HemaSphere (Jan 2021)

Detailed Long-Term Follow-Up of Patients Who Relapsed After the Nordic Mantle Cell Lymphoma Trials: MCL2 and MCL3

  • Christian Winther Eskelund,
  • Kostas Dimopoulos,
  • Arne Kolstad,
  • Ingrid Glimelius,
  • Riikka Räty,
  • Lise Mette Rahbek Gjerdrum,
  • Kristina Sonnevi,
  • Pär Josefsson,
  • Herman Nilsson-Ehle,
  • Hans H. N. Bentzen,
  • Unn Merete Fagerli,
  • Outi Kuittinen,
  • Jacob Haaber,
  • Carsten Utoft Niemann,
  • Lone Bredo Pedersen,
  • Maria Torp Larsen,
  • Christian Hartmann Geisler,
  • Martin Hutchings,
  • Mats Jerkeman,
  • Kirsten Grønbæk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/HS9.0000000000000510
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
p. e510

Abstract

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Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is an incurable disease with a highly variable clinical course. The prognosis after relapse is generally poor, and no standard of care exists. We investigated the postrelapse outcomes of 149 patients who were initially treated in the Nordic Lymphoma Group trials, MCL2 or MCL3, both representing intensive cytarabine-containing frontline regimens including autologous stem cell transplant. Patients with progression of disease before 24 months (POD24, n = 51, 34%) displayed a median overall survival of 6.6 months compared with 46 months for patients with later POD (n = 98, 66%; P < 0.001). MCL international prognostic index, cell proliferation marker, blastoid morphology, and TP53 mutations showed independent prognostic value irrespective of POD24, and in a combined, exploratory risk score, patients with 0, 1, 2-3, or 4-5 high-risk markers, respectively, displayed a 5-year overall survival of 62%, 39%, 31%, and 0%. By a comparison of median progression-free survival of the different salvage therapies in the relapse setting, bendamustine-rituximab was superior to all other combination chemotherapy regimens; however, it was also associated with longer responses to last line of therapy. Collectively, we confirm the prognostic impact of POD24 and highlight the relevance of other biomarkers, and we emphasize the importance of novel therapies for patients with high-risk features at first POD.