last treatment administration) and were attributed to treatment toxicity in the absence of progressive or refractory disease. Deaths occurring after second or subsequent lines of therapy were considered relapse-related (CNS ± systemic or systemic), unless there was clear documentation of a non-lymphoma-related cause unrelated to active disease or its treatment (e.g., unrelated comorbidity). In such cases, the cause of death was classified as <i>other</i> or <i>unknown</i>, depending on the available documentation. Statistical methods are described in Supporting Information.</p><p>A total of 1228 newly diagnosed DLBCL patients treated with curative-intent anti-CD20-CHOP were included. The median time in study for all patients was 5.64 years (range: 0.1–14.1). The median time in study for all living patients was 7.29 years (range: 1.4–14.1). Patient and disease characteristics are listed in Table S1. According to the CNS-IPI score (available in 1222 out of 1228 patients), 343 (28.1%), 541 (44.3%), and 338 (27.7%) patients were categorized as being at low (0–1), intermediate (2–3), and high risk (4–6) for developing CNS relapse, respectively. Overall, 300 (24.4%) patients received CNS prophylaxis with either HD-MTX, HD-AraC, IT chemotherapy, or combinations. Among CNS-IPI risk groups, 145 (42.9%) of high-risk, 109 (20.1%) of intermediate-risk, and 45 (13.1%) of low-risk patients received CNS prophylaxis. Full details are available in Table S1.</p><p>Overall, 321 (26.1%) out of 1228 patients developed lymphoma relapse; 48 of these occurred in the CNS (38 isolated CNS relapses, 10 simultaneous CNS and systemic relapses), whereas 273 lymphoma relapses occurred systemically. Within the low, intermediate, and high CNS-IPI, 7 (2.0%), 10 (1.8%), and 31 (9.2%) patients developed CNS (±systemic) relapse and 42 (12.2%), 121 (22.4%), and 108 (32.0%) patients developed systemic relapse, respectively (Table S2). In patients with any type of relapse, the median times to systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapse were 0.97 years (range: 0.1–13.1) and 0.99 years (range: 0.2–10.6), respectively. The time to systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapses differed between the CNS-IPI risk groups and is shown in Table S2. Consistent with prior retrospective studies, CNS prophylaxis had no impact on CNS relapse incidence in patients with high CNS-IPI scores (P = 0.82; Figure S1A,B).<span><sup>7, 9-14</sup></span> This result must be interpreted with caution due to the retrospective nature of the study and potential selection bias, particularly in patient selection for CNS prophylaxis. Moreover, the low incidence of CNS relapse in DLBCL limits the statistical power of the analysis.</p><p>In the entire cohort, the 5-year cumulative incidence of systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapse was 21.25% and 3.76%, respectively (Figure 1A). Across all CNS-IPI risk groups, there was a higher incidence of systemic as compared to CNS (±systemic) relapse. By CNS-IPI, the 5-year cumulative incidence of systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapse was 8.34% versus 1.6% in the low-risk group, 23.12% and 1.79% in the intermediate-risk group, and 31.99% and 9.45% in the high-risk group, respectively (Figures 1B–D and S2A,B). The IPI stratification provides a very similar incidence of systemic and CNS relapses as CNS-IPI (Figure S2C,D).</p><p>A detailed analysis of the main causes of death was performed in the entire DLBCL cohort and within the specific CNS-IPI risk groups. At the time of analysis, 429 (34.9%) out of 1228 patients had deceased. In the entire cohort, the most common cause of death was systemic lymphoma relapse (157 cases, 36.6%), followed by other causes of death (131, 30.5%), first-line treatment toxicity (37, 8.6%), and CNS (±systemic) relapse (33, 7.7%). The cause of death was unknown in 71 (16.6%) out of 429 patients. At the time of analysis, 57 (16.6%) out of 343 patients with low, 194 (35.9%) out of 541 patients with intermediate, and 176 (52.1%) out of 338 patients with high CNS-IPI had deceased. The causes of death within the CNS-IPI risk groups are shown in Table S3. CNS (±systemic) relapse was associated with significantly shorter post-relapse overall survival (OS) as compared to systemic relapse (P = 0.0003, Figure S3). Median OS after CNS (±systemic) and systemic relapse was 0.31 versus 1.04 years, respectively. In the entire cohort, the 5-year cumulative incidence of lymphoma-associated death was 16.8%, with 11.3%, 3.0%, and 2.5% of death due to systemic relapse, first-line treatment toxicity, and CNS (±systemic) relapse, respectively (Figure S4A,B). The 5-year cumulative incidences of death unrelated to lymphoma and unknown causes were 6.2% and 3.5%, respectively (Figure S4A,B). In the high CNS-IPI risk group, the 5-year cumulative incidence of lymphoma-associated death was 32.3%, with 20.2%, 5.3%, and 6.9% of death due to systemic relapse, first-line treatment-related toxicity, and CNS (±systemic) relapse, respectively. The 5-year cumulative incidence of death unrelated to lymphoma and unknown causes was 7.3% and 4.5%, respectively (Figure S4G,H). In patients with high CNS-IPI, systemic relapse was the leading cause of death, occurring more frequently than CNS relapse, with the majority of systemic relapse-related deaths taking place within the first 2.5 years following lymphoma diagnosis (Figure 2D).</p><p>These data highlight the key risk events in patients with DLBCL and may guide future treatment strategies. Our results show that patients with high CNS-IPI scores are at increased risk of both systemic and CNS relapse, and are often treated with CNS prophylaxis. We lack prospective studies demonstrating the benefit of CNS prophylaxis in reducing the risk of CNS relapse. Retrospective studies, including our findings, despite their limitations, have failed to show a clinically significant benefit of CNS prophylaxis.<span><sup>9-14</sup></span> Wilson et al. demonstrated that HD-MTX, administered either intercalated with R-CHOP (intercalated MTX [i-MTX]) or at the end of treatment (end of treatment MTX [EOT-MTX]), is associated with increased toxicity. Notably, i-MTX led to a higher risk of ≥ 7-day delays in R-CHOP cycles, which may compromise systemic disease control.<span><sup>15</sup></span> Results of this study demonstrate that patients with high CNS-IPI have a significantly higher risk of systemic relapse compared to CNS relapse, with systemic relapse being the leading cause of death in this population (Figures 1 and 2). These findings strongly support a treatment strategy focused on controlling systemic disease through the timely delivery of first-line therapy. Nonetheless, CNS relapse—although less common than systemic relapse—remains a serious therapeutic challenge, primarily due to the lack of effective treatment options, which contributes to its significantly inferior post-relapse survival. Prior studies have shown no difference in CNS relapse incidence between IT MTX and systemic HD-MTX, or between EOT-HD-MTX and i-HD-MTX.<span><sup>15, 16</sup></span> Accordingly, EOT-HD-MTX or IT MTX may be considered safer options in patients still deemed to benefit from CNS prophylaxis. Optimally, novel first-line regimens capable of simultaneously reducing both systemic and CNS relapse risks are needed to improve outcomes, particularly in patients with high CNS-IPI scores.</p><p><b>Magdalena Klanova</b>: Conceptualization; writing—original draft; investigation; funding acquisition; data curation; supervision; project administration. <b>Samuel Hricko</b>: Data curation; investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Michal Masar</b>: Data curation; investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>Prokop Vodicka</b>: Data curation; investigation; writing—review and editing. <b>David Salek</b>: Writing—review and editing; resources. <b>Natasa Kopalova</b>: Data curation. <b>Petra Blahovcova</b>: Formal analysis; writing—review and editing; visualization. <b>Daniela Kuruczova</b>: Formal analysis; writing—review and editing; visualization. <b>Katerina Benesova</b>: Resources; writing—review and editing. <b>Jozef Michalka</b>: Resources; writing—review and editing. <b>Jan Koren</b>: Writing—review and editing; resources. <b>Pavel Klener</b>: Writing—review and editing; resources. <b>Andrea Janikova</b>: Conceptualization; investigation; funding acquisition; resources; writing—review and editing. <b>Marek Trneny</b>: Conceptualization; funding acquisition; resources; writing—original draft; investigation; supervision.</p><p>The authors declare no conflicts of interest.</p><p>This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the General University Hospital in Prague (approval no. 40/22 Grant AZV VES) and the Ethics Committee of the University Hospital Brno (approval no. 44-220622/EK).</p><p>This study was supported by AZV NU23-03-00127 and NU21-03-00411 grants, by Charles University Hematology-Oncology Cooperatio Program, and research project BBMRI_CZ LM2023033.</p>","PeriodicalId":12982,"journal":{"name":"HemaSphere","volume":"9 9","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":14.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/hem3.70201","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"HemaSphere","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hem3.70201","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HEMATOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common hematological malignancy in adults. Although clinical outcomes of patients with DLBCL have improved over the past two decades, a significant proportion of DLBCL patients remain at risk of lymphoma relapse/progression or death due to relapse.1, 2 Patients with high international prognostic index (IPI) or central nervous system IPI (CNS-IPI) scores face the greatest risks of systemic and CNS relapse.3-5 The CNS-IPI model has been validated in numerous studies and is widely used in clinical practice to guide decisions regarding CNS prophylaxis.6-8 However, the effectiveness of CNS prophylaxis has been repeatedly questioned in the recent retrospective studies focusing on both intrathecal (IT) and intravenous high-dose methotrexate (HD MTX).9-14 There is a lack of robust, prospective clinical trials evaluating the impact of CNS prophylaxis on the incidence of CNS relapse. As such, CNS prophylaxis may still be considered for high-risk patients, in accordance with international guidelines (NCCN v5.2025). However, patients classified as high-risk by IPI or CNS-IPI are at risk of not only CNS relapses but also systemic relapses. The risk proportion of these two types of relapse in the same patient population has not been formally studied to date. To address this, we analyzed the competing risks of systemic versus CNS relapse in a real-world cohort of patients with DLBCL.

Using data from the prospective observational NiHiL project (NCT03199066), we identified consecutively diagnosed adult patients with histologically confirmed DLBCL not otherwise specified or DLBCL/high-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBL) with BCL2/MYC or BCL6 rearrangements, HGBL NOS, or T-cell/histiocyte-rich large B-cell lymphoma. Patients were diagnosed between January 2010 and December 2021 at two academic centers in the Czech Republic and were treated with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody plus CHOP chemotherapy as first-line therapy. Patients with biopsy-proven, treatment-naïve transformed indolent lymphoma (excluding Richter's transformation) were included. Patients with CNS involvement at diagnosis were excluded. Causes of death were uniformly categorized as CNS (±systemic) relapse-related, systemic relapse-related, first-line treatment toxicity-related, other, or unknown. Deaths were considered first-line treatment toxicity-related if they occurred during first-line therapy or shortly thereafter (up to Day +60 after the last treatment administration) and were attributed to treatment toxicity in the absence of progressive or refractory disease. Deaths occurring after second or subsequent lines of therapy were considered relapse-related (CNS ± systemic or systemic), unless there was clear documentation of a non-lymphoma-related cause unrelated to active disease or its treatment (e.g., unrelated comorbidity). In such cases, the cause of death was classified as other or unknown, depending on the available documentation. Statistical methods are described in Supporting Information.

A total of 1228 newly diagnosed DLBCL patients treated with curative-intent anti-CD20-CHOP were included. The median time in study for all patients was 5.64 years (range: 0.1–14.1). The median time in study for all living patients was 7.29 years (range: 1.4–14.1). Patient and disease characteristics are listed in Table S1. According to the CNS-IPI score (available in 1222 out of 1228 patients), 343 (28.1%), 541 (44.3%), and 338 (27.7%) patients were categorized as being at low (0–1), intermediate (2–3), and high risk (4–6) for developing CNS relapse, respectively. Overall, 300 (24.4%) patients received CNS prophylaxis with either HD-MTX, HD-AraC, IT chemotherapy, or combinations. Among CNS-IPI risk groups, 145 (42.9%) of high-risk, 109 (20.1%) of intermediate-risk, and 45 (13.1%) of low-risk patients received CNS prophylaxis. Full details are available in Table S1.

Overall, 321 (26.1%) out of 1228 patients developed lymphoma relapse; 48 of these occurred in the CNS (38 isolated CNS relapses, 10 simultaneous CNS and systemic relapses), whereas 273 lymphoma relapses occurred systemically. Within the low, intermediate, and high CNS-IPI, 7 (2.0%), 10 (1.8%), and 31 (9.2%) patients developed CNS (±systemic) relapse and 42 (12.2%), 121 (22.4%), and 108 (32.0%) patients developed systemic relapse, respectively (Table S2). In patients with any type of relapse, the median times to systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapse were 0.97 years (range: 0.1–13.1) and 0.99 years (range: 0.2–10.6), respectively. The time to systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapses differed between the CNS-IPI risk groups and is shown in Table S2. Consistent with prior retrospective studies, CNS prophylaxis had no impact on CNS relapse incidence in patients with high CNS-IPI scores (P = 0.82; Figure S1A,B).7, 9-14 This result must be interpreted with caution due to the retrospective nature of the study and potential selection bias, particularly in patient selection for CNS prophylaxis. Moreover, the low incidence of CNS relapse in DLBCL limits the statistical power of the analysis.

In the entire cohort, the 5-year cumulative incidence of systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapse was 21.25% and 3.76%, respectively (Figure 1A). Across all CNS-IPI risk groups, there was a higher incidence of systemic as compared to CNS (±systemic) relapse. By CNS-IPI, the 5-year cumulative incidence of systemic and CNS (±systemic) relapse was 8.34% versus 1.6% in the low-risk group, 23.12% and 1.79% in the intermediate-risk group, and 31.99% and 9.45% in the high-risk group, respectively (Figures 1B–D and S2A,B). The IPI stratification provides a very similar incidence of systemic and CNS relapses as CNS-IPI (Figure S2C,D).

A detailed analysis of the main causes of death was performed in the entire DLBCL cohort and within the specific CNS-IPI risk groups. At the time of analysis, 429 (34.9%) out of 1228 patients had deceased. In the entire cohort, the most common cause of death was systemic lymphoma relapse (157 cases, 36.6%), followed by other causes of death (131, 30.5%), first-line treatment toxicity (37, 8.6%), and CNS (±systemic) relapse (33, 7.7%). The cause of death was unknown in 71 (16.6%) out of 429 patients. At the time of analysis, 57 (16.6%) out of 343 patients with low, 194 (35.9%) out of 541 patients with intermediate, and 176 (52.1%) out of 338 patients with high CNS-IPI had deceased. The causes of death within the CNS-IPI risk groups are shown in Table S3. CNS (±systemic) relapse was associated with significantly shorter post-relapse overall survival (OS) as compared to systemic relapse (P = 0.0003, Figure S3). Median OS after CNS (±systemic) and systemic relapse was 0.31 versus 1.04 years, respectively. In the entire cohort, the 5-year cumulative incidence of lymphoma-associated death was 16.8%, with 11.3%, 3.0%, and 2.5% of death due to systemic relapse, first-line treatment toxicity, and CNS (±systemic) relapse, respectively (Figure S4A,B). The 5-year cumulative incidences of death unrelated to lymphoma and unknown causes were 6.2% and 3.5%, respectively (Figure S4A,B). In the high CNS-IPI risk group, the 5-year cumulative incidence of lymphoma-associated death was 32.3%, with 20.2%, 5.3%, and 6.9% of death due to systemic relapse, first-line treatment-related toxicity, and CNS (±systemic) relapse, respectively. The 5-year cumulative incidence of death unrelated to lymphoma and unknown causes was 7.3% and 4.5%, respectively (Figure S4G,H). In patients with high CNS-IPI, systemic relapse was the leading cause of death, occurring more frequently than CNS relapse, with the majority of systemic relapse-related deaths taking place within the first 2.5 years following lymphoma diagnosis (Figure 2D).

These data highlight the key risk events in patients with DLBCL and may guide future treatment strategies. Our results show that patients with high CNS-IPI scores are at increased risk of both systemic and CNS relapse, and are often treated with CNS prophylaxis. We lack prospective studies demonstrating the benefit of CNS prophylaxis in reducing the risk of CNS relapse. Retrospective studies, including our findings, despite their limitations, have failed to show a clinically significant benefit of CNS prophylaxis.9-14 Wilson et al. demonstrated that HD-MTX, administered either intercalated with R-CHOP (intercalated MTX [i-MTX]) or at the end of treatment (end of treatment MTX [EOT-MTX]), is associated with increased toxicity. Notably, i-MTX led to a higher risk of ≥ 7-day delays in R-CHOP cycles, which may compromise systemic disease control.15 Results of this study demonstrate that patients with high CNS-IPI have a significantly higher risk of systemic relapse compared to CNS relapse, with systemic relapse being the leading cause of death in this population (Figures 1 and 2). These findings strongly support a treatment strategy focused on controlling systemic disease through the timely delivery of first-line therapy. Nonetheless, CNS relapse—although less common than systemic relapse—remains a serious therapeutic challenge, primarily due to the lack of effective treatment options, which contributes to its significantly inferior post-relapse survival. Prior studies have shown no difference in CNS relapse incidence between IT MTX and systemic HD-MTX, or between EOT-HD-MTX and i-HD-MTX.15, 16 Accordingly, EOT-HD-MTX or IT MTX may be considered safer options in patients still deemed to benefit from CNS prophylaxis. Optimally, novel first-line regimens capable of simultaneously reducing both systemic and CNS relapse risks are needed to improve outcomes, particularly in patients with high CNS-IPI scores.

Magdalena Klanova: Conceptualization; writing—original draft; investigation; funding acquisition; data curation; supervision; project administration. Samuel Hricko: Data curation; investigation; writing—review and editing. Michal Masar: Data curation; investigation; writing—review and editing. Prokop Vodicka: Data curation; investigation; writing—review and editing. David Salek: Writing—review and editing; resources. Natasa Kopalova: Data curation. Petra Blahovcova: Formal analysis; writing—review and editing; visualization. Daniela Kuruczova: Formal analysis; writing—review and editing; visualization. Katerina Benesova: Resources; writing—review and editing. Jozef Michalka: Resources; writing—review and editing. Jan Koren: Writing—review and editing; resources. Pavel Klener: Writing—review and editing; resources. Andrea Janikova: Conceptualization; investigation; funding acquisition; resources; writing—review and editing. Marek Trneny: Conceptualization; funding acquisition; resources; writing—original draft; investigation; supervision.

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the General University Hospital in Prague (approval no. 40/22 Grant AZV VES) and the Ethics Committee of the University Hospital Brno (approval no. 44-220622/EK).

This study was supported by AZV NU23-03-00127 and NU21-03-00411 grants, by Charles University Hematology-Oncology Cooperatio Program, and research project BBMRI_CZ LM2023033.

Abstract Image

R-CHOP治疗弥漫性大b细胞淋巴瘤患者中枢神经系统与全身复发的风险:我们应该关注什么?
弥漫性大b细胞淋巴瘤(DLBCL)是成人最常见的血液恶性肿瘤。尽管DLBCL患者的临床预后在过去二十年中有所改善,但仍有相当比例的DLBCL患者存在淋巴瘤复发/进展或因复发而死亡的风险。1,2国际预后指数(IPI)或中枢神经系统IPI (CNS-IPI)评分较高的患者面临全身和中枢神经系统复发的最大风险。3-5 CNS- ipi模型已在许多研究中得到验证,并广泛用于临床实践,指导有关CNS预防的决策。6-8然而,在最近针对鞘内注射(IT)和静脉注射大剂量甲氨蝶呤(HD MTX)的回顾性研究中,中枢神经系统预防的有效性一再受到质疑。缺乏可靠的前瞻性临床试验来评估CNS预防对CNS复发率的影响。因此,根据国际指南(NCCN v5.2025),高危患者仍可考虑采用中枢神经系统预防。然而,被IPI或CNS-IPI分类为高危的患者不仅有CNS复发的风险,还有全身复发的风险。这两种类型的复发在同一患者群体中的风险比例尚未得到正式研究。为了解决这个问题,我们分析了真实世界DLBCL患者中系统性与中枢神经系统复发的竞争风险。使用前瞻性观察性NiHiL项目(NCT03199066)的数据,我们确定了连续诊断为组织学证实的无其他特异性DLBCL或DLBCL/高级别b细胞淋巴瘤(HGBL)伴BCL2/MYC或BCL6重排、HGBL NOS或t细胞/组织细胞丰富的大b细胞淋巴瘤的成年患者。患者于2010年1月至2021年12月在捷克共和国的两个学术中心诊断,并接受抗cd20单克隆抗体加CHOP化疗作为一线治疗。包括活检证实的treatment-naïve转化性惰性淋巴瘤(不包括Richter转化)患者。排除诊断时累及中枢神经系统的患者。死亡原因统一分类为中枢神经系统(±全身性)复发相关、全身性复发相关、一线治疗毒性相关、其他或未知。如果死亡发生在一线治疗期间或之后不久(最后一次给药后第60天),并且在没有进展性或难治性疾病的情况下归因于治疗毒性,则认为死亡与一线治疗毒性有关。在二线或后续治疗后发生的死亡被认为是复发相关的(中枢神经系统±全身性或全身性),除非有明确的文献证明与活动性疾病或其治疗无关的非淋巴瘤相关原因(例如,无关的合并症)。在这种情况下,根据现有文件,死亡原因被归类为其他原因或未知原因。统计方法见支持信息。共有1228名新诊断的DLBCL患者接受了治疗意向抗cd20 - chop治疗。所有患者的研究中位时间为5.64年(范围:0.1-14.1)。所有在世患者的研究中位时间为7.29年(范围:1.4-14.1年)。患者和疾病特征列于表S1。根据CNS- ipi评分(1228例患者中有1222例可用),343例(28.1%)、541例(44.3%)和338例(27.7%)患者分别被分类为低(0-1)、中(2-3)和高风险(4-6)。总体而言,300例(24.4%)患者接受了HD-MTX、HD-AraC、IT化疗或联合治疗的中枢神经系统预防。在CNS- ipi危险组中,高危组145例(42.9%),中危组109例(20.1%),低危组45例(13.1%)接受了CNS预防。详情见表S1。总体而言,1228例患者中有321例(26.1%)发生淋巴瘤复发;其中48例发生在中枢神经系统(38例孤立中枢神经系统复发,10例同时发生中枢神经系统和全身复发),而273例淋巴瘤复发发生在全身。在低、中、高CNS- ipi组中,分别有7例(2.0%)、10例(1.8%)和31例(9.2%)患者出现CNS(±全身)复发,42例(12.2%)、121例(22.4%)和108例(32.0%)患者出现全身复发(表S2)。在任何复发类型的患者中,到全身和中枢神经系统(±全身)复发的中位时间分别为0.97年(范围:0.1-13.1)和0.99年(范围:0.2-10.6)。CNS- ipi风险组的系统和中枢系统(±系统)复发时间不同,见表S2。与之前的回顾性研究一致,CNS预防对CNS- ipi评分高的患者的CNS复发率没有影响(P = 0.82;图S1A,B)。 Magdalena Klanova:概念化;原创作品草案;调查;资金收购;数据管理;监督;项目管理。Samuel Hricko:数据管理;调查;写作-审查和编辑。michael Masar:数据管理;调查;写作-审查和编辑。Prokop Vodicka:数据管理;调查;写作-审查和编辑。大卫·萨莱克:写作、评论和编辑;资源。natasha Kopalova:数据管理。Petra Blahovcova:形式分析;写作——审阅和编辑;可视化。Daniela Kuruczova:形式分析;写作——审阅和编辑;可视化。Katerina Benesova:资源;写作-审查和编辑。Jozef Michalka:资源;写作-审查和编辑。Jan Koren:写作-评论和编辑;资源。帕维尔·克雷纳:写作、评论和编辑;资源。Andrea Janikova:概念化;调查;资金收购;资源;写作-审查和编辑。Marek treny:概念化;资金收购;资源;原创作品草案;调查;监督。作者声明无利益冲突。本研究得到了布拉格综合大学医院伦理委员会的批准(批准号:40/22批准AZV VES)和布尔诺大学医院伦理委员会(批准号:44 - 220622 / EK)。本研究由AZV NU23-03-00127和NU21-03-00411基金资助,查尔斯大学血液学-肿瘤合作计划,研究项目BBMRI_CZ LM2023033。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
HemaSphere
HemaSphere Medicine-Hematology
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
4.50%
发文量
2776
审稿时长
7 weeks
期刊介绍: HemaSphere, as a publication, is dedicated to disseminating the outcomes of profoundly pertinent basic, translational, and clinical research endeavors within the field of hematology. The journal actively seeks robust studies that unveil novel discoveries with significant ramifications for hematology. In addition to original research, HemaSphere features review articles and guideline articles that furnish lucid synopses and discussions of emerging developments, along with recommendations for patient care. Positioned as the foremost resource in hematology, HemaSphere augments its offerings with specialized sections like HemaTopics and HemaPolicy. These segments engender insightful dialogues covering a spectrum of hematology-related topics, including digestible summaries of pivotal articles, updates on new therapies, deliberations on European policy matters, and other noteworthy news items within the field. Steering the course of HemaSphere are Editor in Chief Jan Cools and Deputy Editor in Chief Claire Harrison, alongside the guidance of an esteemed Editorial Board comprising international luminaries in both research and clinical realms, each representing diverse areas of hematologic expertise.
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