Medicine (St Vincent's) - Research Publications

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    A comparative analysis of histone deacetylase inhibitors for the treatment of mycosis fungoides and Sezary syndrome
    Papps, T ; McCormack, C ; Buelens, O ; Van der Weyden, C ; Twigger, R ; Campbell, BA ; Dickinson, M ; Prince, HM (WILEY, 2020-02-01)
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    Autologous stem cell transplantation for untreated transformed indolent B-cell lymphoma in first remission: an international, multi-centre propensity-score-matched study
    Chin, CK ; Lim, KJ ; Lewis, K ; Jain, P ; Qing, Y ; Feng, L ; Cheah, CY ; Seymour, JF ; Ritchie, D ; Burbury, K ; Tam, CS ; Fowler, NH ; Fayad, LE ; Westin, JR ; Neelapu, SS ; Hagemeister, FB ; Samaniego, F ; Flowers, CR ; Nastoupil, LJ ; Dickinson, MJ (WILEY, 2020-12)
    High-dose chemotherapy (HDC) and autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) are used as consolidation in first remission (CR1) in some centres for untreated, transformed indolent B-cell lymphoma (Tr-iNHL) but the evidence base is weak. A total of 319 patients with untreated Tr-iNHL meeting prespecified transplant eligibility criteria [age <75, LVEF ≥45%, no severe lung disease, CR by positron emission tomography or computed tomography ≥3 months after at least standard cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisolone with rituximab (R-CHOP) intensity front-line chemotherapy] were retrospectively identified. Non-diffuse large B-cell lymphoma transformations were excluded. About 283 (89%) patients had follicular lymphoma, 30 (9%) marginal-zone lymphoma and six (2%) other subtypes. Forty-nine patients underwent HDC/ASCT in CR1, and a 1:2 propensity-score-matched cohort of 98 patients based on age, stage and high-grade B-cell lymphoma with MYC, BCL2 and/or BCL6 rearrangements (HGBL-DH) was generated. After a median follow-up of 3·7 (range 0·1-18·3) years, ASCT was associated with significantly superior progression-free survival [hazard ratio (HR) 0·51, 0·27-0·98; P = 0·043] with a trend towards inferior overall survival (OS; HR 2·36;0·87-6·42; P = 0·1) due to more deaths from progressive disease (8% vs. 4%). Forty (41%) patients experienced relapse in the non-ASCT cohort - 15 underwent HDC/ASCT with seven (47%) ongoing complete remission (CR); 10 chimeric antigen receptor-modified T-cell (CAR-T) therapy with 6 (60%) ongoing CR; 3 allogeneic SCT with 2 (67%) ongoing CR. Although ASCT in CR1 improves initial duration of disease control in untreated Tr-iNHL, the impact on OS is less clear with effective salvage therapies in this era of CAR-T.
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    Australian and New Zealand consensus statement on the management of lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and myeloma during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Di Ciaccio, P ; McCaughan, G ; Trotman, J ; Ho, PJ ; Cheah, CY ; Gangatharan, S ; Wight, J ; Ku, M ; Quach, H ; Gasiorowski, R ; Polizzotto, MN ; Prince, HM ; Mulligan, S ; Tam, CS ; Gregory, G ; Hapgood, G ; Spencer, A ; Dickinson, M ; Latimer, M ; Johnston, A ; Armytage, T ; Lee, C ; Cochrane, T ; Berkhahn, L ; Weinkove, R ; Doocey, R ; Harrison, SJ ; Webber, N ; Lee, H-P ; Chapman, S ; Campbell, BA ; Gibbs, SDJ ; Hamad, N (WILEY, 2020-06)
    The COVID-19 pandemic poses a unique challenge to the care of patients with haematological malignancies. Viral pneumonia is known to cause disproportionately severe disease in patients with cancer, and patients with lymphoma, myeloma and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia are likely to be at particular risk of severe disease related to COVID-19. This statement has been developed by consensus among authors from Australia and New Zealand. We aim to provide supportive guidance to clinicians making individual patient decisions during the COVID-19 pandemic, in particular during periods that access to healthcare resources may be limited. General recommendations include those to minimise patient exposure to COVID-19, including the use of telehealth, avoidance of non-essential visits and minimisation of time spent by patients in infusion suites and other clinical areas. This statement also provides recommendations where appropriate in assessing indications for therapy, reducing therapy-associated immunosuppression and reducing healthcare utilisation in patients with specific haematological malignancies during the COVID-19 pandemic. Specific decisions regarding therapy of haematological malignancies will need to be individualised, based on disease risk, risks of immunosuppression, rates of community transmission of COVID-19 and available local healthcare resources.
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    Role of Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation in Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma
    Abeyakoon, C ; van der Weyden, C ; Harrop, S ; Khot, A ; Dickinson, M ; Yannakou, CK ; Prince, HM (MDPI, 2020-11)
    Peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCLs) are distinct pathological entities with clinical advancements lagging behind their B-cell lymphoma counterpart. Frequently aggressive in their clinical behaviour, clinicians are constantly challenged with low complete remission rates, early relapses and failure to achieve long-term responses despite aggressive first-line chemotherapy, resulting in poor overall survival in the majority of patients. There is currently no consensus regarding the optimal therapy for PTCL and treatment approaches are mainly derived from prospective phase II studies, registry data and retrospective studies. Despite its biological heterogeneity, a less than satisfactory "one-size-fits-all" approach has been adopted to date. Although its role remains controversial, for many years, haematopoietic stem cell transplantation has been adopted by clinicians with the aim of overcoming poor outcomes by consolidating responses. In this review, we aim to define the role of both autologous and allogeneic stem cell transplantation in PTCL in both frontline and salvage settings, especially in the context of recent advancements in this field.