Purpose: We explored the feasibility, toxicity, and preliminary results of a chemotherapy (CT) regimen, mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone (MOPP)/epidoxirubicin, bleomycin, and vinblastine (EBV)/lomustine (CCNU), doxorubicin, and vindesine (CAD), derived through hybridization, shortening, and intensification of a corresponding 10-drug alternating combination CAD/MOPP/doxorubicin, bleomycin, and vinblastine (ABV), effective in treatment of advanced Hodgkin's disease (HD).
Patients and methods: Hybridization involved all drugs except CCNU and mechlorethamine, which were administered in alternating cycles; the length of therapy was reduced from nine to six cycles. The average projected drug doses during the six cycles were increased by 42%, with an overall 1.54 dose-intensification; epidoxorubicin was substituted for doxorubicin at equivalent tumoricidal doses. Radiotherapy (RT) was optional and its indications were limited.
Results: Eighty assessable patients with previously untreated, advanced or unfavorably presenting HD were treated in nine cooperating institutions between 1988 and 1991. RT was delivered to 22 patients. Remissions were complete (CR) in 75 patients (93%), partial in three (4%), and null in two (3%). The median relative dose-intensity was 0.71 for the overall regimen. Three of five patients who failed to achieve CR, and two of the four who relapsed, received lower relative dose-intensive cycles. Nonhematologic toxicity was acceptable, but there was considerable hematologic toxicity. Fatal gastrointestinal bleeding was seen in one patient.
Conclusion: Caution is advised due to the short median follow-up period. Nevertheless, in addition to the excellent response rate, (1) the results were reached through abbreviation, intensification, and hybridization of an existing alternating regimen; (2) RT had limited use in this program, which may have contributed to lowering the risk of second tumors; and (3) the results were obtained in a multicenter study (a condition that often impairs results from clinical trials).