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  • 1
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 108, No. 11 ( 2006-11-16), p. 1949-1949
    Abstract: Background: In primary refractory patients the achievement of a response to salvage therapy is of enormous prognostic impact. Aims: To evaluate the impact of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO) given as adjunct to high-dose cytarabine based intensive salvage therapy in primary refractory younger patients on clinical outcome. Methods: Between 1993 and 2006 264 consecutive patients (median age: 48 yrs) were evaluated. All patients had primary refractory AML after one cycle of ICE (idarubicine, cytarabine, etoposide). The different salvage therapies were as follows: from 1993–1998: S-HAM for patients 〈 55 years of age [cytarabine 3g/m2 bid. days 1,2,8,9, mitoxantrone 10mg/m2 days 3,4,10,11] and HAM for patients 〉 =55 years of age [cytarabine 3g/m2 bid., days 1–3, mitoxantrone 12mg/m2 days 2,3]; from 1998 to 2004 A-HAM [HAM with ATRA 45mg/m2 days 3–5, 15mg/m2 days 6–28] ; from 2004 up to date: GO-A-HAM [A-HAM with gemtuzumab ozogamicin 3g/m2 day 1]. Results: The distribution of the different salvage therapies was HAM n=21, S-HAM n=22, A-HAM n=118, GO-A-HAM n=62, other n=31, or no further therapy n=10. CR-rate according to salvage therapy was GO-A-HAM 49%, A-HAM 34% S-HAM 23%, HAM 14%. Treatment related mortality did not differ between regimens. No CTC-grade 3–5 liver toxicity was seen in patients receiving GO-A-HAM. Logistic regression on the achievement of CR revealed that regimens containing ATRA (odds ratio 2.0, p=0.05) and GO (odds ratio 1.9 p=0.05) were associated with response. 151 of 264 patients have received a stem cell transplantation as consolidation therapy (n=59 MRD, n=79 MUD, n=6 haplo-identical donor, n=7 autologous). The rates of severe veno occlusive disease after transplant was identical (5%) for patients receiving a salvage therapy including GO and those who did not. Survival analysis revealed a significant difference (p= 0.00178) with a median survival of 16.2 months for GO+ATRA, 12.5 months for ATRA versus 7.2 months for the others. Conclusions: Although retrospective in nature our study suggests that ATRA and GO as adjunct to salvage therapy improves CR rates and survival in primary refractory AML patients.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2006
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 2
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 110, No. 11 ( 2007-11-16), p. 1837-1837
    Abstract: Background: Patients with primary refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have a dismal outcome. Only allogeneic stem cell transplantion (SCT) currently offers the chance of cure to these patients. In order to improve outcome after allogeneic SCT, one important prerequisite is to increase response rates prior to SCT. Aims: To evaluate the impact of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO) given as adjunct to high-dose cytarabine-based salvage therapy in younger adult patients with primary refractory AML on achievement of response. Consecutive allogeneic SCT was intended in all patients. Methods: Main inclusion criteria of the AMLSG 05-04 trial (NCT00143975) were refractory AML following one cycle of ICE (idarubicin, cytarabine, etoposide); and age 18 to 60 years. Dose and schedule of the GO-A-HAM regimen were as follows: GO 3mg/m2, day 1; cytarabine 3g/m2 bid., days 1–3; mitoxantrone 12mg/m2, days 2,3; ATRA 45mg/m2, days 3–5, 15mg/m2 days 6–28. Primary endpoint of the study was CR rate. Safety endpoints comprised early / hypoplastic (ED/HD) death rate, liver toxicity CTC grade 3–5, and rate of veno occlusive disease (VOD) after allogeneic SCT. Results: Between September 2004 and June 2007, 94 patients (median age, 48 yrs; range, 22 to 62) were enrolled. Distribution of cytogenetics was as follows: adverse, n=29 [abn(3q), −5/5q-, −7/7q-, abn(12p), abn(17p), complex]; other n=57 [core binding factor (n=3), cytogenetically normal AML (n=37), various aberrations (n=18)] . FLT3-ITD was present in 18 (22%) of 82 analyzed patients. Response to GO-A-HAM was as follows: CR, n=28 (30%); CRi, n=19 (20%); PR, n=11 (12%); refractory disease (RD), n= 34 (36%); and ED/HD, n=2 (2%). In a logistic regression analysis for achievement of CR, the only significant variable was adverse cytogenetics (OR 0.34, p=0.02). The rate of severe liver toxicity was 0%, the incidence of neutropenic fever was 52%, platelet and neutrophil recovery times from start of treatment were 21 and 22 days, respectively. Following GO-A-HAM, allogeneic SCT was actually performed in 60 patients (64%): matched related (n=14) or unrelated donor (n=42); haploidentical related donor, n=4. All SCT were performed within 3 months after GO-A-HAM, intermediate/severe VOD developed in 5 patients after SCT (9%, 95%-confidence interval (CI) 4–19%), mild VOD in 3 patients. Survival analyses revealed that patients with adverse cytogenetics and/or FLT3-ITD (n=45) had a significantly (p=0.001) inferior overall survival after one year of 38% compared to all other patients (n=39) of 81%. The proportions of patients receiving an allogeneic SCT were similar in both groups (68% and 66%, respectively). Conclusions: The GO-A-HAM regimen is feasible and effective as salvage therapy. However, cytogenetics still remains the most significant variable for achievement of response. Allogeneic SCT after GO-A-HAM was not associated with an increased VOD-rate.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2007
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 3
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 112, No. 11 ( 2008-11-16), p. 559-559
    Abstract: Rationale: In a previous randomized trial (AML HD98B) in elderly ( & gt;60 yrs) patients with AML (excluding APL), we could demonstrate that all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) given as adjunct to intensive induction therapy with idarubicin, cytarabine and etoposide significantly improved outcome; this beneficial effect appeared to be restricted to patients having NPM1 mutation without concomitant FLT3-ITD (NPM1mut/FLT3-ITDneg). In our subsequent trial in elderly patients (AMLSG 06-04), all patients received ATRA with a similar backbone of chemotherapy, except that for induction therapy idarubicin was intensified and etoposide was omitted. NPM1mut AML is associated with myelomonocytic/monocytic differentiation, and etoposide is believed to have a particular effect in these morphologic subtypes of AML. Aims: To evaluate the impact of etoposide in combination with ATRA in elderly patients with AML exhibiting NPM1 mutation enrolled into two consecutive AMLSG protocols. Methods: 171 patients with NPM1mut AML were included in this retrospective analysis; 78 patients from trial AML HD98B (trial A; accrual from 1998 to 2004); and 95 patients from trial AMLSG 06-04 (trial B, 2004–2008). Twenty-nine of 78 (37%) patients and 87 of 93 (94%) received ATRA in trials A and B, respectively. Results: Initial patient characteristics, such as median age (67.8 and 67.9 years for trial A and B, respectively), type of AML (de novo, secondary or therapy-associated), white blood cell count (WBC), LDH, and FLT3-ITD mutation status (41% and 47%), were not significantly different between the two cohorts. The rates of complete remission (CR) were 68% and 71% for NPM1mut patients in trial A and B, respectively. Lower age and lower WBC counts were significantly associated with achievement of CR; study, treatment with ATRA, type of AML, and FLT3-ITD mutation status had no impact. Univariable survival analyses revealed no significant difference for the end points event-free (EFS), relapse-free (RFS) and overall survival (OS) between the two patient cohorts from trial A and B. However, when restricting the analysis to patients who had received ATRA, a significant better EFS (p=0.05) and RFS (p=0.03) was found for patients with the genotype NPM1mut/FLT3-ITDneg in trial A (that included etoposide) compared to trial B (in which etoposide was omitted); there was no difference in EFS (p=0.18) and RFS (p=0.09) for patients with the genotype NPM1mut/FLT3-ITDpos. In addition, no difference was seen either in patients with the genotype NPM1mut/FLT3-ITDpos or in patients with the genotype NPM1mut/FLT3-ITDneg in terms of OS mainly due to a high second CR rate in patients with the genotype NPM1mut/FLT3-ITDneg. Conclusion: The data from this retrospective subgroup analysis suggest that etoposide in combination with ATRA may exert a beneficial synergistic effect in elderly patients with AML having NPM1 mutation without concurrent FLT3-ITD.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2008
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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