scholarly journals A Double Priming Induction Regimen for Acute Myeloid Leukemia with Inferior PS Among Resource Limited Areas

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 5173-5173
Author(s):  
Stephen Liang ◽  
Siliang Chen ◽  
Xiaoli Huang ◽  
Zheyuan Qin ◽  
Sanbin Wang

Abstract The treatment options for patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) under inferior performance status (i.e. senior patients, MDS transformed AML, and patients with proven invasive fungal disease) are limited. The conventional "3+7" (idarubicin plus cytarabine) induction for those patients can be either too toxic, which leads to higher mortality rate, or requires prolonged recovery time thus raise medical cost. And the delay of consolidation may compromise outcome thus cause early relapse in such patients. Giving the rationale from the designing art of CPX-351, the prolonged IV time requirement for cytarabine, as well as mini-transplantation for AML treatment, at least in part, reflects the philosophy of a longer exposure to the chemo agent can be a more effective treatment approach for leukemia. On the other hand, the D-CAG protocol, which indicated an encouraging result for elderly patients with AML, indicated effectiveness of the strategy with reduced intensity. However, the cyto-toxic effect of decitabine with standard dose (20mg/m2) could still lead to severe treatment adverse events (AEs) thus raise the need of optimization of D-CAG regimen for patients with inferior PS. When considering the low dose hypo-methylation agent (HMA) can trigger the innate immunity response, the unique effect of homoharringtonine, as well as the effectiveness of CAG, we designed this DHCAG protocol following the principle of "longer exposure, lower intensity preceded by priming" and observed an unexpected excellent outcome with high CR rate, low induction failure and treatment mortality, as well as a higher cost effective value for patients with AML, when compared to "3+7" protocol, whom under inferior PS. From March 2016 - January 2018, we initiated this pilot study and investigated the safety and efficiency of this DHCAG protocol in patients with AML under poor PS. We enrolled 25 patients and administer the regimen as followings: i) G-CSF: 5μg/kg used when WBC <20×10^9/L at day 0-14 subcutaneous injection; ii) Decitabine: 6mg/m2 at day 0, 3, 6, 9, 12 iv drip; iii) Aclarubicin: 6mg/m2 at day 1-8 iv drip; iv) Homoharringtonine: 1mg/m2 at day 9-14 iv drip ( at day 9, if WBC >1*10^9/L then increase the dosage of homoharringtonine to 2mg/m2); iv) Cytarabine:10mg/m2 q12h at day 1-14 subcutaneous injection (if WBC >20*10^9/L then increase to 100mg/m2 by 24h CIV, or 50mg/m2 q12h by subcutaneous injection). The primary end point was complete hematologic remission, defined as a bone marrow blast cells ≤5%, Neutrophils in peripheral blood ≥1.0X109 /L, hemoglobin≥90g/L, and platelets ≥100X109/L and no any evidence of extramedullary leukemic infiltration; Secondary end points included numbers of adverse events, length of hospital stay, medical costs, and quality of life as measured with the use of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - General (FACT-G) questionnaire. Among the 25 patients in the study, 23 completed the induction therapy. And 21/25 patients had a hematologic complete remission after a median time of 19 days. Once complete remission had occurred, all 21 patients received post-remission treatment for another 5 cycles of DHCAG. Median follow-up was 14 months (range, 8 to 19) by June 2018. Interestingly, regardless of grade 3-4 myelo-suppression occurred all of our patients during induction, eight patients did not experienced grade 3-4 myelo-suppression during the following cycles. The median hospital stay is 22 days. The median of total medical costs for induction was $9,815 (range, $5,053 to $16,336) vs $14,705 for "3+7" induction protocol (history control. Data unpublished). Patients resumed their usual lifestyle during post-remission therapy, and their quality of life was rated as nearly normal on the FACT-G questionnaire. At the time of the last follow-up, seven patients had had a hematologic relapse. The results of our pilot study, in which we tested a priming based, low dose and longer exposure in 25 patients with AML under poor PS, showed that the treatment was safe, effective, and economical. A prospective multicenter, randomized trial comparing DHCAG with IA is now under way in China. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4841-4841
Author(s):  
Rajaram Nagarajan ◽  
Todd A Alonzo ◽  
Robert B Gerbing ◽  
Donna Johnston ◽  
Richard Aplenc ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Objectives were to describe guardian proxy-reported quality of life (QoL) during chemotherapy for pediatric acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and to identify treatment and demographic factors associated with worse QoL. Methods: Children's Oncology Group phase 3 AAML1031 study was a randomized trial for de novo AML patients age 0-30 to receive standard AML therapy with and without bortezomib. Patients with high risk FLT3-internal tandem duplication high allelic ratio (ITD HAR) were allocated to receive sorafenib in addition to the standard chemotherapy. Patients enrolled on the AAML1031 study who were 2-18 years of age at diagnosis with English or Spanish-speaking guardians were eligible to participate in the QoL portion of the study which included the PedsQL 4.0 Generic Core Scales, PedsQL 3.0 Acute Cancer Module and PedsQL Multidimensional Fatigue Scale. QoL assessments were obtained at four timepoints - at diagnosis and following completion of second, third and fourth (final) course of therapy. Guardians provided proxy assessments for all patients, while self-report for patients 5 years of age or older who could understand English was optional. This analysis focused on guardian proxy-reported QoL for patients who did not have FLT3-ITD HAR. In addition to demographic and treatment related factors, the total number of non-hematological grade 3-4 CTCAE (Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events) toxicities occurring during the time frame of QoL assessments was examined as a potential predictor of QoL. Results: There were a total of 4105 QoL submissions and there were 3513 non-hematological grade 3-4 CTCAE toxicities reported: 1339 submissions at diagnosis with 1088 toxicities reported, 1112 submissions following the second course with 721 toxicities, 929 submissions following third course with 911 toxicities, and 725 submissions following the fourth course with 793 toxicities. In repeated measures linear regression the number of submitted CTCAE toxicities was significantly associated with worse physical health (β±standard error (SE) -3.00±0.69; P<0.001) and general fatigue (β±SE -2.50±0.66; P<0.001). Older age was significantly associated with general fatigue (β±SE -0.58±0.25; P=0.022). In contrast, gender, risk status, bortezomib assignment, duration of neutropenia, private insurance status, white race and Hispanic ethnicity were not associated with physical health, psychosocial health or fatigue. Conclusions: The number of CTCAE toxicities was an important factor influencing physical QoL and fatigue among children on treatment for AML. Identifying novel approaches for reducing toxicities should be a priority to potentially improve QoL. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 4454-4464 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajaram Nagarajan ◽  
Robert Gerbing ◽  
Todd Alonzo ◽  
Donna L. Johnston ◽  
Richard Aplenc ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 1345-1352 ◽  
Author(s):  
E J Bow ◽  
J A Sutherland ◽  
M G Kilpatrick ◽  
G J Williams ◽  
J J Clinch ◽  
...  

PURPOSE The University of Manitoba Adult Acute Leukemia Study Group sought to examine the safety, efficacy, and impact on quality of life of a non-cytarabine-containing remission-induction regimen followed by intermediate-dose cytarabine (IDARA-C) postremission therapy for the management of untreated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in patients age 60 to 80 years. PATIENTS AND METHODS Eligible patients received mitoxantrone 10 mg/m2 and etoposide 100 mg/m2 on days 1 to 5. Complete remitters received a single course of cytarabine 0.5 mg/m2 every 12 hours on days 1 to 6. Cytogenetic and immunophenotyping studies were performed at diagnosis and were examined for prognostic importance. The Functional Living Index-Cancer (FLI-C) was used in the longitudinal assessment of quality of life. RESULTS A total of 37 (55%) of 67 eligible patients achieved remission, 34 (92%) of whom did so with a single course. The induction mortality rate was 12%. The median disease-free and overall survival times were 8.4 and 9.2 months, respectively. CD34 stem-cell phenotype, poor performance status, and high cytogenetic complexity score were independent covariates of failure to achieve remission. Very complex karotype combined with CD34 stem-cell phenotype to predict induction death in 67% of cases (P = .0003). Cytotoxic therapy-related gut epithelial damage was maximal during weeks 2 and 3 of therapy. Complete remitters and partial responders exhibited significantly improved global FLI-C scores following completion of therapy. CONCLUSION Mitoxantrone plus etoposide was an effective and well-tolerated first-line induction regimen for AML in the elderly that should be studied further in comparison to the standard cytarabine/anthracycline-based therapy.


2009 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 168-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shabbir M.H. Alibhai ◽  
Marc Leach ◽  
Vikas Gupta ◽  
George A. Tomlinson ◽  
Joseph M. Brandwein ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 274-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Filgen Y. Fung ◽  
Madeline Li ◽  
Henriette Breunis ◽  
Narhari Timilshina ◽  
Mark D. Minden ◽  
...  

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