Purpose: This trial evaluated the efficacy, toxicity, and practicability of a new intensive chemotherapy regimen in a multicenter setting of university and community hospitals.
Patients and methods: We tested a hybrid protocol of two non-cross-resistant regimens, cyclophosphamide, epirubicin, vincristine, and prednisolone (CEOP) and ifosfamide, etoposide (VP-16), methotrexate, and dexamethasone (IMVP-Dexa) given every fourth week, three to six times according to response, in patients with untreated intermediate- and high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Ten Austrian centers entered 81 patients onto this multicenter trial. Eleven patients were excluded. The median age was 55 years. Twenty-six of 70 patients had stage III or IV disease. The distribution among international risk categories low, intermediate-low, intermediate-high, and high was 20%, 34%, 23%, and 23%, respectively.
Results: Of 70 eligible patients, 56 (80%) had a complete remission and seven (10%) a partial remission. After a median observation time of 36 months, the estimated time to relapse and overall survival rates are 67% and 72%, respectively. Age and Karnofsky index were the only independent risk factors for survival. Toxicity was primarily hematologic, with a median granulocyte nadir of 0.56 x 10(9)/L. Sixty-seven percent of patients had infections; 25.7% were severe World Health Organization (WHO) grade III or IV. There were three treatment-related deaths.
Conclusion: CEOP-IMVP-Dexa chemotherapy is safe and feasible on a groupwide basis even when used in community hospitals. Neutropenic infections are the major complications. A 72% 3-year survival rate in patients with intermediate- and high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma warrants further studies. These data are the basis for a randomized trial to compare cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisolone (CHOP) with CEOP/IMVP-Dexa.