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Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 20, Issue 14 (July), 2002: 3088-3094
© 2002 American Society for Clinical Oncology

Treatment of Unfavorable Childhood Hodgkin’s Disease With VEPA and Low-Dose, Involved-Field Radiation

By Alison M. Friedmann, Melissa M. Hudson, Howard J. Weinstein, Sarah S. Donaldson, Larry Kun, Nancy J. Tarbell, Michael P. Link

From the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA; St Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, TN; and Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA.

Address reprint requests to Alison M. Friedmann, MD, Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit St, Boston, MA 02114; email: afriedmann{at}partners.org

PURPOSE: Between January 1990 and April 1993, 56 pediatric patients with Hodgkin’s disease were treated on a single-arm trial at three institutions with a regimen designed to maintain high cure rates while minimizing the potential late effects of treatment, such as infertility, second malignant neoplasms, and cardiopulmonary injury.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: The regimen used combined-modality therapy with six cycles of vinblastine, etoposide, prednisone, and doxorubicin (VEPA) chemotherapy and low-dose, involved-field radiation. Unfavorable features comprised bulky presentations of localized (stage I or II) disease or advanced (stage III or IV) Hodgkin’s disease.

RESULTS: Of 56 patients enrolled, 26 (46%) had unfavorable presentations of stage I/II disease and 30 (54%) had advanced (stage III/IV) disease. Seventy-nine percent of the patients are alive without disease at a median follow-up time of 8.9 years from diagnosis. Nineteen patients had events at a median of 1.5 years (range, 0.4 to 7.9 years) from diagnosis; 17 patients relapsed, one died of cardiomyopathy, and one died of accidental injuries. Survival and event-free survival (EFS) estimates at 5 years for the entire cohort were 81.9% (SE, 5.2%) and 67.8% (SE, 6.3%), respectively. Five-year EFS by stage was 100% for stage I, 79.2% (SE, 8.3%) for stage II, 70% (SE, 14.5%) for stage III, and 49.5% (SE, 11.3%) for stage IV patients.

CONCLUSION: Combined-modality therapy with VEPA chemotherapy and low-dose, involved-field radiation is adequate for disease control of early-stage patients with unfavorable features, but it is inferior to other standard regimens for advanced-stage patients.


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