Background: Dose intensification and autologous stem cell transplantation as front-line therapy in non-Hodgkin's lymphoma patients (NHL) is a matter for debate, although preliminary data suggest a role for it in patients at high risk of resistance or relapse according to the international prognostic index (IPI). PURPOSE AND STUDY DESIGN: To compare retrospectively the clinical outcome of two cohorts of NHL patients with high-risk IPI treated with MACOP-B for 12 weeks (38 patients) or high-dose chemotherapy (44 patients) including eight weeks of MACOP-B, one or two intensification cycles with mitoxanthrone, dexamethasone, high-dose ara-C and finally BEAM chemotherapy with autologous hemopoietic progenitor cell transplantation.
Results: The actuarial estimate of event (progression, relapse or death)-free survival (EFS) at three years was better (58% vs. 41%, P = 0.08) for patients treated with intensive regimen even though the overall survival did not show a statistically significant difference (63% vs. 50%, P = 0.27). Multivariate analysis showed that the high-dose chemotherapy program was the only independent variable correlating with a reduction in the event rate.
Conclusion: Early autologous stem-cell transplantation might improve the clinical outcome of high-risk patients according to IPI.