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Safety of bendamustine for the treatment of indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma: a UK real-world experience

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posted on 2024-12-03, 15:11 authored by Rohan Shotton, Rachel Broadbent, Alia Alchawaf, Mohamed Bakri Mohamed, Adam Gibb, Nicolás Martinez-Calle, Christopher P Fox, Mark Bishton, Alexandra Pender, Mary Gleeson, David Cunningham, Andrew Davies, Sina Yadollahi, Toby A Eyre, Graham Collins, Faouzi Djebbari, Shireen Kassam, Paula Garland, Emily Watts, Wendy Osborne, William Townsend, Rachael Pocock, Matthew J Ahearne, Fiona Miall, Xin Wang, Kim M Linton

Bendamustine is among the most effective chemotherapeutics for indolent B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (iNHL), but trial reports of significant toxicity, including opportunistic infections and excess deaths, led to prescriber warnings. We conducted a multicenter observational study evaluating bendamustine toxicity in real-world practice. Patients receiving at least 1 dose of bendamustine with/without rituximab (R) for iNHL were included. Demographics, lymphoma and treatment details, and grade 3 to 5 adverse events (AEs) were analyzed and correlated. In total, 323 patients were enrolled from 9 National Health Service hospitals. Most patients (96%) received bendamustine-R, and 46%, R maintenance. Overall, 21.7% experienced serious AEs (SAE) related to treatment, including infections in 12%, with absolute risk highest during induction (63%), maintenance (20%), and follow-up (17%) and the relative risk highest during maintenance (54%), induction (34%), and follow-up (28%). Toxicity led to permanent treatment discontinuation for 13% of patients, and 2.8% died of bendamustine-related infections (n = 5), myelodysplastic syndrome (n = 3), and cardiac disease (n = 1). More SAEs per patient were reported in patients with mantle cell lymphoma, poor preinduction performance status (PS), poor premaintenance PS, and abnormal preinduction total globulins and in those receiving growth factors. Use of antimicrobial prophylaxis was variable, and 3 of 10 opportunistic infections occurred despite prophylaxis. In this real-world analysis, bendamustine-related deaths and treatment discontinuation were similar to those of trial populations of younger, fitter patients. Poor PS, mantle cell histology, and maintenance R were potential risk factors. Infections, including late onset events, were the most common treatment-related SAE and cause of death, warranting extended antimicrobial prophylaxis and infectious surveillance, especially for maintenance-treated patients.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Medicine

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Blood Advances

Volume

8

Issue

4

Pagination

878 - 888

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

issn

2473-9529

eissn

2473-9537

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-12-03

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Fiona Miall

Deposit date

2024-11-21