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. 1989 Mar-Apr;74(2):173-9.

Combination chemotherapy with alternating MOPP-ABVD in advanced Hodgkin's disease

  • PMID: 2473013

Combination chemotherapy with alternating MOPP-ABVD in advanced Hodgkin's disease

E Brusamolino et al. Haematologica. 1989 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

Fifty untreated adult patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease (HD) were given alternating MOPP-ABVD chemotherapy in a prospective eight-cycle program. This series included 33 patients with stage II-III disease and bulky lymphoma and/or B symptoms, and 17 patients with stage IV disease. Nodular sclerosis amounted to 52%, and systemic symptoms were present in 70% of patients. The median follow-up was 50 months from the initiation of therapy (range: 36-78 months). The complete remission rate was 80%, with no differences according to the main patient characteristics before therapy, except for bulky (65%) versus non bulky (88%) disease (p = 0.05). The actuarial 4-year overall (OS) and relapse-free survival were 78% and 71%, respectively. No clear-cut pretreatment characteristics showed an influence on survival, although there was a trend favoring non bulky versus bulky disease (p = 0.08). The actuarial 4-year OS of complete responders was 92%; all 13 patients who died had evidence of HD; the cause of death was disease progression and organ failure in 11 cases, acute myelomonocytic and opportunistic infections with AIDS in the other two cases, respectively. No severe pancytopenia episodes or life-threatening complications occurred during therapy; gastrointestinal and neurological toxicity were mild and no patient refused to complete the treatment. Menstruating women were given estrogen-progesterone combinations, and all continued to have regular menses throughout chemotherapy and afterwards; a young woman had a normal pregnancy resulting in a normal live birth. Only one case of stable amenorrhea was observed. Oligospermia after chemotherapy was seen in seven of 10 tested males, and azoospermia in one case.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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