r-epoch

Medically reviewed by
LIV Hospital Expert Healthcare
...
Views
Read Time

Drug Overview

R‑EPOCH (dose-adjusted rituximab, etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin) is an advanced chemo-immunotherapy regimen designed for aggressive B-cell lymphomas, delivering continuous 96-hour infusions to maximize tumor cell exposure across the cell cycle while rituximab provides targeted CD20 immunotherapy. Its dose-adjusted approach personalizes intensity based on neutrophil nadirs, balancing efficacy against myelotoxicity in high-risk cases like double-hit lymphomas. r-epoch

  • Generic name: R-EPOCH regimen (Rituximab + Etoposide + Prednisone + Vincristine + Cyclophosphamide + Doxorubicin)
  • US Brand names: No regimen-specific brand; components include Rituxan (rituximab), Adriamycin (doxorubicin), Oncovin (vincristine), Cytoxan (cyclophosphamide)
  • Drug Class: Multi-agent chemo-immunotherapy; rituximab as targeted CD20 monoclonal antibody immunotherapy
  • Route of Administration: Intravenous continuous infusions (etopo/doxo/vcr Days 1-4), IV bolus (cyclo Day 5), oral prednisone (Days 1-5)
  • FDA Approval Status: Regimen guideline-endorsed (NCCN Category 1 for certain high-grade lymphomas); all components individually FDA-approved for NHL​

    R-epoch is a proven and intensive chemotherapy regimen. Discover the benefits of this effective cancer treatment for better health results. r-epoch

What Is It and How Does It Work? (Mechanism of Action):

R%E2%80%91EPOCH image 1 LIV Hospital
r-epoch 2

R‑EPOCH is designed to provide continuous, schedule-intensive exposure of lymphoma cells to multiple non‑cross‑resistant mechanisms, while rituximab specifically targets CD20‑positive B cells.

  • Rituximab – targeted CD20 immunotherapy
    • Binds to CD20 on normal and malignant B cells, clustering the receptor in lipid rafts.
    • Induces complement‑dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) by activating the classical complement cascade and forming membrane attack complexes that lyse B cells.
    • Promotes antibody‑dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) through Fcγ receptor engagement on NK cells and macrophages, resulting in perforin‑ and granzyme‑mediated killing.
    • Directly triggers apoptosis via intracellular signaling cascades (calcium flux, caspase activation, modulation of BCL‑2 family proteins).
  • Etoposide – topoisomerase II inhibition
    • Stabilizes the DNA–topoisomerase II cleavable complex, preventing re‑ligation of double‑stranded DNA breaks.
    • Accumulation of DNA breaks during S and G2 phases leads to replication fork collapse, activation of ATM/ATR checkpoint pathways, and mitochondrial apoptosis.
  • Prednisone – lymphocytotoxic steroid
    • Binds cytosolic glucocorticoid receptors in lymphocytes, translocating to the nucleus to alter transcription of pro‑ and anti‑apoptotic genes.
    • Upregulates pro‑apoptotic factors and downregulates survival signals (e.g., IL‑2), leading to apoptosis and lysis of both normal and malignant lymphocytes.
  • Vincristine – microtubule disruption
    • Binds β‑tubulin, preventing polymerization of microtubules and formation of the mitotic spindle.
    • Arrests cells in metaphase and ultimately triggers apoptosis through prolonged mitotic block and activation of intrinsic cell death pathways.
  • Cyclophosphamide – DNA alkylation and cross‑linking
    • Prodrug activated by hepatic CYP450 enzymes to phosphoramide mustard.
    • Covalently binds the N7 position of guanine, forming intra‑ and inter‑strand cross‑links, distorting DNA, blocking replication/transcription, and inducing p53‑mediated apoptosis.
  • Doxorubicin – DNA intercalation and free radical formation
    • Intercalates between DNA base pairs, inhibiting transcription and replication.
    • Inhibits topoisomerase II, increasing DNA strand breaks.
    • Generates reactive oxygen species via iron‑dependent reactions, causing oxidative damage to DNA, membranes, and mitochondria.
  • Regimen‑level effects
    • Continuous 96‑hour infusions of etoposide, vincristine, and doxorubicin maintain cytotoxic drug levels across the cell cycle rather than relying on brief peaks, which may be particularly effective in highly proliferative lymphomas.
    • Dose‑adjusted R‑EPOCH (DA‑R‑EPOCH) escalates or de‑escalates doses of etoposide, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide based on neutrophil nadirs, individualizing intensity to marrow tolerance.

FDA Approved Clinical Indications (List clearly in bullet format)

R‑EPOCH is used protocol‑wise for various aggressive lymphomas; the uses below reflect common guideline‑based practice.

  • Oncological uses
    • First‑line treatment of certain aggressive B‑cell non‑Hodgkin lymphomas, including high‑grade B‑cell lymphomas with double‑hit or triple‑hit genetics (MYC with BCL2/BCL6 rearrangements), in some protocols.
    • Treatment of primary mediastinal large B‑cell lymphoma in selected settings.
    • Alternative to R‑CHOP in high‑risk diffuse large B‑cell lymphoma (DLBCL) subgroups per institutional or trial‑based protocols.
    • Occasionally used in other aggressive B‑ or T‑cell lymphomas where an EPOCH‑based regimen is indicated, often with curative intent.
  • Non‑oncological uses
    • None; use is limited to malignant hematologic conditions.

Dosage and Administration Protocols

21-day cycles ×6; often inpatient first cycle; central venous access required for CVI.​

Component / DayStandard Adult Dose (example)Frequency / CycleInfusion Time / RouteDose Adjustments (renal/hepatic)
Rituximab (Day 1)375 mg/m² IVEvery 21 daysFirst cycle 4–6 h; subsequent 3–4 h IV infusionNo formal renal adjustment; caution in hepatic impairment; premedicate for infusion reactions.
Etoposide (Days 1–4)50 mg/m²/day IVContinuous over Days 1–424‑hour continuous IV infusion (96 h total)Reduce in moderate–severe renal impairment; adjust in hepatic dysfunction.
Doxorubicin (Days 1–4)10 mg/m²/day IVContinuous over Days 1–424‑hour continuous IV infusion (with etoposide)Consider reduction in hepatic impairment; lifetime cumulative dose limits for cardiotoxicity.
Vincristine (Days 1–4)0.4 mg/m²/day IV (max daily dose often capped)Continuous over Days 1–424‑hour continuous IV infusion (with etoposide)Reduce in significant hepatic dysfunction; avoid in severe neuropathy.
Cyclophosphamide (Day 5)750 mg/m² IVEvery 21 days30–60 min IV infusion on Day 5Reduce in renal impairment (especially GFR <30 mL/min) and hepatic dysfunction; mesna uroprotection as per protocol.
Prednisone (Days 1–5)60 mg/m² PO dailyEvery 21 daysOral, usually in divided dosesNo formal adjustment but monitor in diabetes, hypertension, and psychiatric illness.

Dose Adjustment: Escalate/de-escalate etopo/doxo/cyclo ±20% per Day 10 ANC nadir/duration.​

Clinical Efficacy and Research Results

DA-R-EPOCH excels in high-risk molecular subtypes.​

  • NCI series: 5y EFS 43%, OS 70%; 10y OS 79% overall, 100% BCL6+ subset.
  • Double-hit DLBCL: 4y PFS 64% vs R-CHOP 30-40% (retrospectives).
  • PMLBCL: 5y PFS 97%, superior to R-CHOP.
  • 2020-2025: CONFIRM trial ongoing vs R-CHOP; real-world CR 80-90% high-grade B-cell lymphoma.​

Safety Profile and Side Effects:

Because R‑EPOCH is intensive and includes anthracycline, alkylator, vinca alkaloid, and steroid components plus rituximab, toxicity is substantial, and monitoring is critical.

Black Box Warning (component‑related)

  • Doxorubicin:
    • Risk of severe, potentially irreversible cardiomyopathy; lifetime cumulative dose limits; heart failure risk increases at higher cumulative exposure.
  • Cyclophosphamide:
    • Risk of secondary malignancies and hemorrhagic cystitis.
  • Rituximab:
    • Severe, sometimes fatal infusion reactions.
    • Hepatitis B reactivation and fulminant hepatic failure.
    • Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML).

Common side effects (>10%)

  • Hematologic:
    • Neutropenia, anemia, and thrombocytopenia.
  • Gastrointestinal:
    • Nausea, vomiting, mucositis, loss of appetite, diarrhea or constipation.
  • General and others:
    • Fatigue, alopecia, peripheral neuropathy (from vincristine), steroid‑related insomnia and mood changes, mild to moderate rituximab infusion reactions (fever, chills, rash).
  • Management strategies:
    • Prophylactic antiemetics (5‑HT3 antagonists ± NK1 inhibitor) and mouth care to reduce mucositis.
    • G‑CSF support starting after completion of chemotherapy to reduce duration of neutropenia.
    • Premedication before rituximab (acetaminophen, antihistamine ± corticosteroid) and slow initial infusion with careful monitoring.
    • Dose reduction or omission of vincristine if neuropathy becomes significant.

Connection to Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine (If Applicable)

Bridge to autoSCT in poor responders; trials combine with CAR-T post-induction.​

Patient Management and Practical Recommendations

Inpatient/outpatient hybrid; central line mandatory.​

  • Pre-treatment tests: CBC/chem, echo/MUGA (LVEF>50%), HBV/HCV/HIV, PFTs, fertility counseling, PET-CT.
  • Precautions: qWeek CBCs, neuro q-shift (vcr), glucose/psych (steroids), CVI site care.
  • Do’s
    • Mouth care, infection vigilance, and G-CSF compliance.
    • Fertility preservation discussion pre-tx.
  • Don’ts
    • Skip HBV screen.
    • Ignore neuropathy/constipation.
    • Exceed the doxo cumulative dose.​

Legal Disclaimer

This guide is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Decisions about R‑EPOCH or any chemotherapy regimen must be made by qualified healthcare professionals based on individual patient factors, current clinical guidelines, and official prescribing information for each component drug.

i

Medical Disclaimer

The content on this page is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider regarding any medical conditions.

Trusted Worldwide
30
Years of
Experience
30 Years Badge

With patients from across the globe, we bring over three decades of medical

LIV Hospital Expert Healthcare
Patient Reviews
Reviews from 9,651
4,9

Get a Free Quote

Response within 2 hours during business hours

Clinics/branches
GDPR
Was this content helpful?
Your feedback helps us improve.
What did you like?
Share more details about your experience.
You must give consent to continue.

Thank you!

Your feedback has been submitted successfully. Your input is valuable in helping us improve.

Our Doctors

Asst. Prof. MD. Meltem Topalgökçeli Selam

Asst. Prof. MD. Meltem Topalgökçeli Selam

Prof. MD.  Batur Gönenç Kanar

Prof. MD. Batur Gönenç Kanar

Diet. Özgenaz Kazan

Diet. Özgenaz Kazan

Prof. MD.  Duran Tok

Prof. MD. Duran Tok

Spec. MD. Ahmet Şadi Kılınç

Spec. MD. Ahmet Şadi Kılınç

Assoc. Prof. MD. Nadir Göksügür

Assoc. Prof. MD. Nadir Göksügür

Spec. MD. Melike Akar

Spec. MD. Melike Akar

Prof. MD. Mustafa Sünbül

Prof. MD. Mustafa Sünbül

Spec. MD. Nurullah Yılmaz

Spec. MD. Nurullah Yılmaz

Assoc. Prof. MD. Zehra Çağla Karakoç

Assoc. Prof. MD. Zehra Çağla Karakoç

Op. MD. Burak Hazine

Op. MD. Burak Hazine

Op. MD. Rıdvan Gökay

Op. MD. Rıdvan Gökay

Need Help? Chat with our medical team

Let's Talk on WhatsApp

📌

Get instant answers from our medical team. No forms, no waiting — just tap below to start chatting now.

or call us at +90 530 174 26 75