In this issue of Blood, Omuro et al report the results of a phase 2 study for patients with newly diagnosed primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) using induction immunochemotherapy (rituximab, high-dose methotrexate [MTX], vincristine, procarbazine) followed by a novel consolidation high-dose chemotherapy (thiotepa, busulfan, cyclophosphamide) and autologous stem cell transplantation (HDC-ASCT).1 

Although patient numbers are small, the results of the study are remarkable. With a median follow-up of survivors of 45 months, 3-year overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were 81% and 79%, respectively.

Survival of patients with PCNSL given supportive care alone was reported to be 3.3 months.2  As conventional chemotherapy successfully used to treat diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) in sites outside the central nervous system (CNS) proves largely ineffective in PCNSL because drugs do not cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the first treatment modality that met with some success was whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT). However, survival after WBRT was short, usually not exceeding 12 to 18 months, and finally all patients succumbed to their disease. With the availability of leucovorin rescue, high doses of MTX (1.5-8 g/m2) could be administered to patients and achieved concentrations in the brain high enough to effectively destroy tumor cells. Unfortunately, the early studies combining both strategies, WBRT and high-dose MTX, although improving PFS and OS, caused severe neurologic deficits leading to death of some patients otherwise cured from the disease.3  Therefore, a number of studies investigated the efficacy of high-dose MTX alone or in combination with other drugs like ifosfamid, temozolomide, or cytosine-arabinoside (Ara-C) crossing the BBB.4-6  The only randomized study comparing high-dose MTX alone with high-dose MTX plus high-dose Ara-C reported a statistically significant benefit of the combination,6  which therefore is considered current standard therapy by many investigators. The chemotherapy-only approach caused less neurotoxicity and fairly good tumor control. However, with an OS of 46% at 3 years, results were not completely satisfying. The question of whether WBRT added to the success of therapy if high-dose MTX plus other drugs were used remained unanswered, and the search for better treatment options continued.

Which are the therapeutic elements that contributed to the success of the study by Omuro et al? With a notorious lack of prospective randomized studies in a disease as rare as PCNSL, a strictly scientific answer to the question is not possible, but an educated guess should be allowed. First, some of the recent studies in PCNSL used combinations of drugs (not only MTX) all penetrating into the CNS for a higher number of treatment cycles. This may extend the exposure of lymphoma tissue to cytotoxic drugs, which seems to make sense as this and other studies report ongoing tumor responses after 4 or 5 cycles of therapy. Second, the administration of rituximab in higher-than-standard doses (500 mg/m2) may have contributed to the effectiveness of induction therapy. Although it is clear that rituximab administered IV virtually does not cross the BBB of healthy individuals, the situation is different in patients with brain lymphoma. We and others have seen responses to rituximab monotherapy in patients with PCNSL or secondary involvement of the CNS by DLBCL. Third, although the concept of consolidation therapy is not new, the introduction of HDC including drugs like thiotepa, busulfan, and carmustine, and thereby achieving very high concentrations of effective drugs in the brain, certainly was major step forward. The importance of HDC-ASCT is highlighted by reports showing that the complete response and overall response rates after HDC-ASCT dramatically improved when compared with the responses to the preceding conventional chemotherapy.7 

Omuro et al1  are to be congratulated on performing this study not only because of the high efficacy of their strategy but also because they included a prospective assessment of neurocognitive function into their study. It has been a major problem of many studies in PCNSL that deterioration in neurologic function was reported, but it was not clear how this was objectively measured and how the results of one study would compare with those reported by others. The neuropsychological tests, quality-of-life assessments, and radiographic evaluation of neurotoxicity delivered with this study show that PCNSL can cause impairment of cognitive functions by itself before any treatment is given. The multiple tests chosen by the authors to document neurologic function demonstrate an improvement of deficits over time and a lack of severe neurologic deficits elicited by therapy itself. Of course, the observation period of surviving patients is not long enough to preclude long-term sequelae of therapy. Therefore, further follow-up is definitely warranted.

In summary, during a time period of no longer than 25 years PCNSL has turned from a unanimously deadly disease to a highly curable disorder. To further improve the situation, a better understanding of the molecular background of PCNSL8  may help to integrate some of the new orally available small molecules into our treatment strategies. This might not only further improve treatment results but also allow treatment of older and frail patients and spare all patients the acute and long-term toxicities of current radio- and chemotherapy regimens.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author declares no competing financial interests.

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