New Hodgkin Lymphoma Therapy Shows High Success, Reduces Need for Radiation

April 20, 2026
New Hodgkin Lymphoma Therapy Shows High Success, Reduces Need for Radiation
  • The safety profile showed that nearly all patients experienced some treatment-emergent adverse events, with 44% having grade 3 or higher events; peripheral sensory neuropathy was common but mostly low-grade and resolving, and immune-mediated events occurred in 22% (including thyroid dysfunction and rash), with no febrile neutropenia reported.

  • Two-year progression-free survival was exceptionally high—about 97% in favorable disease and 97–98% across PET response groups (Deauville scores 1–3)—indicating robust short-term disease control.

  • Most patients did not require consolidative involved-site radiation therapy, suggesting potential toxicity reduction compared with standard treatment approaches.

  • Source: Blood, led by Jeremy S. Abramson at Massachusetts General Hospital, with disclosures noting sponsorship from Seagen, Takeda, and Bristol Myers Squibb and various author affiliations.

  • Study limitations include unrecorded steroid doses, potential unreliability of interim PET as a biomarker in nivolumab-containing chemo, focus on nonbulky early-stage disease limiting generalizability, and relatively short follow-up for long-term outcomes and late toxicities.

  • AN+AD therapy—combining brentuximab vedotin with nivolumab plus doxorubicin and dacarbazine—achieved high complete responses and strong short-term disease control in nonbulky, early-stage classical Hodgkin lymphoma, based on a phase 2 trial of 154 treatment-naive patients.

  • End-of-treatment outcomes were strong: 92% complete response, 96% objective response, and 96% maintaining complete response at 2 years, with similar results across favorable and unfavorable subgroups.

  • Overall, AN+AD shows excellent efficacy and safety in nonbulky early-stage cHL and may allow omission of consolidative radiation, potentially reducing toxicity while preserving disease control.

Summary based on 1 source


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