CHICAGO – Routine surveillance imaging does not improve clinical outcomes in patients with classic Hodgkin disease who are in first complete remission and it sharply increases costs, researchers reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
The team, led by Dr. Sai Ravi Pingali, retrospectively reviewed the charts of 241 adult patients who achieved a complete remission after first-line therapy.
In 68%, the treating physicians’ planned approach was routine surveillance imaging, which consisted of radiologic imaging with scans every few months, plus clinical exams and laboratory testing. In the other 32%, the planned approach was clinical surveillance, meaning that radiologic imaging was performed only if concerning signs or symptoms occurred.
The two groups had statistically indistinguishable overall survival, and in both groups, all patients experiencing relapse successfully achieved a second complete remission with salvage therapy.
In the routinely imaged group, scanning increased costs by nearly $20,000 per patient and by almost $600,000 per each relapse detected. In addition, patients were exposed to the associated radiation.
"We were unable to detect an overall survival benefit associated with routine surveillance imaging, although I have to acknowledge that our study was limited in power given the small number of deaths and relapses," commented Dr. Pingali, an oncologist with the Medical College of Wisconsin Affiliated Hospitals in Milwaukee.
"Relapses in both ... groups were effectively salvaged with autologous stem cell transplantation, arguing against a critical advantage of detection of asymptomatic relapse. Also, we need to keep in mind that the costs associated with routine surveillance imaging are significant, and it is also associated with potential risks, both in terms of radiation exposure and unnecessary work-up," he added.
"We do not feel that potential risks and costs without overall survival benefit or any other clinical benefit justify the practice of routine surveillance imaging in classical Hodgkin lymphoma patients who have achieved a complete remission after first-line therapy. We recommend that such patients be followed clinically," Dr. Pingali concluded.
Invited discussant Dr. Leo Gordon of Northwestern University in Chicago, agreed that accumulating data argue against routine imaging for surveillance in this context and noted that insurers will likely not continue to cover scans having no proven benefit. The data should prompt a revision of guidelines and reeducation of clinicians and patients, he said.
"For translational researchers and investigators and academics, I think we need to convince journal reviewers that a manuscript is acceptable if scans are not so frequent. And for industry trials, I think we need to discuss with the Food and Drug Administration the endpoint of progression-free survival and that those endpoints may not only be driven by scans but by more mundane parameters," he said—namely, the history and physical examination.
But session comoderator Dr. Gilles A. Salles of Hospices Civils de Lyon, Université Claude Bernard, France, expressed reservations, noting that the study did not provide information on how patients were allocated to groups and the time frame of relapse.
"It may be different whether relapses occur early, in the first year, or they occur later, and that may have some implications for the surveillance," he said. "I understand that you and many others jumped over the idea that we should immediately stop. A few people may think that we need more solid data, despite the provocative and quality data that were presented, to really make this jump in clinical practice. That’s my personal opinion."
Dr. Pingali and his team retrospectively reviewed the charts of adult patients who received a new diagnosis of classical Hodgkin lymphoma between 2000 and 2010 at three institutions, achieved complete remission after first-line therapy and had at least 2 years of follow-up.
The routine surveillance imaging and clinical surveillance groups had similar demographic and disease characteristics, Dr. Pingali reported. The former were significantly more likely to have received ABVD (doxorubicin [Adriamycin], bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine) and less likely to have received the Stanford V regimen as first-line therapy, and they were significantly less likely to have received radiation therapy.
With a median duration of follow-up of about 4 years, the groups did not differ significantly with respect to overall survival. "When we look at the 5-year time point, when typically the surveillance CT scans are discontinued, the curves are pretty much superimposable," he pointed out.
There were five deaths in the routine surveillance imaging group, one of which was from relapsed disease; the other deaths were from cancer, heart failure, hip fracture, and myelodysplastic syndrome. There were four deaths in the clinical surveillance group: two were from non-Hodgkin lymphoma and two from unknown causes while the patient was in confirmed remission.