ABVD is still considered the standard therapy for HL being a good balance of efficacy and tolerability. Here we report the 3-yr results of a phase 2 study which explore the possibility to ameliorate the performance of this (g)old schedule. Modifications of the standard ABVD and strategy concepts :

  1. Each patient received a total of 6 cycles

  2. For advanced stage, Adriamycin (ADM) was escalated from 50 to 70 mg/m2 in the cycles 1,2,3,4.

  3. Intermediate stage patients (pts) were treated without the dose escalation of ADM.

  4. The cumulative doses of ADM were 380 (advanced-) and 300 mg/m2 (intermediate-stage).

  5. The inter-cycle period was shortened from 28 to 21 days for all 6 cycles; the 4 drugs were delivered at d 1 and 11 of each cycle.

  6. Primary G-CSF was given from d4 to d8, and from d14 to d18 of each cycle.

  7. The therapy program was driven by interim-FDG-PET. Normalisation of PET at the end of 2nd cycles was indicator of early complete response (CR), while the persistence of PET+ lesion(s) at the end of the 4th cycle was indicator of failure and consequently the treatment was shift to a salvage therapy

  8. Consolidation Radiotherapy was reserved only for bone lesions.

From June 2004 to May 2006 fifty-eight pts were enrolled (Tab 1). On 20th August 2007 all patients have performed the interim-PET and 54/58 pts completed the treatment. Administered RDIs ranged between 1.10 to 1.44 (median 1.34) for DD-DI ABVD, and 1.18 to 1.34 (median 1.24) for DD ABVD. Hematologic toxicity was moderate and self-limiting with grade 3 or 4 neutropenia and anemia occuring in less than 20% of courses. Non-hematologic toxicity was generally mild to moderate. A limited number of G3-G4 reversible events determined the need for intervention (RBC’s trasfusions) or hospitalisation (pulmonary infections, GI and respiratory tracts, and neurological effects).The majority of pts presented a mild to moderate palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia. Early cardiac toxicity was very mild. 55/ 58 obtained the early CR (95%) and 54/ 54 the CR (100%); a 60-yr old man died of pneumonia a month after the end of the last cycle still being in CR while one-site relapse occurred in a 27-yr old girl at ten month from the end of therapy. All the other pts are alive and disease-free. (tab 2 and fig 1). DD-DI ABVD and DD ABVD are feasible, well tolerated and highly active in advanced and intermediate HL: at 3 years from the beginning of the study these schedules confirm to be a promising strategy for optimal long-term results.

tab 1

Presentation features

N%GHSGNCI
total 58 100% 
advanced   36 62% 51 88% 
intermediate   22 38% 12% 
male 21 36%     
age>45-yr 10%     
bulky 21 36%     
stage IV 17 29%     
B symptoms 37 64%     
extranodal 20 35%     
ESR >50 mm 30 52%     
LDH ratio>1 25 43%     
IPS>3 20 35%     
N sites>3 42 72%     
N%GHSGNCI
total 58 100% 
advanced   36 62% 51 88% 
intermediate   22 38% 12% 
male 21 36%     
age>45-yr 10%     
bulky 21 36%     
stage IV 17 29%     
B symptoms 37 64%     
extranodal 20 35%     
ESR >50 mm 30 52%     
LDH ratio>1 25 43%     
IPS>3 20 35%     
N sites>3 42 72%     
Tab 2

Response and Survival Data

Nearly CRCRTRMRelapse3-yr EFS3-yr OS
median f-up 17 mos 
 58 (100%) 55 (95%) 54/54 (100%) 1 (2%) 1 (2%) 98% 98% 
GHSG        
advanced 36 35 (97%) 33/33 (100%)   100% 97% 
intermediate 22 20 (91%) 21/21 (100%)   95% 100% 
NCI        
advanced 51 49 (96%) 48/48 (100%)   98% 98% 
intermediate 6 (86%) 6/6 (100%)   100% 100% 
Nearly CRCRTRMRelapse3-yr EFS3-yr OS
median f-up 17 mos 
 58 (100%) 55 (95%) 54/54 (100%) 1 (2%) 1 (2%) 98% 98% 
GHSG        
advanced 36 35 (97%) 33/33 (100%)   100% 97% 
intermediate 22 20 (91%) 21/21 (100%)   95% 100% 
NCI        
advanced 51 49 (96%) 48/48 (100%)   98% 98% 
intermediate 6 (86%) 6/6 (100%)   100% 100% 

Author notes

Disclosure: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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