| Literature DB >> 18000167 |
Beverly J Lange1, Franklin O Smith, James Feusner, Dorothy R Barnard, Patricia Dinndorf, Stephen Feig, Nyla A Heerema, Carola Arndt, Robert J Arceci, Nita Seibel, Margie Weiman, Kathryn Dusenbery, Kevin Shannon, Sandra Luna-Fineman, Robert B Gerbing, Todd A Alonzo.
Abstract
CCG-2961 incorporated 3 new agents, idarubicin, fludarabine and interleukin-2, into a phase 3 AML trial using intensive-timing remission induction/consolidation and related donor marrow transplantation or high-dose cytarabine intensification. Among 901 patients under age 21 years, 5-year survival was 52%, and event-free survival was 42%. Survival improved from 44% between 1996 and 1998 to 58% between 2000 and 2002 (P = .005), and treatment-related mortality declined from 19% to 12% (P = .025). Partial replacement of daunomycin with idarubicin in the 5-drug induction combination achieved a remission rate of 88%, similar to historical controls. Postremission survival was 56% in patients randomized to either 5-drug reinduction or fludarabine/cytarabine/idarubicin. For patients with or without a related donor, respective 5-year disease-free survival was 61% and 50% (P = .021); respective survival was 68% and 62% (P = .425). Donor availability conferred no benefit on those with inv(16) or t(8;21) cytogenetics. After cytarabine intensification, patients randomized to interleukin-2 or none experienced similar outcomes. Factors predictive of inferior survival were age more than 16 years, non-white ethnicity, absence of related donor, obesity, white blood cell count more than 100 000 x 10(9)/L, -7/7q-, -5/5q-, and/or complex karyotype. No new agent improved outcomes; experience may have contributed to better results time.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18000167 PMCID: PMC2214754 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2007-04-084293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113