| Literature DB >> 14576058 |
Barbara Wassmann1, Heike Pfeifer, Urban J Scheuring, Anja Binckebanck, Nicola Gökbuget, Johannes Atta, Patrick Brück, Harald Rieder, Claudia Schoch, Lothar Leimer, Rainer Schwerdtfeger, Gerhard Ehninger, Thomas Lipp, Jolanta Perz, Matthias Stelljes, Harald Gschaidmeier, Dieter Hoelzer, Oliver G Ottmann.
Abstract
Imatinib has pronounced but brief antileukemic activity in advanced Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph(+)ALL). We assessed the prognostic impact of pretreatment disease features and the early bone marrow (BM) response in 68 consecutive patients with Ph(+)ALL receiving imatinib salvage therapy. A complete hematologic or marrow response was achieved by 92% of patients with BM blasts below 5% on day 14, whereas 62.5% of patients with more than 5% BM blasts on day 14 were nonresponders. Similarly, time to progression (TTP) was superior in patients with a good day 14 response (5.2 versus 0.9 months; P <.0001). Prior complete remission of less than 6 months, white blood cell count of more than 10 x 10(9)/L, circulating peripheral blood blasts at diagnosis, additional Philadelphia chromosomes, or at least 2 Bcr-Abl fusion signals were associated with significantly inferior remission rate and response duration. In patients without poor prognostic features, single-agent imatinib may be appropriate before transplant salvage therapy. Conversely, patients with clinically or cytogenetically defined poor-risk features are candidates for trials of upfront imatinib in combination with other agents.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14576058 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2003-01-0154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113