Chemotherapy With or Without Radiation, Low and Intermediate Risk Hodgkins Lymphoma, TXCH-HD-12A
- Conditions
- Hodgkin Disease
- Interventions
- Drug: ABVE-PCDrug: DECA
- Registration Number
- NCT01858922
- Lead Sponsor
- Baylor College of Medicine
- Brief Summary
Subjects have a type of cancer called Hodgkin Disease (HD), a cancer of the lymph system. The lymph system is made up of tissue throughout the body that makes and stores infection-fighting cells. HD is one of the most treatable childhood cancers. The standard treatment for HD involves chemotherapy (treatment with anti-cancer drugs) and radiation therapy (the use of high-dose x-rays to get rid of cancer cells). Although they are cured from their cancer, some patients experience negative side effects from treatment later in life. These kinds of side effects are often referred to as late effects. This can include problems with growth, problems with some organ functions, and sometimes second cancers. These types of effects can be associated with either chemotherapy or radiation therapy. The investigators are therefore designing studies to minimize or prevent these late effects. It is thought that if some patients can be successfully treated without radiation, those patients might experience fewer late side effects.
Some patients, however, do not respond as well to the first stages of treatment (slow early responders). Slow early responders are considered to be at higher risk for relapse. This study also looks at whether these kinds of patients will benefit from additional chemotherapy.
The purpose of this study is to look at how the immune system recovers and at how certain T-cells in the blood behave after receiving chemotherapy with or without radiation. The investigators also want to identify if bio-markers (special proteins in blood and in cancer) relate to the response of HD to study treatment.
- Detailed Description
At first the subject will have 2 cycles of cancer drugs (Doxorubicin, Bleomycin, Vincristine, Etoposide, Prednisone, Cyclophosphamide). The doctors call this combination of cancer drugs ABVE-PC for short. A cycle equals 21 days. The cancer drugs will be given intravenously (IV).
Those patients evaluated as having an early response to treatment will be put in the group of Rapid Early Responders (RERs). The RER group includes those patients whose disease has been reduced by 60% or more. The next step for patients with RERs is 2 more cycles of ABVE-PC chemotherapy followed by another evaluation of their response. Those determined to have a complete response (at least an 80% disease reduction) will receive no further therapy. Those patients determined to have less than a complete response will receive radiation therapy within 6 weeks after the last cycle or when blood counts are recovered. Radiation therapy will be given to the involved areas and by the standard of care of this hospital (Texas Children's Hospital). After radiation the subject will be off treatment.
Patients with disease reduction less than 60% are put in the group of Slow Early Responders (SERs). The next step for patients with SER is 2 cycles of DECA (Dexamethasone, Etoposide, Cytarabine, and Cisplatin). On Days 1 and 2, the subject will be given dexamethasone IV first; afterwards, then they will receive the Etoposide and Cytarabine mixture. Cisplatin will be given by IV only on Day 1.
BIOLOGY TESTS The doctors are investigating molecules in tumors and blood that may help them better understand the biology of Hodgkin's Disease. These studies may also help them understand differences in patients' responses to therapy.
TISSUE FOR BIOMARKER STUDIES The doctors want to study the material that shows the make-up of the cancer (the genes of the cancer tissue) and the special "markers" of the tissue. Tissue from the subject's cancer biopsies will be used for these studies. They will collect these samples when the subject has a biopsy for clinical reasons.
IMMUNE FUNCTION AND BIOMARKER BLOOD TESTS The doctors also want to collect blood samples to study the subject's immune system and to look at biomarkers in the blood.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 40
Patients with newly diagnosed, histologically confirmed Hodgkin Lymphoma (HD) who meet the following criteria:
- Stage IA and IB (non-bulky nodular lymphocyte predominant)
- Stage IIA and IIB
- Stage IIIA
- Stage IVA
- Patients with Stage IA-IIA non-bulky lymphocyte predominant histology
- Patients who have received previous chemotherapy or radiation therapy (does NOT include steroids).
- Patients with symptomatic cardiac failure unrelieved by medical therapy or evidence of significant cardiac dysfunction by echocardiogram (shortening fraction <27%).
- Patients with severe renal disease (i.e. Measured or estimated creatinine clearance or radioisotope GFR <= 70 ml/min/1.73 m2).
- Patients with pre-existing severe restrictive pulmonary disease (FVC less than 60% of predicted).
- Patients with severe hepatic disease (direct bilirubin greater than 3 mg/dl or AST greater than 500 IU/L).
- Known HIV positivity
- Patients with a Karnofsky performance score <70% or Lansky score <70%.
- Female patients who are pregnant or breast feeding.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Slow Early Responders DECA All patients will have initial treatment utilizing ABVE-PC x2 cycles. Those patients determined to have a slow early response (SER) determined by PET/CT scan after two cycles of ABVE-PC will receive 2 courses of DECA. If after PET/CT, the patient has a partial or complete response, then 2 additional courses of ABVE-PC will be given. If subsequent PET/CT scan indicates PR or CR, those patients will then undergo IFRT. If stable or progressive disease is found at either PET/CT scan, the patient will be taken off-study and follow up will begin. Rapid Early Responders ABVE-PC All patients will have initial treatment utilizing ABVE-PC x2 cycles. Those patients with rapid early response (RER) determined by FDG-PET/CT scan after two cycles of ABVE-PC will receive two more cycles of ABVE-PC. If subsequent PET/CT scan indicates a complete response (CR), therapy will stop and regular follow-up will begin. If the subsequent PET/CT for RER patients indicates a partial response, those patients will undergo IFRT. Slow Early Responders ABVE-PC All patients will have initial treatment utilizing ABVE-PC x2 cycles. Those patients determined to have a slow early response (SER) determined by PET/CT scan after two cycles of ABVE-PC will receive 2 courses of DECA. If after PET/CT, the patient has a partial or complete response, then 2 additional courses of ABVE-PC will be given. If subsequent PET/CT scan indicates PR or CR, those patients will then undergo IFRT. If stable or progressive disease is found at either PET/CT scan, the patient will be taken off-study and follow up will begin.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Changes in Frequency of Regulatory Cell Population Baseline to 18 Months To identify the behavior of antigen-specific cytotoxic T-cells and specific chemokine/cytokine biomarkers in patients with low and intermediate risk HD undergoing chemotherapy with or without radiation therapy will be analyzed using means, medians, standard deviations, and confidence interval estimates. Pairwise comparisons, paired t-tests, and/or Wilcoxon signed-rank tests will be used to compare the changes.
Function of Regulatory Cell Population Up to 18 months To identify tumor and circulating biomarkers in patients with low and intermediate risk HD who receive chemotherapy with or without radiation therapy and correlate with clinical outcomes including incidence of relapse and infection using random coefficient mixed models and multivariate cox proportional hazard modeling.
Response to therapy from Day 1 of Treatment up to 18 months To define the general immune recovery in patients with low and intermediate risk HD undergoing chemotherapy with or without radiation therapy. Descriptive analysis of response to therapy, event-free survival, overall survival, relapse, and infection will be summarized using summary statistics.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Texas Children's Hospital
🇺🇸Houston, Texas, United States