Purpose: To describe the long-term results of treatment with chemotherapy plus adjuvant low-dose, involved-field radiation therapy (CMT) in patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease. Data on disease-free and failure-free survival, second malignancies, and the results of salvage therapy are presented.
Patients and methods: From 1969 to 1989, CMT was administered to 186 patients with previously untreated stage IIB, III, and IV Hodgkin's disease. Chemotherapy included MVVPP (47%), MOPP (25%), MOPP/ABVD (26%) and ABVD (2%). After 6 months of chemotherapy, patients received radiation to all involved sites with the exception of the bone marrow.
Results: The failure-free survival for all patients was 63% at 5 years, 56% at 10 years, and 40% at 23.5 years, respectively. Significantly worse results were observed in patients older than 40 years and those with stage IV disease. The overall survival of 45 patients after recurrence was 39% at 10 years, but was only 21% if the initial complete remission lasted less than 1 year. Thus far, 21 of 165 patients (12.7%) who achieved complete remission have developed a second malignancy, and 16 have died.
Conclusions: In comparison with comparable chemotherapy programs, chemotherapy plus radiation therapy may improve disease-free survival; however, the results of treatment in patients older than age 40 or with stage IV disease are still poor. Although patients with initial remissions lasting longer than 1 year can have durable second remissions, the long-term disease-free survival is poor and in the current series the majority of failures were due to recurrent Hodgkin's disease.