Haematologica (Nov 2013)

High cure rates in Burkitt lymphoma and leukemia: a Northern Italy Leukemia Group study of the German short intensive rituximab-chemotherapy program

  • Tamara Intermesoli,
  • Alessandro Rambaldi,
  • Giuseppe Rossi,
  • Federica Delaini,
  • Claudio Romani,
  • Enrico Maria Pogliani,
  • Chiara Pagani,
  • Emanuele Angelucci,
  • Elisabetta Terruzzi,
  • Alessandro Levis,
  • Vincenzo Cassibba,
  • Daniele Mattei,
  • Giacomo Gianfaldoni,
  • Anna Maria Scattolin,
  • Eros Di Bona,
  • Elena Oldani,
  • Margherita Parolini,
  • Nicola Gökbuget,
  • Renato Bassan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2013.086827
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 98, no. 11

Abstract

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We evaluate the long-term results of a prospective clinical study enrolling more than 100 adult patients with Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia. Depending on extent of disease, treatment consisted of six to eight rituximab infusions and four to six courses of intensive chemotherapy (attenuated in patients aged >55 years) with high-dose methotrexate, fractionated ifosfamide/cyclophosphamide, other drugs in rotation, and intrathecal chemoprophylaxis. One-hundred five patients were treated (median age 47 years, range 17–78 years); 48% had Burkitt leukemia, 25% were older than 60 years, 37% had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance score >1, and 14% were positive for human immunodeficiency virus. The complete response rate and 3-year overall and disease-free survival rates were 79%, 67% and 75%, respectively, ranging from 100% to 45% for survival (P=0.000) and from 100% to 60% for disease-free survival (P=0.01) in patients with low, intermediate and high adapted International Prognostic Index scores. In multivariate analysis, only age (≤ versus >60 years) and performance status (0–1 versus >1) retained prognostic significance, identifying three risk groups with overall and disease-free survival probabilities of 88% and 87.5%, 57% and 70.5%, 20% and 28.5% (P=0.0000 and P=0.0001), respectively. The relapse rate was only 7% in patients treated with an intercycle interval ≤25 days. This regimen achieved 100% curability in patients with low adapted International Prognostic Index scores (21% of total), and very close to 90% in patients aged ≤60 years with performance score 0–1 (48% of total). Rapid diagnosis of Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia with prompt referral of patients to prevent clinical deterioration, and careful supervision of treatment without chemotherapy delay can achieve outstanding therapeutic results. ClinicalTrials.gov ID, NCT01290120