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Association of improved overall survival with decreased distant metastasis following asparaginase-based chemotherapy and radiotherapy for intermediate- and high-risk early-stage extranodal nasal-type NK/T-cell lymphoma: a CLCG study

Xin Zheng, Xiaohui He, Yong Yang, X. Liu, L.L. Zhang, Baolin Qu, Qiuzi Zhong, Qian Li, Xiaorong Hou, Xueying Qiao, Hui-Mei Wang, Yuan Zhu, Jianzhong Cao, Junxin Wu, Tao Wu, S Y Zhu, Mei Shi, Liming Xu, H.L. Zhang, Hang Su, Yaqing Song, Jun Zhu, Yu Zhang, Hui Huang, Y. Wang, Feilong Chen, Lina Yin, Shu‐Nan Qi, Y.X. Li

2021ESMO Open26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study evaluated the survival benefit of asparaginase (ASP)-based versus non-ASP-based chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy in a real-world cohort of patients with early-stage extranodal nasal-type natural killer/T-cell lymphoma (ENKTCL). PATIENTS AND METHODS: We identified 376 patients who received combined radiotherapy with either ASP-based (ASP, platinum, and gemcitabine; n = 286) or non-ASP-based (platinum and gemcitabine; n = 90) regimens. The patients were stratified into low-, intermediate-, and high-risk groups using the early stage-adjusted nomogram-revised risk index. Overall survival (OS) and distant metastasis (DM)-free survival (DMFS) between the chemotherapy regimens were compared using inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) and multivariable analyses. RESULTS: ASP-based (versus non-ASP-based) regimens significantly improved 5-year OS (84.5% versus 73.2%, P = 0.021) and DMFS (84.4% versus 74.5%, P = 0.014) for intermediate- and high-risk patients, but not for low-risk patients in the setting of radiotherapy. Moreover, ASP-based regimens decreased DM, with a 5-year cumulative DM rate of 14.9% for ASP-based regimens compared with 25.1% (P = 0.014) for non-ASP-based regimens. The survival benefit of ASP-based chemotherapy and radiotherapy remained consistent after adjusting the confounding variables using IPTW and multivariate analyses; additional sensitivity analyses confirmed these results. CONCLUSIONS: The findings provided support for ASP-based chemotherapy and radiotherapy as a first-line treatment strategy for intermediate- and high-risk early-stage ENKTCL.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInternal medicineRadiation therapyOncologyGemcitabineChemotherapyStage (stratigraphy)T-cell lymphomaLymphomaBiologyPaleontologyLymphoma Diagnosis and TreatmentCNS Lymphoma Diagnosis and TreatmentImmune Cell Function and Interaction