Focus Area

Lymphoma

Lymphoma affects the lymphatic system and includes both Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin types. The Hope Foundation funds cutting-edge research and clinical trials through SWOG to develop more effective and less toxic treatments for lymphoma patients.

15-Year Results from SWOG’s S0016 Study Suggest Follicular Lymphoma Is Curable

February 2026

For decades, patients diagnosed with advanced-stage follicular lymphoma,  a slow-growing type of blood cancer, have been told the same difficult truth: the disease is incurable. It can be treated and managed, but it almost always comes back. A major new SWOG analysis, just published in JAMA Oncology, is challenging that long-held assumption in a meaningful way.

Researchers applied a sophisticated statistical method called cure modeling to 15 years of follow-up data from the S0016 clinical trial, which enrolled patients with advanced-stage follicular lymphoma beginning in 2001. About 70 percent of patients remained alive 15 years after starting treatment, and the cure modeling estimated that 42 percent of treated patients had been cured, meaning they have no chance of the lymphoma recurring during their expected lifespan.

Lead author Dr. Jonathan Friedberg called these findings a “paradigm shift” in the understanding of follicular lymphoma. The results suggest that a substantial subset of patients, when treated with a standard regimen combining immunotherapy and chemotherapy, can achieve long-term disease control after a time-limited course of treatment. This could change how newly diagnosed patients are counseled and could eliminate the need for indefinite oncology and radiologic follow-up visits, with patients eventually transitioning from oncology care back to a primary care team.

Key milestones in Lymphoma research

Through Hope-supported studies, new drugs have been approved, unnecessary treatments eliminated, and access to lifesaving research expanded to patients everywhere.

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Research Impact

2026

A new long-term study challenges the belief that advanced follicular lymphoma is incurable, finding that about 42% of patients treated with standard therapy may be effectively cured and remain cancer-free for life.

Clinical Impact

2024

The SWOG S1826 trial established nivolumab plus AVD chemotherapy as the new standard of care for advanced Hodgkin lymphoma, replacing brentuximab vedotin + AVD with a regimen showing superior progression-free survival and fewer toxic side effects.

Clinical Impact

2020

The SWOG S1001 trial proved that most patients with limited-stage diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) can safely skip radiation therapy after four cycles of R-CHOP chemotherapy—cutting long-term toxicity without sacrificing cure rates.

Latest Lymphoma news

Our members move the latest research from the laboratory into the lives of patients. Read on for the latest milestones reached through our nationwide-and-beyond network of clinical trialists and their groundbreaking studies.

Additional areas of focus

The Hope Foundation for Cancer Research partners with SWOG Cancer Research Network to provide over $6.5 million each year in support of oncology research in lung, breast, gastrointestinal, and genitourinary cancers, as well as melanoma, myeloma, leukemia, lymphoma, and rare diseases. We fund critical, need-based research grants, fellowships, training events, physician education, and patient advocacy.

6 active studies open to enrollment or gathering long-term follow up data.

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7 active studies open to enrollment or gathering long-term follow up data.

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8 active studies open to enrollment or gathering long-term follow up data.

Learn More