Intensified induction and consolidation with or without maintenance chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia (AML): two multicenter studies of the German AML Cooperative Group.Th. Büchner, D. Urbanitz, Wolfgang Hiddemann et al.|Journal of Clinical Oncology|1985 In two multicenter trials, a total of 576 patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were treated and found to be evaluable. Two hundred forty-two patients were in a 1978 pilot study and 334 patients were in a 1982 randomized study. Ages were between 15 and 78 years (median, 48). The uniform remission induction therapy in both studies consisted of one to two courses of a 9-day combination of 6-thioguanine (TG) with cytosine arabinoside (ARA-C) and daunorubicin (DNR) [TAD9]. The timing and sequencing of TAD9 was designed according to cell kinetic effects of ARA-C. A complete remission (CR) was achieved in 65% (70% and 61%, respectively) of patients within a median of 33 days, and in 68% of responders after only one course. The CR rate in patients 60 to 78 years of age was 51% (66% and 39%, respectively). In the 1978 pilot study, different protocols of post-remission treatment were applied at the different centers: monthly 5-day maintenance, TAD9 consolidation, both consolidation and maintenance, or no further therapy. The group receiving treatment during CR showed 24% probability of remissions at 4 years v 0% probability of remissions in the untreated group. Between the different post-remission protocols, no significant differences were observed. Remission duration was not influenced by age, WBC, or morphologic cell type, but was longer in patients achieving CR within 30 days (P = .017). In the subsequent 1982 study, 145 patients in CR were randomized for TAD9 consolidation with or without monthly maintenance. The updated life-table analysis revealed a predicted rate of continuous remission at 2 1/2 years of 30% for the maintenance and 17% for the nonmaintenance arm (P = .003). These results of response and remission duration in adult patients of all ages support the validity of intensified induction therapy and of consequent myelosuppressive treatment in remission.
Improved outcome in adult B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemiaA total of 68 adult patients with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) were treated in three consecutive adult multicenter ALL studies. The diagnosis of B-ALL was confirmed by L3 morphology and/or by surface immunoglobulin (Slg) expression with > 25% blast cell infiltration in the bone marrow (BM). They were characterized by male predominance (78%) and a median age of 34 years (15 to 65 y) with only 9% adolescents (15 to 20 y), but 28% elderly patients (50 to 65 y). The patients received either a conventional (N = 9) ALL treatment regimen (ALL study 01/81) or protocols adapted from childhood B-ALL with six short, intensive 5-day cycles, alternately A and B. In study B-NHL83 (N = 24) cycle A consisted of fractionated doses of cyclophosphamide 200 mg/m2 for 5 days, intermediate-dose methotrexate (IdM) 500 mg/m2 (24 hours), in addition to cytarabine (AraC), teniposide (VM26) and prednisone. Cycle B was similar except that AraC and VM26 were replaced by doxorubicin. Major changes in study B-NHL86 (N = 35) were replacement of cyclophosphamide by ifosphamide 800 mg/m2 for 5 days, an increase of IdM to high-dose, 1,500 mg/m2 (HdM) and the addition of vincristine. A cytoreductive pretreatment with cyclophosphamide 200 mg/m2, and prednisone 60 mg/m2, each for 5 days was recommended in study B-NHL83 for patients with high white blood cell (WBC) count (> 2,500/m2) or large tumor burden and was obligatory for all patients in study B-NHL86. Central nervous system (CNS) prophylaxis/treatment consisted of intrathecal methotrexate (MTX) therapy, later extended to the triple combination of MTX, AraC, and dexamethasone, and a CNS irradiation (24 Gy) after the second cycle. Compared with the ALL 01/81 study where all the patients died, results obtained with the pediatric protocols B-NHL83 and B-NHL86 were greatly improved. The complete remission (CR) rates increased from 44% to 63% and 74%, the probability of leukemia free survival (LFS) from 0% to 50% and 71% (P = .04), and the overall survival rates from 0% to 49% and 51% (P = .001). Toxicity, mostly hematotoxicity and mucositis, was severe but manageable. In both studies B-NHL83 and B-NHL86, almost all relapses occurred within 1 year. The time to relapse was different for BM, 92 days, and for isolated CNS and combined BM and CNS relapses, 190 days (P = .08). The overall CNS relapses changed from 50% to 57% and 17%, most probably attributable to the high-dose MTX and the triple intrathecal therapy. LFS in studies B-NHL83 and B-NHL86 was significantly influenced by the initial WBC count < or > 50,000/microL, LFS 71% versus 29% (P = .003) and hemoglobin value > or < 8 g/dL, LFS 67% versus 27% (P = .02). Initial CNS involvement had no adverse impact on the outcome. Elderly B-ALL patients (> 50 years) also benefited from this treatment with a CR rate of 56% and a LFS of 56%. It is concluded that this short intensive therapy with six cycles is effective in adult B-ALL. HdM and fractionated higher doses of cyclophosphamide or ifosphamide seem the two major components of treatment.
A phase 2 clinical study of SU5416 in patients with refractory acute myeloid leukemiaNeoangiogenesis has been shown to play an important role in the pathogenesis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Autocrine and paracrine secretion of angiogenic and hematopoietic growth factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and stem cell factor (SCF) in the bone marrow microenvironment may promote proliferation and survival of leukemic blasts. This concept represented the rationale for the initiation of a multicenter phase 2 trial of SU5416, a small molecule inhibitor of phosphorylation of VEGF receptors 1 and 2, c-kit, the SCF receptor, and fms-like tyrosine kinase-3 (FLT3) in patients with advanced AML. Entered into the study were 43 patients with refractory AML or elderly patients not judged medically fit for intensive induction chemotherapy; 42 patients received at least one dose of study drug. Treatment was generally well tolerated, with nausea, headache, and bone pain the most frequent treatment-related side effects. One patient had a morphologic remission (French-American-British [FAB] criteria of complete response without normalization of blood neutrophil and platelet counts) lasting for 2 months. There were 7 patients who achieved a partial response (reduction of blasts by at least 50% in bone marrow and peripheral blood) lasting 1 to 5 months. Patients with AML blasts expressing high levels of VEGF mRNA by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) had a significantly higher response rate and reduction of bone marrow microvessel density than patients with low VEGF expression consistent with the antiangiogenic effects of SU5416.
Autologous stem cell transplantation followed by a dose-reduced allograft induces high complete remission rate in multiple myelomaWe evaluated toxicity, engraftment, chimerism, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), and response to a dose-reduced allograft after cytoreductive autografting in 17 patients with advanced stage II/III multiple myeloma (MM). After autografting with melphalan (200 mg/m2) the patients received after a median interval of 119 days (range 60-210) a dose-reduced regimen consisting of fludarabine (180 mg/m2), melphalan (100 mg/m2), and antithymocyte globulin (3 x 10 mg/kg) followed by allografting from related (n = 7), mismatched related (n = 2), or unrelated (n = 8) donors to induce a graft-versus-myeloma effect. After dose-reduced allografting all patients became neutropenic (< 0.2 x 10(9)/L) for at least 8 days. All patients engrafted with a median time for leukocyte (> 1 x 10(9)/L) and platelet (> 20 x 10(9)/L) counts of 16 (range, 11-24) and 23 days (range, 12-43), respectively. Complete donor chimerism was detected after a median of 30 days (range, 19-38). Acute GVHD stage II occurred in 4 patients (25%) and grade III GVHD in 2 patients (13%). Chronic GVHD developed in 40% of the patients, but only 1 patient experienced extensive chronic GVHD requiring further immunosuppressive therapy. Two patients died of alveolar hemorrhage and pneumonia, resulting in a day 100 mortality rate of 11%. The rate of complete remission with negative immunofixation increased from 18% after autografting to 73% after allografting. After a median follow-up of 17 months after autologous and 13 months after allogeneic transplantation 13 patients are alive and 12 of them free of relapse or progression. The tandem auto-allotransplant protocol is highly active and provides rapid engraftment with complete donor chimerism and tolerable toxicity.
Multicentre randomized therapeutic trial for advanced centrocytic lymphoma: Anthracycline does not improve the prognosisP. Meusers, M. Engelhard, H. Bartels et al.|Hematological Oncology|1989 Within a multicentre observation study on non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) diagnosed according to the Kiel classification advanced stages III and IV of centrocytic (CC) lymphoma exhibited the worst prognosis among lymphomas of low-grade malignancy with a 5-year survival probability of less than 10 per cent. Treatment had been solely expectative and palliative with treatment results showing a prognostic superiority of patients achieving partial and complete remissions over non-responders. Therefore, a randomized multicentre study was initiated to compare the remission-inducing potential of the COP regimen (Bagley et al., 1972) with that of the more intensive adriamycin-containing CHOP regimen (McKelvey et al., 1976). From 91 newly diagnosed CC lymphomas 63 fulfilled randomization criteria with 37 patients assigned to the COP regimen and 26 patients to the CHOP regimen. Between the COP- and CHOP-treated patients no significant differences could be demonstrated with respect to initial clinical parameters, rate of complete (41 per cent versus 58 per cent) or partial remissions (43 per cent versus 31 per cent), median overall survival probability (32 versus 37 months), relapse-free survival (10 versus 7 months) and rates of relapse (73 per cent versus 67 per cent) and death (57 per cent versus 50 per cent). It can be concluded that CC lymphoma is a typical lymphoma of low-grade malignancy with its inability to reach stable remissions while the demonstration of identical survival probabilities for patients with complete and partial remissions constitutes a unique feature of this lymphoma entity. These observations prove advanced CC lymphoma to represent an incurable neoplastic disease under conventional therapeutic approaches.