Literature DB >> 22180162

Acute myeloid leukemia: 2012 update on diagnosis, risk stratification, and management.

Elihu H Estey1.   

Abstract

DISEASE OVERVIEW: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) results from accumulation of abnormal immature cells in the marrow. These cells interfere with normal hematopoiesis can escape into the blood and infiltrate lung and CNS. The most common cause of death is bone marrow failure. It is likely that many different mutations and/or epigenetic aberrations can produce the same disease, with these differences responsible for the very variable response to therapy, which is AML's principal clinical feature. DIAGNOSIS: This rests on demonstration that the marrow or blood has >20% blasts of myeloid lineage. Blast lineage is assessed by multiparameter flow cytometry with CD33 and CD13 being surface markers typically expressed by myeloid blasts. It should be realized that clinical/prognostic considerations, not the blast % per se, should be the main factor determining how a patient is treated. RISK STRATIFICATION: Two features determine risk: the probability of treatment-related mortality (TRM) and, more important, even in patients aged >75 with Zubrod performance status 1, the probability of resistance to standard therapy despite not incurring TRM. The chief predictor of resistance is cytogenetics with a monosomal karyotype (MK) denoting the disease is essentially incurable with standard therapy even if followed by a standard allogeneic transplant (HCT). The most common cytogenetic finding is a normal karyotype (NK) and those of such patients with an NPM1 mutation but no FLT3 internal tandem duplication (ITD), or with a CEBPA mutation, have a prognosis similar to that of patients with the most favorable cytogenetics [inv(16) or t(8;21)] (60-70% cure rate). In contrast, NK patients with a FLT3 ITD have only a 30-40% chance of cure even after HCT. Accordingly analyses of NPM1, FLT3, and CEBPA should be part of routine evaluation, much as is cytogenetics. Risk is best assessed considering several variables simultaneously rather than, for example, only age. RISK-ADAPTED THERAPY: Patients with inv(16) or t(8;21) or who are NPM1+/FLT3ITD- can receive standard therapy (daunorubicin + cytarabine) and should not receive HCT in first CR. It seems likely that use of a daily daunorubicin dose of 90 mg/m(2) will further improve outcome in these patients. There appears no reason to use doses of cytarabine > 1 g/m(2) (for example, bid × 6 days), as opposed to the more commonly used 3 g/m(2) . Patients with an unfavorable karyotype (particularly MK) are unlikely to benefit from standard therapy (even with dose escalation) and are thus prime candidates for clinical trials of new drugs or new approaches to HCT; the latter should be done in first CR. Patients with intermediate prognoses (for example, NK and NPM and FLT3ITD negative) should also receive HCT in first CR and can plausibly receive either investigational or standard induction therapy, with the same prognostic information about standard therapy leading one patient to choose the standard and another an investigational option.
Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22180162     DOI: 10.1002/ajh.22246

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hematol        ISSN: 0361-8609            Impact factor:   10.047


  57 in total

1.  Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for patients with acute leukemia.

Authors:  Yan Chen; Yajing Xu; Gan Fu; Yi Liu; Jie Peng; Bin Fu; Xiaoyu Yuan; Hongya Xin; Yan Zhu; Qun He; Dengshu Wu; Yigang Shu; Xiaolin Li; Xielan Zhao; Fangping Chen
Journal:  Chin J Cancer Res       Date:  2013-08       Impact factor: 5.087

2.  Hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation for advanced systemic mastocytosis.

Authors:  Celalettin Ustun; Andreas Reiter; Bart L Scott; Ryotaro Nakamura; Gandhi Damaj; Sebastian Kreil; Ryan Shanley; William J Hogan; Miguel-Angel Perales; Tsiporah Shore; Herrad Baurmann; Robert Stuart; Bernd Gruhn; Michael Doubek; Jack W Hsu; Eleni Tholouli; Tanja Gromke; Lucy A Godley; Livio Pagano; Andrew Gilman; Eva Maria Wagner; Tor Shwayder; Martin Bornhäuser; Esperanza B Papadopoulos; Alexandra Böhm; Gregory Vercellotti; Maria Teresa Van Lint; Christoph Schmid; Werner Rabitsch; Vinod Pullarkat; Faezeh Legrand; Ibrahim Yakoub-Agha; Wael Saber; John Barrett; Olivier Hermine; Hans Hagglund; Wolfgang R Sperr; Uday Popat; Edwin P Alyea; Steven Devine; H Joachim Deeg; Daniel Weisdorf; Cem Akin; Peter Valent
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-08-25       Impact factor: 44.544

3.  Prognostic significance of the BAALC gene expression in adult patients with acute myeloid leukemia: A meta-analysis.

Authors:  Shi-Ji Xiao; Jian-Zhen Shen; Jin-Long Huang; Hai-Ying Fu
Journal:  Mol Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-05-11

4.  AML versus ICU: outcome of septic AML patients in an intensive care setting.

Authors:  Christoph Sippel; Young Kim; Anja Wallau; Peter Brossart; Ingo Schmidt-Wolf; Peter Walger
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-03-19       Impact factor: 4.553

5.  Differentiation therapy for the treatment of t(8;21) acute myeloid leukemia using histone deacetylase inhibitors.

Authors:  Michael Bots; Inge Verbrugge; Benjamin P Martin; Jessica M Salmon; Margherita Ghisi; Adele Baker; Kym Stanley; Jake Shortt; Gert J Ossenkoppele; Johannes Zuber; Amy R Rappaport; Peter Atadja; Scott W Lowe; Ricky W Johnstone
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2014-01-10       Impact factor: 22.113

6.  Clinical application of targeted and genome-wide technologies: can we predict treatment responses in chronic lymphocytic leukemia?

Authors:  Reem Alsolami; Samantha Jl Knight; Anna Schuh
Journal:  Per Med       Date:  2013-06-01       Impact factor: 2.512

Review 7.  The myth of the second remission of acute leukemia in the adult.

Authors:  Stephen J Forman; Jacob M Rowe
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2012-12-14       Impact factor: 22.113

8.  Epigenetic therapy is associated with similar survival compared with intensive chemotherapy in older patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Alfonso Quintás-Cardama; Farhad Ravandi; Theresa Liu-Dumlao; Mark Brandt; Stefan Faderl; Sherry Pierce; Gautam Borthakur; Guillermo Garcia-Manero; Jorge Cortes; Hagop Kantarjian
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2012-10-15       Impact factor: 22.113

9.  Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor inhibits CXCR4/SDF-1α signaling and overcomes stromal-mediated drug resistance in the HL-60 cell line.

Authors:  Xianfu Sheng; Hua Zhong; Haixia Wan; Jihua Zhong; Fangyuan Chen
Journal:  Exp Ther Med       Date:  2016-04-20       Impact factor: 2.447

Review 10.  Myeloprotection by cytidine deaminase gene transfer in antileukemic therapy.

Authors:  Nico Lachmann; Sebastian Brennig; Ruhi Phaltane; Michael Flasshove; Dagmar Dilloo; Thomas Moritz
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 5.715

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