Global patterns of care in advanced stage mycosis fungoides/Sezary syndrome: a multicenter retrospective follow-up study from the Cutaneous Lymphoma International Consortium

ABSTRACT Background Advanced-stage mycosis fungoides (MF)/Sezary syndrome (SS) patients are weighted by an unfavorable prognosis and share an unmet clinical need of effective treatments. International guidelines are available detailing treatment options for the different stages but without recommending treatments in any particular order due to lack of comparative trials. The aims of this second CLIC study were to retrospectively analyze the pattern of care worldwide for advanced-stage MF/SS patients, the distribution of treatments according to geographical areas (USA versus non-USA), and wheth... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Martina Sanlorenzo
José Antonio Sanches
Emmilia Hodak
Iris Amitay-Laish
Estela Martinez-Escala
Emilio Berti
Rein Willemze
Martine Bagot
Rudolf Stadler
Rakhshandra Talpur
Ch. Antoniou
Tomomitsu Miyagaki
Paolo Fava
Simona Osella-Abate
S. Alberti Violetti
V. Nikolaou
K. Rogers
Octavio Servitje
Francesco Onida
Pietro Quaglino
Simone Ribero
Henry Miles Prince
Stephen Morris
Cristina Muniesa
Chiara Astrua
M. Kheterpal
Sean Whittaker
J. Scarisbrick
F. Child
N. Spaccarelli
Youn H. Kim
S. Fabbro
S. Porkert
M.T. Fierro
René Stranzenbach
Pierluigi Porcu
Steve Horwitz
Alessandro Pileri
Pier Luigi Zinzani
Milena Maule
C. Postigo-Llorente
S. Chaganti
A. Combalia
Nicola Pimpinelli
Christopher McCormack
R. Knobler
Denis Miyashiro
Maarten H. Vermeer
A. Stevens
G. Ognibene
Daniela Zugna
M. Duvic
Larisa J. Geskin
Richard T. Hoppe
Joan Guitart
Teresa Estrach
Evangelia Papadavid
Caroline Ram-Wolff
Ellen Kim
Alain H. Rook
Constanze Jonak
Vieri Grandi
Makoto Sugaya
P L Ortiz-Romero
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2017
Schlagwörter: Netherlands / Oncology / Hematology
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27591064
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://www.openaccessrepository.it/record/100437

ABSTRACT Background Advanced-stage mycosis fungoides (MF)/Sezary syndrome (SS) patients are weighted by an unfavorable prognosis and share an unmet clinical need of effective treatments. International guidelines are available detailing treatment options for the different stages but without recommending treatments in any particular order due to lack of comparative trials. The aims of this second CLIC study were to retrospectively analyze the pattern of care worldwide for advanced-stage MF/SS patients, the distribution of treatments according to geographical areas (USA versus non-USA), and whether the heterogeneity of approaches has potential impact on survival. Patients and methods This study included 853 patients from 21 specialist centers (14 European, 4 USA, 1 each Australian, Brazilian, and Japanese). Results Heterogeneity of treatment approaches was found, with up to 24 different modalities or combinations used as first-line and 36% of patients receiving four or more treatments. Stage IIB disease was most frequently treated by total-skin-electron-beam radiotherapy, bexarotene and gemcitabine; erythrodermic and SS patients by extracorporeal photochemotherapy, and stage IVA2 by polychemotherapy. Significant differences were found between USA and non-USA centers, with bexarotene, photopheresis and histone deacetylase inhibitors most frequently prescribed for first-line treatment in USA while phototherapy, interferon, chlorambucil and gemcitabine in non-USA centers. These differences did not significantly impact on survival. However, when considering death and therapy change as competing risk events and the impact of first treatment line on both events, both monochemotherapy (SHR = 2.07) and polychemotherapy (SHR = 1.69) showed elevated relative risks. Conclusion This large multicenter retrospective study shows that there exist a large treatment heterogeneity in advanced MF/SS and differences between USA and non-USA centers but these were not related to survival, while our data reveal that chemotherapy as first ...