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1.
In the LAME89/91 protocol, children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who achieved complete remission (CR) after induction chemotherapy, were treated either with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) if they had an HLA-compatible related donor or with chemotherapy including high-dose cytarabine. The objectives of this study were to describe the overall results of this strategy and to compare the two post-remission arms. Two hundred and thirty-one children were enrolled in the protocol. Induction chemotherapy consisted of a combination of cytarabine and mitoxantrone. A CR was achieved in 204 children (88%). Fifty-one of them had an HLA-identical sibling donor and were eligible for BMT. These 51 patients, as well as two additional children who had a one antigen HLA-mismatched father, received BMT during first CR. Consequently, 53 patients were analysed in the BMT group and 151 in the chemotherapy group. With a mean follow up duration in the study of 38 ± 2 months, overall event-free survival (EFS) was 47 ± 7% at 4 years for the 231 patients entered into the protocol. The 4-year disease-free survival (DFS) was 53 ± 8% for the 204 patients who achieved complete remission after induction therapy. The 4-year probability of relapse was 28 ± 14% in the BMT group and 47 ± 9% in the chemotherapy group (p = 0.02). The risk of therapy-related death was 6.2% for BMT and 8.1% for chemotherapy. DFS was 68 ± 14% in the BMT group and 48 ± 9% in the chemotherapy group (p = 0.02). We conclude that allogeneic BMT from a matched sibling donor is the treatment of choice for reducing the relapse risk and for increasing DFS in children with AML in first CR.  相似文献   

2.
Cytogenetic analysis at the time of diagnosis predicts outcome in patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). For those patients with favorable risk cytogenetics, stem cell transplant can be delayed until the time of relapse. For those patients with nonfavorable cytogenetic risk profiles, stem cell transplant may be required for optimal survival benefit. We treated patients with de novo AML and age less than 60 years first with etoposide, mitoxantrone, cytarabine, and G-CSF (EMA-G) to induce remission. Patients in complete remission were assigned to treatment with chemotherapy alone if they had favorable risk cytogenetics defined as the identification of a core-binding factor translocation. Patients with any other cytogenetic profile were assigned to treatment with either autologous or allogeneic stem cell transplant depending on the availability of an HLA-matched donor. Following EMA-G, 33 of 40 patients (83%) achieved CR. Of the 25 patients who actually were treated with postremission chemotherapy, 21 were treated with their assigned risk-adapted therapy. Of the 33 patients in remission, 5 year relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) was 46 and 38%, respectively. Our intensive and risk-adapted, stem cell transplant approach to the treatment of patients with AML requires a better definition of risk and does not appear to substantially improve results compared with more standard approaches.  相似文献   

3.
The exact dose of cytarabine still remain controversial for the management of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) after complete remission (CR), but recent studies favor lower doses. This study aimed to investigate the toxic effects of single-intermediate dose (ID) cytarabine in patients with AML after achieving CR, compared with standard-dose cytarabine.In this retrospective study, AML patients who achieved CR after consolidation therapy before enrollment between 07/2008 and 05/2019 were included. All patients were divided into single-ID cytarabine and standard-dose cytarabine. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to compare overall survival (OS) and relapse-free time (RFS). Cox regression models were used to assess factors independently associated with OS and RFS. The toxic side effects of hematology and non-hematology were observed.52 patients were enrolled. There were 33 in ID group, 19 in Standard dose group. The 3-year RFS rate (40.4% vs 22.2%, P = .031) was better in the ID group than in the standard-dose group, while the 3-year OS rate was not different between the 2 groups (50.2% vs 27.8%, P = .074). Treatment stratage of ID cytarabine chemotherapy significantly improve the prognosis of AML regardless of patient age, risk grade, WBC count. There were no significant differences between the 2 groups in grade 3 to 4 bone marrow suppression, gastrointestinal symptoms, blood transfusion, infections.Patients with AML receiving ID cytarabine showed better survival and similar toxicity profiles compared with patients who received standard-dose cytarabine.  相似文献   

4.
In the LAME89/91 protocol, children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who achieved complete remission (CR) after induction chemotherapy, were treated either with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) if they had an HLA-compatible related donor or with chemotherapy including high-dose cytarabine. The objectives of this study were to describe the overall results of this strategy and to compare the two post-remission arms. Two hundred and thirty-one children were enrolled in the protocol. Induction chemotherapy consisted of a combination of cytarabine and mitoxantrone. A CR was achieved in 204 children (88%). Fifty-one of them had an HLA-identical sibling donor and were eligible for BMT. These 51 patients, as well as two additional children who had a one antigen HLA-mismatched father, received BMT during first CR. Consequently, 53 patients were analysed in the BMT group and 151 in the chemotherapy group. With a mean follow up duration in the study of 38 ± 2 months, overall event-free survival (EFS) was 47 ± 7% at 4 years for the 231 patients entered into the protocol. The 4-year disease-free survival (DFS) was 53 ± 8% for the 204 patients who achieved complete remission after induction therapy. The 4-year probability of relapse was 28 ± 14% in the BMT group and 47 ± 9% in the chemotherapy group (p = 0.02). The risk of therapy-related death was 6.2% for BMT and 8.1% for chemotherapy. DFS was 68 ± 14% in the BMT group and 48 ± 9% in the chemotherapy group (p = 0.02). We conclude that allogeneic BMT from a matched sibling donor is the treatment of choice for reducing the relapse risk and for increasing DFS in children with AML in first CR.Research grant support: Supported by lAssociation pour la Recherche contre le Cancer (ARC)  相似文献   

5.
Patterns of failure were studied in two consecutive randomized trials of intensified induction therapy carried out by the Australian Leukaemia Study Group (ALSG) between 1984 and 1991 to determine the impact of dose intensification. Patients received standard dose cytarabine and daunorubicin (7-3), 7-3 plus etoposide (7-3-7) or 7-3 plus high-dose cytarabine (HIDAC-3-7) chemotherapy. Patients with FAB M3 morphology were excluded. Time to failure (TTF) was defined as the time from randomization to induction death or removal from study for non-responders, or to relapse or death in complete response (CR) for complete responders. An estimated 86% of 470 de novo patients with acute myeloid leukaemia failed within 10 years of randomization, as a result of death in induction in 17% of the randomized patients, failure to achieve CR in a further 17%, relapse in 44% and death in CR in 8% of patients. An estimated 66% of patients failed as a result of refractory disease or relapse within that period (disease-related failures). Multifactor analysis identified age and peripheral blast count as the most significant pretreatment factors associated with overall TTF. These factors, together with cytogenetics, were significantly associated with disease-related failures. High-dose cytarabine in induction significantly decreased the disease-related failure rate as did allogeneic transplantation in first CR. The impact of high-dose cytarabine did not depend on the cytogenetic risk group.  相似文献   

6.
Pretreatment characteristics and outcome of patients treated with induction regimens containing high-dose ara-C (HiDAC) at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center refractory to 1 cycle of induction were compared with similar patients achieving a complete response (CR). Among 1597 patients treated with HiDAC-based induction from 1995 to 2009, 285 were refractory to 1 cycle. Median age was 59 years (range, 18-85 years). Induction regimens included HiDAC with anthracyclines (n = 181; 64%) or HiDAC with nonanthracycline chemotherapy (n = 104; 36%). Refractory patients were older (median age, 59 vs 56 years; P < .001), more likely with unfavorable cytogenetics (P < .001) and antecedent hematologic disorder (P < .001), and had a higher presentation white blood cell count (P = .04), but not a higher incidence of FLT3 mutations (P = .85), than those achieving CR. Forty-three patients (22%) responded to salvage (35 CR and 8 CR without platelet recovery). With a median follow-up of 72 months (range, 27-118 months) in responders, 11 are alive. Nineteen patients (7%) were alive and in CR for at least 6 months, including 9 who underwent allogeneic stem cell transplantation. On multivariate analysis, severe thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis, increasing marrow blast percentage, unfavorable cytogenetics, and salvage not including allogeneic stem cell transplantation were associated with a worse survival. Alternative strategies are needed for these patients.  相似文献   

7.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate therapeutic results and prognostic factors from a series of 44 patients affected by de novo acute myeloid leukemia with multilineage dysplasia (MD-AML), treated with the combination of fludarabine, cytarabine and G-CSF (FLAG). METHODS: Forty-four patients with de novo MD-AML were treated with the FLAG regimen. The median age was 61 yr (range 31-75 yr). Induction therapy consisted of the FLAG regimen; consolidation included idarubicin plus cytarabine. Patients with a compatible donor and aged less than 55 yr were programmed to receive allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT), while in those without a donor and aged less than 65 yr autologous transplantation with peripheral blood stem cells mobilized by a consolidation regimen plus G-CSF was planned. Bone marrow harvest was performed in poor mobilizers. RESULTS: Complete remission (CR) was achieved in 28 out of 44 patients (64%). Death in induction occurred in four patients (9%), while 12 patients (27%) were resistant to FLAG. Toxicity of consolidation was negligible. Most patients aged less than 60 yr and achieving CR were eligible for transplantation procedures, the main reason of exclusion being early relapse. Median overall survival and disease free survival were 16 and 22 months, respectively. Unfavorable cytogenetics was the only parameter significantly related to inferior clinical outcome following multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION: Multilineage dysplasia per se is not an adverse prognostic factor in AML patients treated with the FLAG regimen. Favorable results are obtained in patients with intermediate karyotype, while in those with adverse cytogenetics new approaches are clearly needed. The toxicity of the regimen is also acceptable in the elderly, and following induction/consolidation, most patients may be submitted to transplantation procedures.  相似文献   

8.
In 1997–2003, a protocol for treatment of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) (except promyelocytic leukaemia) was activated in four Swedish health care regions covering 50% of the national population. Based on cytogenetics and clinical findings, patients aged 18–60 yr were assigned to one of three risk groups. In this report we account for the long‐term clinical outcome of enrolled patients. Patients received idarubicin and cytarabine in standard doses as induction therapy and consolidation courses included high‐dose cytarabine. Allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo‐SCT) from an human leucocyte antigen‐identical sibling was recommended in standard and poor‐risk patients, whereas unrelated donor transplant was reserved for poor‐risk patients. Autologous (auto‐SCT) was optional for standard or poor risk patients not eligible for allo‐SCT. Two hundred seventy‐nine patients with de novo or secondary (9%) AML, median age 51 (18–60) yr, corresponding to 77% of all patients in the population, were included. Twenty (7%) patients were assigned to the good risk group, whereas 150 (54%) and 109 patients (39%) were assigned to standard‐ and poor‐risk groups, respectively. Induction failures accounted for 55 patients; 16 early deaths eight of whom had white blood cell (WBC) >100 at diagnosis, and 39 refractory disease. Thus, complete remission (CR) rate was 80%. At study closure, the median follow‐up time of living patients was 90 months. Median survival time from diagnosis in the whole group was 27 months and 4‐yr overall survival (OS) rate was 44%. In good, standard, and poor risk groups, 4‐yr OS rates were 60, 57 and 24%, respectively. Median relapse‐free survival (RFS) time in CR1 was 25 months and RFS at 4 yr was 44%. Four‐year RFS rates were significantly (P < 0.001) different between the three risk groups; 64% in good risk, 51% in standard risk and 27% in poor risk patients. One hundred‐ten transplantations were performed in CR1; 74 allo‐SCT (50 sibling, 24 unrelated donor), and 36 auto‐SCT. Non‐relapse mortality was 16% for allo‐SCT patients. Outcome after relapse was poor with median time to death 163 d and 4‐yr survival rate 17%. Three conclusions were: (i) these data reflect treatment results in a minimally selected population‐based cohort of adult AML patients <60 yr old; (ii) a risk‐adapted therapy aiming at early allogeneic SCT in patients with a high risk of relapse is hampered by induction deaths, refractory disease, and early relapses; and (iii) high WBC count at diagnosis is confirmed as a strong risk factor for early death but not for relapse.  相似文献   

9.
Recent advances in remission induction treatment strategies for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have improved the rates of complete remission (CR) and overall survival (OS), owing to a concerted effort to tailor therapies toward specific AML subtypes. However, without effective post-remission therapy, most patients will relapse. The extent to which post-remission therapies is individualized in the current paradigm is quite varied. Core binding factor (CBF) AML is typically treated with post-remission high-dose cytarabine (HiDAC) without allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), whereas those with intermediate or adverse-risk cytogenetics are treated with post-remission cytarabine followed by allogeneic HSCT in CR1 when feasible. A lack of clarity regarding the proper dosing of post-remission cytarabine has made consensus building on dosing and schedule a challenge. CBF AML benefits most from high-dose cytarabine (HiDAC), and dasatinib appears promising as an adjunct for those for KIT-mutated CBF AML. Other than series using CPX-351 or lomustine in older adults, multiagent chemotherapy approaches have resulted in excess toxicity without a survival benefit. Neither hypomethylating agents nor gemtuzumab ozogamicin have shown a material OS benefit. Targeted agents such as FLT3 inhibitors and IDH1/IDH2 inhibitors show potential for the patients who harbor these druggable targets, but few data are available. Many studies evaluating post-remission strategies to target AML in the MRD-positive state are already underway, and these remain a promising area of investigation.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract: The results of an intensive treatment program for patients 16–60 yr of age with de novo acute myeloid leukemia are presented. The patients were given conventional induction treatment with daunorubicin and cytarabine. Patients not entering complete remission (CR) after 1 course of daunorubicin/cytarabine were given 1 course of amsacrine/etoposide/cytarabine. Those entering complete remission received 3 consolidation courses using mitoxantrone, etoposide, amsacrine and cytarabine. One hundred and eighteen patients were enrolled. Complete remission was attained after 1–2 courses in 90 patients (76%). Another 6 patients reached CR after 3–4 induction courses for a total CR rate of 81%. If feasible, patients were offered either allogeneic or unpurged autologous bone marrow transplantation. Twenty-four patients underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation; 15 in first remission, 8 in second remission, 1 in early relapse. Thirty patients below 56 yr of age underwent autologous bone marrow transplantation in first remission. The overall probability of survival at 4 yr was 34%, and for patients below 40 yr of age 50%. Leukemia-free survival was 35% for the whole cohort of patients; 52% for patients below 40 yr of age. Patients undergoing allogeneic or autologous bone marrow transplantation in first remission had an overall survival of 86% and 47%, respectively, while the probability of leukemia-free survival in these groups was 87% vs. 40% at 4 yr. The CR rate and long-term results of this intensive treatment program compare favorably with other recent studies using intensive consolidation with allogeneic or autologous bone marrow transplantation or high dose cytarabine.  相似文献   

11.
We analyzed the outcome of 108 adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients undergoing allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome occurred in 35.2% patients at diagnosis. Two-thirds of patients received allogeneic BMT in first complete remission (CR1) BMT. Salvage BMT was performed in 21 and 16 patients at second complete remission (CR2) and beyond CR2. Donors were human leukocyte antigen-identical siblings in 87 patients, and match-unrelated donors in 21 patients. Conditioning contained total body irradiation (TBI) in 92.6% patients. Overall survival (OS) for BMT at CR1 and BMT beyond CR1 were 46.2 and 20.3% at 15 years. Multivariate analyses (including age, sex, disease status, donor type, acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD), stem cell source, cytogenetics, grade 1/2 aGVHD and TBI-containing conditioning regimen) identified age<35, BMT at CR1 and grade 1/2 aGVHD as favorable factors for OS. Disease-free survival (DFS) for BMT at CR1 and beyond CR1 were 45.8 and 15.9% at 15 years, respectively, with BMT at CR1, age<35 and grade 1/2 aGVHD being favorable factors for DFS. Importantly, conventional adverse risk factors such as the Ph chromosome, B-cell phenotype and high leukocyte count were not associated with inferior survivals. In summary, the adverse impact of Ph chromosome, B-cell phenotype and high leukocyte count was overcome by allogeneic BMT. Matched unrelated donor transplantation appears promising.  相似文献   

12.
We conducted a multicenter prospective randomized study to compare a fixed-scheduled induction therapy with a response-oriented individualized induction therapy for elderly patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Newly diagnosed AML patients, aged between 65 and 80, were randomly assigned to receive fixed or individualized induction. Both groups received daunorubicin (DNR) 40?mg/m(2) for 3?days and behenoyl cytarabine (BHAC) 200?mg/m(2) for 8?days. In the individualized group, bone marrow biopsy was done on days 8 and 10, and according to the cellularity and blast ratio, the patients received additional DNR and BHAC for two to four more days. All patients achieving complete remission (CR) were randomized a second time to determine whether they would receive ubenimex. CR was obtained in 60.1?% of the fixed group and 63.6?% of the individualized group. Predicted 4-year relapse-free survival (RFS) was 9?% for the fixed group and 18?% for the individualized group. There were no statistically significant differences in CR and RFS between the fixed and individualized groups. In the ubenimex group, prolonged RFS was observed. Notably, gender was a prognostic factor in this study, as 102 female patients had a significantly higher CR rate (72.5 vs. 54.3?%, p?=?0.0048) and better OS (24 vs. 14?% at 4?years, p?=?0.018), compared with 140 male patients.  相似文献   

13.
Disease recurrence has been and remains the leading cause of treatment failure in patients with high-risk leukemia.We retrospectively analyzed outcome in 61 patients with high-risk leukemia receiving a combination of fludarabine and intermediate-dose cytarabine as induction (n = 11) or salvage therapy (n = 35). Thirty-six patients having a suitable stem cell donor proceeded to allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Ten patients received fludarabine-based salvage therapy without consecutive allogeneic transplantation and 15 patients received fludarabine/intermediate-dose cytarabine because of disease relapse following allogeneic stem cell transplantation. In patients without prior allogeneic HSCT (n = 46) the complete remission rate (CR) was 41% with a CR rate of 46 and 14% in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), respectively. Overall survival for patients achieving a CR was 41 versus 0% for patients not achieving CR (P < 0.0001). The best outcome was observed in patients receiving an allogeneic HSCT in CR following fludarabine/intermediate-dose cytarabine (47 vs. 0% for patients not in CR at the time of allografting, P = 0.01). All 10 patients receiving fludarabine/intermediate-dose cytarabine without subsequent allogeneic HSCT died within 3 years either of disease relapse/progression or infection. Only 1/15 (7%) patients receiving fludarabine/intermediate-dose cytarabine because of relapse following allogeneic HSCT became a long-term survivor. By multivariate analysis achieving CR, receiving an allogeneic HSCT, and being in first relapse or untreated were the only parameters that significantly determine the outcome. Although preliminary only high-risk AML patients having a stem cell donor are candidates for fludarabine/intermediate-dose cytarabine and only those achieving a CR should be referred to subsequent allogeneic HSCT. All other patients with high-risk leukemia are candidates for experimental therapies within controlled trials.  相似文献   

14.
This study investigated the feasibility of allogeneic (alloSCT) and autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) as postconsolidation therapy for patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs) or acute myeloid leukemia after MDS. Patients with a histocompatible sibling were candidates for alloSCT and the remaining patients for ASCT. Remission-induction therapy consisted of 1 or 2 courses with idarubicin, cytarabine, and etoposide, followed by one intensive consolidation course with cytarabine and mitoxantrone. Initially, bone marrow cells were used for ASCT. Subsequently, mobilized blood stem cells were used in an attempt to shorten posttransplantation hypoplasia. With a median follow-up of 3.6 years the 184 evaluable patients showed a 4-year survival rate of 26% and a median survival of 13 months. The remission-induction chemotherapy induced complete remission (CR) in 100 patients (54%). The 4-year disease-free survival (DFS) rate was 29% and the median DFS was 12 months. Twenty-eight of 39 patients (72%) with a donor were allografted in CR-1, including 2 patients who underwent transplantation in CR-1 without a consolidation course. Thirty-six of 59 patients (61%) without a donor received ASCT in CR-1. The 4-year DFS rates in the group of patients with or without a donor were 31% and 27%, respectively. The 4-year survival rates from CR were 36% and 33%, respectively. This large prospective study shows the feasibility of both alloSCT and ASCT. This treatment approach leads to a relatively high remission rate, and the majority of patients in remission received the SCT in CR-1. The ongoing study investigates whether this approach is better than treatment with chemotherapy only.  相似文献   

15.
Pastore  D.  Specchia  G.  Carluccio  P.  Liso  A.  Mestice  A.  Rizzi  R.  Greco  G.  Buquicchio  C.  Liso  V. 《Annals of hematology》2003,82(4):231-235
We evaluated the efficacy and toxicity profiles of the combination of fludarabine, high-dose cytosine arabinoside (AraC), idarubicin, and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) in refractory/relapsed acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) patients. Between October 1998 and February 2002, 46 AML patients were treated with FLAG-IDA (fludarabine 30 mg/m(2), AraC 2 g/m(2) for 5 days, idarubicin 10 mg/m(2) for 3 days, and G-CSF 5 micro g/kg from day +6 until neutrophil recovery). Thirty patients were in relapse after conventional chemotherapy including cytarabine, etoposide, and daunorubicin or mitoxantrone according to the GIMEMA protocols. Four were in relapse after autologous peripheral stem cell transplantation and two after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Ten patients had refractory disease (after 10 days of standard doses of cytarabine, 3 days of mitoxantrone or daunorubicin, and 5 days of etoposide). Recovery of neutrophils and platelets required a median of 19 and 22 days from the start of therapy. Complete remission (CR) was obtained in 24 of 46 patients (52.1%) and 3 of 46 (6.6%) died during reinduction therapy: 2 due to cerebral hemorrhage and 1 due to fungemia ( Candida tropicalis). Fever >38.5 degrees C was observed in 40 of 46 patients (86.9%), 27 had fever of unknown origin (FUO) and 13 documented infections; 31 of 46 (67.3%) developed mucositis and 14 of 46 (30.4%) had grade 2 WHO transient liver toxicity. After achieving CR, 11 patients received allogeneic stem cell transplantation, 4 patients received autologous stem cell transplantation, 4 were judged unable to receive any further therapy, and 5 refused other therapy. Ten patients are at present in continuous CR after a median follow-up of 13 months (range: 4-24). In our experience, FLAG-IDA is a well-tolerated and effective regimen in relapsed/refractory AML. The toxicity is acceptable, enabling most patients to receive further treatment, including transplantation procedures.  相似文献   

16.
Seventy consecutive adult patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), median age 44 years, received high-dose cytarabine (3 g/m2 every 12 hours for 12 doses) followed by daunorubicin (45 mg/m2 daily for three doses) for remission induction. A single, identical course was planned for postremission therapy. Complete remission (CR) was achieved in 63 patients (90%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 83% to 97%), 60 after a single course. Eight patients were selected to undergo elective bone marrow transplantation (BMT) during first CR. Of the remaining 55 patients, 40 (73%) underwent planned post-CR therapy; 15 patients did not, owing to early relapse, excessive toxicity from the induction chemotherapy, or refusal. Nineteen patients, including 13 who received planned post-CR therapy, remain in continuous CR at a median follow-up of 5.2 years (range 3.0 to 7.1 years). The 5-year actuarial leukemia-free survival was 30% (95% Cl, 19% to 42%) for all patients achieving CR and 32% (95% Cl, 19% to 47%) for the 40 patients who received the planned post-CR chemotherapy. Analysis of various putative prognostic factors for CR and overall and leukemia-free survival showed significance for a previous history of myelodysplasia, higher initial leukocyte counts, certain French-American-British (FAB) types, and certain abnormal karyotypes. None of these factors was consistently significant regarding the above parameters, although small patient numbers in certain analyses may have obscured significant associations. Myelosuppression was occasionally prolonged after remission induction and especially post-CR therapy. Severe cerebellar toxicity was observed in 13 patients; in 11 cases, this toxicity was fully reversible. Other serious complications were infrequent. Intensive chemotherapy with high-dose cytarabine and daunorubicin has substantial antileukemic activity in adult AML, and may represent an improvement over conventional therapy. Relapses were common, however, even in patients who received planned therapy, and substantial toxicity was observed. The optimum use of this regimen in AML remains to be determined.  相似文献   

17.
Timed sequential chemotherapy (TSC) combining mitoxantrone on days 1–3, etoposide on days 8–10 and cytarabine on days 1–3 and 8–10, was administered to 240 patients with advanced acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Sixty one percent of patients, with a 95% confidence interval (CI) ranging from 54 to 67%, achieved complete remission (CR), including 47% (CI: 38–55%) of refractory patients and 78% (CI: 70–86%) of late first relapse patients (p < 0.0001). Thirty percent of patients did not respond to therapy and 9% died from toxicity. Median duration of neutropenia was 32 days and of thrombocytopenia 29 days. Severe non hematologic toxicity included sepsis in 45% of patients and mucositis in 27%. Post-remission therapy varied but included maintenance chemotherapy in most patients, a second course of TSC in 27, autologous stem cell transplantation in 17 and allogeneic transplantation in 20. Median survival of patients who were not transplanted was 7 months with 13% (CI: 7–19%) survival at 5 years. Median disease-free survival (DFS) was 9 months with 13% (CI: 6–20%) DFS at 5 years. Previous refractoriness was the main factor associated with poor prognosis for achieving CR, DFS and survival in a multivariate analysis. There was no difference in DFS between patients receiving the different modalities of intensive post-remission therapy. These results confirm initial reports on TSC and show that some patients with first relapse off therapy can enjoy prolonged DFS using chemotherapy only.  相似文献   

18.
We analyzed prospectively 1213 adults with de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) to ascertain the prognostic impact of cytogenetic abnormalities on complete remission (CR) rate, 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse (CIR), and 5-year overall survival (OS). All patients received similar induction therapy. Median follow-up for surviving patients was 8.3 years. Nonprioritized cytogenetics distinguished t(8;21) and inv(16)/t(16;16) as conferring a significantly better prognosis than normal karyotype. Prognostic impact of many abnormalities could not be determined independently because of their association with complex karyotype. Neither complex karyotype nor secondary aberrations affected outcome of patients with t(8;21), inv(16)/t(16;16), or t(9;11). Among other patients, those with complex karyotypes had significantly worse outcomes than cytogenetically normal patients. Based on outcome for specific cytogenetic abnormalities and karyotype complexity, patients were divided into 3 risk groups: favorable (CR 88%, CIR 54%, OS 55%), intermediate (CR 67%, CIR 67%, OS 24%), and adverse (CR 32%, CIR 92%, OS 5%). Multivariate analyses confirmed the major contribution of cytogenetics to the probability of attaining CR, CIR, and OS. For the adverse-risk group, the probability of achieving CR was 4.0 and 11.9 times lower, the probability of relapse 3.0 and 4.4 times higher, and the risk of death 2.1 and 4.3 times higher than those for the intermediate and favorable groups, respectively. We conclude that although the prognostic impact of many recurring abnormalities has not been ascertained independently of complex karyotype, cytogenetics is among the most useful factors predicting attainment of CR, CIR, and long-term survival in adult AML.  相似文献   

19.
Donor leukocyte infusion (DLI) alone has very limited efficacy for patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who have relapsed after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). We, therefore, prospectively tested the efficacy of cytoreductive chemotherapy (intermediate-dose cytarabine+idarubicin+etoposide) followed immediately by G-CSF-primed DLI (Chemo-DLI) in 10 relapsed ALL patients after allogeneic BMT. Seven achieved complete remission (CR) at a median of 25 days (19-73 days) after DLI. Of these seven CR patients, only one remains alive in CR 907 days after DLI. Two CR patients died in CR of graft-versus-host disease. The remaining four CR patients relapsed at a median of 153 days (120-991 days) after DLI. One is alive with leukemia at post-DLI day 1217. The median survival duration after DLI was 175 days (15-1217 days). In summary, although Chemo-DLI for relapsed ALL after allogeneic BMT induced a relatively high CR rate, durable remissions were rare. Although our data should be interpreted cautiously considering the small number of patients, these results suggest that poor outcome of DLI in relapsed ALL may be primarily due to intrinsic resistance to graft-versus-leukemia effect rather than to the rapid pace of the disease.  相似文献   

20.
Intensive sequential chemotherapy with mitoxantrone, 12 mg/m2/d on days 1 through 3, etoposide, 200 mg/m2/d as a continuous infusion on days 8 through 10, and cytarabine, 500 mg/m2/d as a continuous infusion on days 1 through 3 and 8 through 10 was administered to 72 patients aged less than 60 years with previously treated acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Forty patients had refractory AML (nonresponse to prior therapy, early first relapse, or multiple relapse) and 32 had late first relapse. Sixty-one percent of patients, with a 95% confidence interval (CI) ranging from 49% to 72%, achieved complete remission (CR), including 45% (CI: 30% to 62%) of refractory patients and 81% (CI: 64% to 93%) of late first relapse patients. Twenty-nine percent of patients (CI: 19% to 41%) did not respond to therapy and 10% (CI: 4% to 19%) died from therapy-related toxicity. Median duration of aplasia was 30 days. Nonhematologic WHO grade 3 or more toxicity included sepsis (57% of patients), vomiting (10%), mucositis (35%), diarrhea (7%), skin rash (6%), and hyperbilirubinemia (11%). Postinduction therapy was attempted in 36 of 44 CR patients: 16 of them received a second course of the same regimen, 7 received maintenance chemotherapy, 4 underwent autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT), and 9 allogeneic BMT. At a median follow-up of 20 months, 23 of the 44 complete remitters have relapsed, 1 to 14 months after achievement of CR, including 19 of 31 patients not undergoing BMT. Median survival is 7 months with 16% (CI: 4% to 28%) projected survival at 47 months. Median disease-free survival is 6 months with 21% (CI: 3% to 39%) of CR patients projected to remain disease-free at 46 months. Twenty-six percent (CI: 13% to 43%) of the evaluable patients who did not receive transplantation had inversion of CR duration. Among patients younger than 50 years, there was no significant difference in disease-free survival between patients receiving postinduction chemotherapy and those receiving BMT. We conclude that this chemotherapy regimen is highly efficient and could be used as first-line therapy in young patients with AML.  相似文献   

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