No survival difference with allo- or auto-SCT in PTCL
An updated analysis, performed at a median observation time of 26 months, showed there was still no significant difference in overall survival between the treatment arms (P=0.362).
Cause of death
In the intent-to-treat population—30 patients in the auto-SCT arm and 28 in the allo-SCT arm—there were 16 lymphoma-related deaths, 10 in the auto-SCT arm and 6 in the allo-SCT arm.
There were 6 deaths related to study treatment (4 early and 2 late), all in the allo-SCT arm. One patient in the allo-SCT arm died of post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder, and 1 patient in the same arm died of hemorrhage after salvage. One patient in each arm died as a result of salvage treatment.
Dr Schmitz and his colleagues also looked at the cause of death among patients who received a transplant—19 in the auto-SCT arm and 17 in the allo-SCT arm.
After SCT, there were 7 deaths in each arm. In the auto-SCT arm, there were 6 lymphoma-related deaths and 1 death related to salvage treatment. In the allo-SCT arm, there were 7 cases of non-relapse-related mortality, including 1 patient with post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder.
“There certainly seems to be a [graft-vs-lymphoma] effect of allo-transplant in T-cell lymphoma that is, unfortunately, in some way, counterbalanced by high transplant-related mortality,” Dr Schmitz said.
He added that results of a final analysis of the 104 patients enrolled on this study should be available in 2017.
*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.