Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop tumor cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. Combining chemotherapy with bone marrow or peripheral stem cell transplantation may allow the doctor to give higher doses of chemotherapy drugs and kill more tumor cells.
PURPOSE: Phase II trial to study the effectiveness of combination chemotherapy followed by bone marrow or peripheral stem cell transplantation in treating patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Full description
OBJECTIVES:
OUTLINE: Syngeneic or autologous bone marrow and/or autologous peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) are harvested. Syngeneic bone marrow transplantation is preferred for patients with a qualifying identical twin donor. Patients without a syngeneic donor who have a history of lymphomatous involvement of the bone marrow or are profoundly hypocellular undergo harvest of PBSC alone. Patients without a syngeneic donor who have no history of lymphomatous involvement of the bone marrow undergo harvest of autologous bone marrow or PBSC.
Patients receive conditioning comprising cyclophosphamide IV over 1 hour on days -6 to -3 and etoposide IV over 1 hour every 12 hours and cisplatin IV continuously on days -6 to -4. Bone marrow and/or PBSC are infused on day 0. (Patients requiring more than 25 bags of stem cells receive bone marrow transplantation on day 0 and PBSC transplantation on day 1.)
After recovery from transplantation, eligible patients receive consolidative radiotherapy to any site of prior bulk disease (greater than 5 cm) present at any time before transplantation and any site of disease present at the time of transplantation.
Patients are followed at 3, 6, and 12 months and then annually thereafter.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A maximum of 30 patients will be accrued for this study.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
Histologically proven stage I-IV Hodgkin's lymphoma
Must have refractory or relapsed disease, defined by 1 of the following:
Failure to achieve a complete remission (CR) after 4 courses of conventional-dose front-line chemotherapy
Disease in second or greater remission
No chemoresistant disease, defined as active progression with tumor growth greater than 25% by volume during first-line chemotherapy
Stable residual masses after conventional-dose chemotherapy not considered treatment failures
Syngeneic marrow transplantation offered to patients with consenting identical twin donor
No CNS involvement by lymphoma
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:
Age:
Performance status:
Life expectancy:
Hematopoietic:
Hepatic:
Renal:
Must meet 1 of the following criteria:
Cardiovascular:
Pulmonary:
Other:
PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:
Biologic therapy
Chemotherapy
Endocrine therapy
Radiotherapy
Surgery
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal