A retrospective study of treatment and outcomes in synchronous systemic and central nervous system large B-cell lymphoma.

Journal: Blood advances

Study type and population

  • Retrospective cohort from two centers over 21 years
  • 63 consecutive, previously untreated patients with synchronous systemic and de novo secondary CNS large B‑cell lymphoma
  • Majority had diffuse large B‑cell lymphoma histology (73%)

Treatment and responses

  • Most patients received ~6 cycles of R‑CHOP intercalated with high‑dose IV methotrexate (R‑CHOP‑M)
  • Overall response rate: 84%
  • Complete response rate: 75%

Outcomes (median follow-up 8.1 years)

  • Median progression-free survival (PFS): 1.2 years
  • 6‑year PFS: 37%
  • Median overall survival (OS): 7.9 years
  • 6‑year OS: 52%

Prognostic factors

  • Better PFS associated with:
  •     Normal LDH
  •     Low International Prognostic Index (IPI)
  •     Brain parenchymal–only CNS disease
  • Better OS associated with:
  •     Normal LDH
  •     Parenchymal CNS involvement (vs more extensive patterns)

Impact of consolidation with HDC/ASCT

  • 25% of patients received high‑dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplant consolidation
  • This group had superior PFS and OS vs non‑transplant patients
  • Benefit particularly notable in patients with IPI ≥3

Key implications for practice

  • A meaningful proportion of patients with synchronous systemic and secondary CNS involvement can achieve long-term survival and likely cure with upfront R‑CHOP‑M, with or without HDC/ASCT.
  • Normal LDH, low IPI, and isolated parenchymal CNS disease identify a more favorable subgroup and can aid in counseling and risk stratification.
  • HDC/ASCT consolidation appears most valuable in higher‑risk patients (IPI ≥3).

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