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Rituximab key to survival after transplant for mantle cell lymphoma

Maintenance rituximab: the standard – for now

FROM BIOLOGY OF BLOOD AND MARROW TRANSPLANTATION

Rituximab maintenance was a key factor influencing survival in patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) who had undergone autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT), according to results from a retrospective, single-center study of 191 patients.

The benefit of rituximab “stands out, and adds to the increasing body of evidence supporting this practice for all MCL patients after ASCT, regardless of age and frontline induction regimens,” wrote Dr. Mei and his colleagues (Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 2017 November. doi: 10.1016/j.bbmt.2017.07.006). This was the case even with improvements in early diagnosis and supportive care, and the incorporation of novel agents such as bortezomib, lenalidomide, and ibrutinib, they wrote, noting significantly better outcomes for patients who underwent ASCT after 2007.

Wikimedia Commons/TexasPathologistMSW/CC-ASA 4.0 International
Of the 191 patients with MCL who underwent ASCT, 175 (92%) received rituximab before ASCT and 75 (39%) received maintenance rituximab after ASCT.

In multivariate analysis, maintenance rituximab therapy after ASCT was the single most important factor associated with improvement in progression-free survival (relative risk [RR], .25; 95% confidence interval, .14-.44) and overall survival (RR, .17; 95% CI, .07-.38).

Positron emission tomography scans were done prior to ASCT for 133 patients; after ASCT, 105 (79%) were found to be in a PET-negative complete remission. All but one of the patients with PET-negative disease received rituximab before ASCT. For that PET-negative subset, maintenance rituximab was significantly associated with improvements in progression-free survival (RR, .20; 95% CI, .09-.43) and overall survival (RR, .17; 95% CI, .05-.59).

This study represents one of the largest single-center reports to date on MCL patients who have undergone ASCT, according to the authors. “This study also sets the stage for prospective investigation aiming at optimization of maintenance therapy following ASCT.”

Dr. Mei reported no disclosures, and senior author Lihua E. Budde, MD, PhD, reported being a member of the Lymphoma Research Foundation MCL consortium. The study was supported by research funding from the National Cancer Institute.