1 Department of Haematology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Laikon General Hospital, Athens, Greece ; 2 Department of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology, Marianna V. Vardinoyannis-ELPIDA Children's Oncololgy Unit, Agia Sofia Children's Hospital, Athens, Greece.
Transl Pediatr. 2013 Jul;2(3):126-30. doi: 10.3978/j.issn.2224-4336.2013.06.03.
Despite high cure rates, treatment of childhood Hodgkin Lymphoma (HL) is associated with late effects caused mainly by radiotherapy (RT). In the GPOH-HD95 trial of the German Society of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology that was recently published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, RT was spared in patients achieving a stringently defined complete remission (CR) with chemotherapy and reduced in patients with a good partial remission (PR). Overall, RT-treated patients had superior PFS, but overall survival (OS) was almost identical within each risk-stratified treatment group irrespectively of the use of RT. In the low-risk group, RT could be safely omitted in 20% of patients. In contrast, failure rates were considered unacceptable, when RT was omitted in intermediate or high risk patients achieving a CR. However, salvage therapy was successful, equalizing overall survival between irradiated and non-irradiated patients. Although GPOH-HD95 points out to the omission of RT in selected patients achieving a CR after chemotherapy, especially those in the low-risk group, more than 80% of the patients are still irradiated. Notably, the GPOH-HD95 was not a randomized trial. In conclusion, according to the GPOH-HD95 trial, RT can be safely omitted in pediatric and adolescent patients with low-risk, early stage HL achieving a stringently defined CR after 2 cycles of OPPA or OEPA chemotherapy. RT dose could also be reduced in case of good PR by conventional imaging. However, conventional response assessment is not the optimal means to decide whether RT is needed or not. It is now increasingly recognized that RT can be omitted in many patients with HL without compromising the final outcome and it appears wise to try to stringently limit RT in those patients who really need it. This might be achieved through the use of modern functional imaging (PET/CT). Such efforts are already in progress and results regarding efficacy are awaited relatively soon.
尽管儿童霍奇金淋巴瘤(HL)的治愈率很高,但治疗方法仍会导致许多晚期并发症,这些并发症主要由放射治疗(RT)引起。德国儿科肿瘤学和血液学学会的 GPOH-HD95 试验最近发表在《临床肿瘤学杂志》上,该试验表明,在达到严格定义的完全缓解(CR)的患者中,化疗可避免 RT,而在部分缓解(PR)良好的患者中则减少 RT。总的来说,接受 RT 治疗的患者具有更好的无进展生存期(PFS),但在每个风险分层治疗组中,无论是否使用 RT,总生存率(OS)几乎相同。在低危组中,有 20%的患者可以安全地避免 RT。相比之下,在达到 CR 的中危或高危患者中,如果不使用 RT,则认为失败率不可接受。但是,挽救性治疗是成功的,使接受和未接受 RT 的患者的总体生存率相等。尽管 GPOH-HD95 表明在接受化疗后达到 CR 的特定患者中可以避免 RT,尤其是在低危组中,但仍有超过 80%的患者接受了 RT。值得注意的是,GPOH-HD95 并不是一项随机试验。总之,根据 GPOH-HD95 试验,在接受 OPPA 或 OEPA 化疗 2 个周期后达到严格定义的 CR 的低危、早期 HL 儿科和青少年患者中,可以安全地避免 RT。如果 PR 良好,也可以通过常规影像学降低 RT 剂量。但是,常规反应评估并不是决定是否需要 RT 的最佳方法。现在越来越多的人认识到,在不影响最终结果的情况下,可以在许多 HL 患者中避免 RT,并且明智的做法是尝试在真正需要 RT 的患者中严格限制 RT。这可以通过使用现代功能成像(PET/CT)来实现。目前已经在进行此类努力,并且很快就会等待关于疗效的结果。