Increase in “Null” Cells in Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia in Remission on Long-Term Immunotherapy

Author(s):  
R. R. Joseph ◽  
D. Belpomme
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-133
Author(s):  
Virginia C. Peckham ◽  
Anna T. Meadows ◽  
Nettie Bartel ◽  
Osvaldo Marrero

Records of levels of school achievement in long-term survivors of childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia were obtained for 23 children who had received 2,400-rad cranial irradiation and intrathecal methotrexate and standard chemotherapeutic agents 8 to 10 years previously. The children had been evaluated with standardized tests of intelligence at the time of diagnosis and periodically thereafter. Declines in IQ and cognitive dysfunctions have been previously described. School placements, educational histories, attendance records, learning strengths and weaknesses, social/emotional adjustments, and grade level achievements in reading and mathematics as measured by standardized achievement tests are reported here. Children achieved less than the expected levels in both reading and mathematics given both pretreatment and most recent IQ scores. Neither sex nor initial IQ were related to achievement scores. Children experienced difficulty with attention/concentration, memory, sequencing, and comprehension when performing school tasks. Individual children showed different degrees of dysfunction, but results of this study suggest that there are patterns of specific learning disabilities rather than global retardation. A small number of children achieved greater than expected levels, indicating that individualized instruction, tutoring, and parental support may reduce some learning deficits. Early educational intervention is recommended for similarly treated patients.


1986 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 737-743 ◽  
Author(s):  
P S Gill ◽  
P R Meyer ◽  
Z Pavlova ◽  
A M Levine

Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) is a heterogeneous group of disorders, clinically, immunologically, and pathologically. ALL of a B cell phenotype (B-ALL) is the least common. We have studied ten adult patients with B-ALL, none of whom had a tumor mass. The median age was 56 years (range, 30 to 90). A history of an altered immune state was noted in four cases: a distant history of Hashimoto's thyroiditis in one, pregnancy in one, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in two. Two patients presented with CNS involvement, and in two additional patients CNS leukemia developed during the course of disease. By the French-American-British (FAB) classification system, L3 leukemic morphology was present in nine, whereas L2 was present in one. Circulating leukemic blasts varied from less than 500/dL to greater than 15,000/dL. Eight patients were thrombocytopenic, and eight were anemic at presentation. Immunologic marker studies on leukemic blasts revealed monoclonal kappa light chain marking in nine and monoclonal lambda in one. Following chemotherapy, complete remission was achieved in three patients, two of whom experienced relapse within 9 months. The median survival for the group was 3 months, and only one patient experienced long-term, disease-free survival. We conclude that B-ALL in the adult presents with the classic L3 morphologic picture in the majority and is associated with extremely short survival.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 765-769
Author(s):  
Stanley Musgrave ◽  
Joseph D. Dickerman ◽  
Vita J. Land

A national survey was conducted to determine the number of children with acute lymphocytic leukemia who have survived 5 years or longer in their second or subsequent remission. Seventy-two such patients were identified. The clinical and laboratory characteristics of these patients as well as their therapy are described. It is concluded that long-term second or subsequent remission may occur more frequently than previously appreciated.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 2805-2805
Author(s):  
Olga A. Gavrilina ◽  
Elena N. Parovichnikova ◽  
Vera V. Troitskaya ◽  
Andrey N. Sokolov ◽  
Larisa A. Kuzmina ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction. For more than a decade it's postulated that the addition oftyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) to chemotherapy has dramatically improved the long term outcome in Ph-positive adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL). Nevertheless whether do we need chemotherapy at all and if yes - how intensive it should be, is still the matter of debates. The only randomized trial addressing this issue (GRAAL, Blood 2015, 125: 3711-3719) has demonstrated the lack of benefit of more intensive induction at all checkpoints: complete remission (CR) rate, major molecular complete remission (MMolCR), molecular complete remission (MolCR), progression disease (PD) and resistance. We have conducted two consecutive trials in Ph+ ALL aiming to evaluate the efficacy of more and less intensive chemotherapy approach in combination with constant non-stop 600 mg Imatinib application. Aim. Toanalyze of the protocol RALL-2009 with ITK and RALL-Ph+-2012 effectiveness in patients with Ph+ ALL. The primary objective was the major molecular complete remission (MMolCR) rate after induction (70th day), patients being then eligible for allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) if they had a donor, or autologous SCT if in MMolR and no donor. Patients and methods. Since Jan 2010 till July 2016, 120 new cases of ALL were verified in our National Research Center for Hematology with 68 (56,7%) of them being B-cell precursors ALL and 25 diagnosed as Ph-positive (36,8%). Since 2010 till 2012, 10 Ph+ ALL pts (median age 35 years (19-68), m/f (50%)/(50%), CNS disease=1, WBC> 30*109/l=5(50%), bcr/abl transcript p190/p210/p190+210 6(60%)/3(30%)/1(10%)) were treated according to RALL-2009 protocol (ClinicalTrials.gov public site; NCT01193933) with parallel Imatinib. This protocol includes 8 cytostatic drugs and no intervals between treatment phases. Since 2012 till now 15 other pts (median age 40 years (17-61); m/f 7(46,7%)/8(53,3%); CNS disease=1, WBC>30*109/l=5(33,3%), bcr/abl transcript p190/p210/p190+210 9(60%)/5(33%)/1(7%)) were included in RALL- Ph+-2012 protocol, based mainly on 600 mg Imatinib with prednisolone, VNCR, L-asp, followed by 6-MP and MTX. Both protocols suggested the shift to Dasatinib (100-140 mg) after non-achievement of MolCR at day 70 of treatment. MolCR was stated if no bcr/abl chimeric transcript was detected by PCR with 10-4 sensitivity. All patients were considered as candidates for allogeneic HSCT if HLA-identical donor was available. Results. At day 70th disregarding the chemotherapy intensity there was 40% of MolCR on both protocols (RALL-2009 - n=4 and RALL-2012 - n=6). No death within 2 months of induction/consolidation were registered on less intensive protocol in comparison with 2 cases on RALL-2009. Hematological CR was achieved in all pts (except two early deaths on RALL-2009) - 23 of 25 (92%). There was one autologous HSCT in older pts, included in RALL-2012 (n=3, aGVHD and severe infections, at a median +4 months after HSCT and more than 12 months of CR duration). The 3y OS, DFS and relapse probability (RP) for all 25 pts constituted 37,8%, 32,5% and 52,1% (Fig. 1). The long-term outcome on both protocols (RALL-2009 and RALL-2012) was similar: OS - 45% vs 27,7% (p=0,27), DFS - 45% vs 22,1% (p=0,94), RP - 35,7% vs 57% (p=0,29), respectively (Fig.2). Conclusion. De-intensification of the chemotherapy does not affect the effectiveness of the therapy Ph-positive acute lymphocytic leukemia in era of the tyrosine kinase inhibitors. We haven't seen differences in achievement of molecular remission when we deescalated chemotherapy (40% vs. 40%). However, when we reduced toxicity of the chemotherapy in ALL-2012 protocol, we were able to realize more extra allo-BMT and it could improve long-term results of the therapy Ph+ ALL. Figure Overall, disease-free survival and relapse probability in patients with Ph+ ALL on RALL protocols. Figure. Overall, disease-free survival and relapse probability in patients with Ph+ ALL on RALL protocols. Figure Overall, disease-free survival and relapse probability in patients with Ph+ ALL on RALL-2009 and RALL-2012 protocols. Figure. Overall, disease-free survival and relapse probability in patients with Ph+ ALL on RALL-2009 and RALL-2012 protocols. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1980 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 273-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence T. Ch'ien ◽  
Rhomes J. A. Aur ◽  
Shirley Stagner ◽  
Katie Cavallo ◽  
Adynel Wood ◽  
...  

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