Background: A cooperative study was undertaken to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of a very brief course of chemotherapy followed by locoregional radiotherapy in patients with localized-stage intermediate- to high-grade non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL).
Patients and method: From January 1988 to November 1994, 84 patients with localized stages IA and IIA intermediate- to high-grade NHL underwent a combined modality treatment. All patients underwent a six-week chemotherapy regimen, ACOP-B (doxorubicin 50 mg/sqm and cyclophosphamide 350 mg/sqm on weeks 1, 3, 5; vincristine 1.4 mg/sqm and bleomycin 10 mg/sqm on weeks 2, 4, 6; prednisone 50 mg p.o. daily throughout the first two weeks and thereafter every other day), followed by locoregional radiotherapy (36 Gy).
Results: The median age was 58 years, with 35% older than 65 years; 52 patients had stage I and 32 stage II; 39 patients had extranodal +/- nodal involvement, and 4 had testicular involvement. Treatment was well tolerated, with only 38% suffering from mild mucositis and no toxic deaths. Seventy-nine patients achieved CR after ACOP-B and 83 at the end of the program. With a median follow-up of four years, relapse-free survival was 79% with 15 relapses (93% disseminated). Two patients with testis lymphoma had CNS relapses. Overall survival was 90% at four years.
Conclusion: This combined program is effective and probably curative in localized stage intermediate- to high-grade NHL, with low toxicity, also in elderly people. Patients with NHL of the testis, as primary site, require CNS prophylaxis due to the high likelihood of CNS relapse.