Sickinger Marie-Therese, von Tresckow Bastian, Kobe Carsten, Engert Andreas, Borchmann Peter, Skoetz Nicole
Cochrane Haematological Malignancies Group, Department I of Internal Medicine, University Hospital of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Jan 9;1(1):CD010533. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010533.pub2.
Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is a B-cell lymphoma accounting for 10% to 15% of all lymphoma in industrialised countries. It has a bimodal age distribution with one peak around the age of 30 years and another after the age of 60 years. Although HL accounts for fewer than 1% of all neoplasms worldwide, it is considered to be one of the most common malignancies in young adults and, with cure rates of 90%, one of the most curable cancers worldwide. Current treatment options for HL comprise more- or less-intensified regimens of chemotherapy plus radiotherapy, depending on disease stage. [18F]-fluorodeoxy-D-glucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography (PET, also called PET scanning) is an imaging tool that can be used to illustrate a tumour's metabolic activity, stage and progression. Therefore, it could be used as a standard interim procedure during HL treatment, to help distinguish between individuals who are good or poor early responders to therapy. Subsequent therapy could then be de-escalated in PET-negative individuals (good responders) or escalated in those who are PET-positive (poor responders). It is currently unknown whether such response-adapted therapeutic strategies are of benefit to individuals in terms of overall and progression-free survival, and the incidence of long-term adverse events (AEs).
To assess the effects of interim [18F]-FDG-PET imaging treatment modification in individuals with HL.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL; latest issue) and MEDLINE (from 1990 to September 2014) as well as conference proceedings (American Society of Hematology; American Society of Clinical Oncology; European Hematology Association; and International Symposium on Hodgkin Lymphoma) for studies. Two review authors independently screened search results.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing FDG-PET-adapted therapy with non-adapted treatment in individuals with previously untreated HL of all stages and ages.
Two review authors independently extracted data and assessed the quality of trials. As none of the included studies provided HRs for OS, we described risk ratios (RRs) for this outcome and did not pool the data. As an effect measure we used hazard ratios (HRs) for progression-free survival (PFS). We described RRs for the dichotomous data on AEs. We also calculated 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Our search strategies led to 308 potentially relevant references. From these, we included three studies involving 1999 participants. We judged the overall potential risk of bias as moderate. The studies were reported as RCTs; blinding was not reported, but given the study design it is likely that there was no blinding. One study was published in abstract form only; hence, detailed assessment of the risk of bias was not possible.Two trials compared standard treatment (chemotherapy plus radiotherapy) with PET-adapted therapy (chemotherapy only) in individuals with early-stage HL and negative PET scans. The study design of the third trial was more complex. Participants with early-stage HL were divided into those with a favourable or unfavourable prognosis. They were then randomised to receive PET-adapted or standard treatment. Following a PET scan, participants were further divided into PET-positive and PET-negative groups. To date, data have been published for the PET-negative arms only, making it possible to perform a meta-analysis including all three trials.Of the 1999 participants included in the three trials only 1480 were analysed. The 519 excluded participants were either PET-positive, or were excluded because they did not match the inclusion criteria.One study reported no deaths. The other two studies reported two deaths in participants receiving PET-adapted therapy and two in participants receiving standard therapy (very-low-quality evidence). Progression-free survival was shorter in participants with PET-adapted therapy (without radiotherapy) than in those receiving standard treatment with radiotherapy (HR 2.38; 95% CI 1.62 to 3.50; P value < 0.0001). This difference was also apparent in comparisons of participants receiving no additional radiotherapy (PET-adapted therapy) versus radiotherapy (standard therapy) (HR 1.86; 95% CI 1.07 to 3.23; P value = 0.03) and in those receiving chemotherapy but no radiotherapy (PET-adapted therapy) versus standard radiotherapy (HR 3.00; 95% CI 1.75 to 5.14; P value < 0.0001) (moderate-quality evidence). Short-term AEs only were assessed in one trial, which showed no evidence of a difference between the treatment arms (RR 0.91; 95% CI 0.54 to 1.53; P value = 0.72) (very-low-quality evidence). No data on long-term AEs were reported in any of the trials.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: To date, no robust data on OS, response rate, TRM, QoL, or short- and long-term AEs are available. However, this systematic review found moderate-quality evidence that PFS was shorter in individuals with early-stage HL and a negative PET scan receiving chemotherapy only (PET-adapted therapy) than in those receiving additional radiotherapy (standard therapy). More RCTs with longer follow ups may lead to more precise results for AEs, TRM and QoL, and could evaluate whether this PFS advantage will translate into an overall survival benefit.It is still uncertain whether PET-positive individuals benefit from PET-based treatment adaptation and the effect of such an approach in those with advanced HL.
霍奇金淋巴瘤(HL)是一种B细胞淋巴瘤,在工业化国家占所有淋巴瘤的10%至15%。其年龄分布呈双峰型,一个高峰在30岁左右,另一个在60岁以后。尽管HL在全球所有肿瘤中所占比例不到1%,但它被认为是年轻成年人中最常见的恶性肿瘤之一,并且治愈率达90%,是全球最可治愈的癌症之一。目前HL的治疗方案包括根据疾病分期或多或少强化的化疗加放疗方案。[18F] - 氟脱氧 - D - 葡萄糖(FDG) - 正电子发射断层扫描(PET,也称为PET扫描)是一种成像工具,可用于显示肿瘤的代谢活性、分期和进展情况。因此,它可作为HL治疗期间的标准中期检查程序,以帮助区分对治疗早期反应良好或不佳的个体。随后,对于PET阴性个体(反应良好者)可降低后续治疗强度,而对于PET阳性个体(反应不佳者)则增加治疗强度。目前尚不清楚这种根据反应调整的治疗策略在总生存期、无进展生存期以及长期不良事件(AE)发生率方面是否对个体有益。
评估中期[18F] - FDG - PET成像指导的治疗调整对HL患者的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL;最新期)、MEDLINE(1990年至2014年9月)以及会议论文集(美国血液学会;美国临床肿瘤学会;欧洲血液学协会;以及霍奇金淋巴瘤国际研讨会)以查找研究。两位综述作者独立筛选检索结果。
我们纳入了比较FDG - PET指导治疗与未调整治疗的随机对照试验(RCT),研究对象为所有分期和年龄的初治HL患者。
两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估试验质量。由于纳入的研究均未提供总生存期(OS)的风险比(HR),我们描述了该结局的风险比(RR),未对数据进行合并。作为效应量,我们使用无进展生存期(PFS)的风险比(HR)。我们描述了不良事件二分数据的RR。我们还计算了95%置信区间(CI)。
我们的检索策略共获得308条潜在相关参考文献。其中,我们纳入了3项研究,涉及1999名参与者。我们判断总体潜在偏倚风险为中等。这些研究报告为RCT;未报告是否设盲,但鉴于研究设计,很可能未设盲。一项研究仅以摘要形式发表;因此,无法对偏倚风险进行详细评估。两项试验比较了早期HL且PET扫描阴性患者的标准治疗(化疗加放疗)与PET指导治疗(仅化疗)。第三项试验的研究设计更为复杂。早期HL患者根据预后良好或不良进行分组。然后将他们随机分配接受PET指导治疗或标准治疗。PET扫描后,参与者进一步分为PET阳性和PET阴性组。迄今为止,仅公布了PET阴性组的数据,这使得可以对所有三项试验进行荟萃分析。在三项试验纳入的1999名参与者中,仅分析了1480名。排除的519名参与者要么是PET阳性,要么因不符合纳入标准而被排除。一项研究报告无死亡病例。另外两项研究报告接受PET指导治疗的参与者中有2例死亡,接受标准治疗的参与者中有2例死亡(证据质量极低)。接受PET指导治疗(不放疗)的参与者无进展生存期短于接受含放疗标准治疗的参与者(HR 2.38;95%CI 1.62至3.50;P值<0.0001)。在比较未接受额外放疗(PET指导治疗)与接受放疗(标准治疗)的参与者时(HR 1.86;95%CI 1.07至3.23;P值 = 0.03)以及接受化疗但不放疗(PET指导治疗)与标准放疗的参与者时(HR 3.00;95%CI 1.75至5.14;P值<0.0001),这种差异也很明显(证据质量中等)。仅在一项试验中评估了短期不良事件,结果显示各治疗组之间无差异证据(RR 0.91;95%CI 0.54至1.53;P值 = 0.72)(证据质量极低)。所有试验均未报告长期不良事件的数据。
迄今为止,尚无关于总生存期、缓解率、治疗相关死亡率、生活质量或短期和长期不良事件的可靠数据。然而,本系统评价发现中等质量证据表明,早期HL且PET扫描阴性的患者接受单纯化疗(PET指导治疗)时的无进展生存期短于接受额外放疗(标准治疗)的患者。更多随访时间更长的RCT可能会得出关于不良事件、治疗相关死亡率和生活质量更精确的结果,并可评估这种无进展生存期优势是否会转化为总生存获益。PET阳性个体是否从基于PET的治疗调整中获益以及这种方法对晚期HL患者的效果仍不确定。