Tolerability and Clinical Activity of Post-Transplantation Azacitidine in Patients Allografted for Acute Myeloid Leukemia Treated on the RICAZA Trial

Charles Craddock(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Nadira Jilani(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Shamyla Siddique(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Christina Yap(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Josephine Khan(Cancer Research UK Clinical Trials Unit), Sandeep Nagra(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Janice Ward(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Paul Ferguson(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Peter Hazlewood(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Richard J. Buka(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), Paresh Vyas(John Radcliffe Hospital), Oliver Goodyear(University of Birmingham), Eleni Tholouli(Manchester Royal Infirmary), Charles Crawley(Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Nigel H. Russell(Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust), Jenny Byrne(Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust), Ram Malladi(Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham), John A. Snowden(Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Mike Dennis(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust)
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation
September 11, 2015
Cited by 173Open Access
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Abstract

Disease relapse is the major causes of treatment failure after allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT) in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). As well as demonstrating significant clinical activity in AML, azacitidine (AZA) upregulates putative tumor antigens, inducing a CD8(+) T cell response with the potential to augment a graft-versus-leukemia effect. We, therefore, studied the feasibility and clinical sequelae of the administration of AZA during the first year after transplantation in 51 patients with AML undergoing allogeneic SCT. Fourteen patients did not commence AZA either because of transplantation complications or withdrawal of consent. Thirty-seven patients commenced AZA at a median of 54 days (range, 40 to 194 days) after transplantation, which was well tolerated in the majority of patients. Thirty-one patients completed 3 or more cycles of AZA. Sixteen patients relapsed at a median time of 8 months after transplantation. No patient developed extensive chronic graft-versus-host disease. The induction of a post-transplantation CD8(+) T cell response to 1 or more tumor-specific peptides was studied in 28 patients. Induction of a CD8(+) T cell response was associated with a reduced risk of disease relapse (hazard ratio [HR], .30; 95% confidence interval [CI], .10 to .85; P = .02) and improved relapse-free survival (HR, .29; 95% CI, .10 to .83; P = .02) taking into account death as a competing risk. In conclusion, AZA is well tolerated after transplantation and appears to have the capacity to reduce the relapse risk in patients who demonstrate a CD8(+) T cell response to tumor antigens. These observations require confirmation in a prospective clinical trial.


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