| Literature DB >> 24816236 |
Arnon Nagler1, Myriam Labopin2, Norbert-Claude Gorin3, Felicetto Ferrara4, Miguel A Sanz5, Depei Wu6, Antonio Torres Gomez7, Simona Lapusan8, Giuseppe Irrera9, Jose E Guimaraes10, Aida Botelho Sousa11, Angelo M Carella12, Norbert Vey13, William Arcese14, Avichai Shimoni1, Raanan Berger1, Vanderson Rocha15, Mohamad Mohty16.
Abstract
Oral busulfan is the historical backbone of the busulfan+cyclophosphamide regimen for autologous stem cell transplantation. However intravenous busulfan has more predictable pharmacokinetics and less toxicity than oral busulfan; we, therefore, retrospectively analyzed data from 952 patients with acute myeloid leukemia who received intravenous busulfan for autologous stem cell transplantation. Most patients were male (n=531, 56%), and the median age at transplantation was 50.5 years. Two-year overall survival, leukemia-free survival, and relapse incidence were 67±2%, 53±2%, and 40±2%, respectively. The non-relapse mortality rate at 2 years was 7±1%. Five patients died from veno-occlusive disease. Overall leukemia-free survival and relapse incidence at 2 years did not differ significantly between the 815 patients transplanted in first complete remission (52±2% and 40±2%, respectively) and the 137 patients transplanted in second complete remission (58±5% and 35±5%, respectively). Cytogenetic risk classification and age were significant prognostic factors: the 2-year leukemia-free survival was 63±4% in patients with good risk cytogenetics, 52±3% in those with intermediate risk cytogenetics, and 37 ± 10% in those with poor risk cytogenetics (P=0.01); patients ≤50 years old had better overall survival (77±2% versus 56±3%; P<0.001), leukemia-free survival (61±3% versus 45±3%; P<0.001), relapse incidence (35±2% versus 45±3%; P<0.005), and non-relapse mortality (4±1% versus 10±2%; P<0.001) than older patients. The combination of intravenous busulfan and high-dose melphalan was associated with the best overall survival (75±4%). Our results suggest that the use of intravenous busulfan simplifies the autograft procedure and confirm the usefulness of autologous stem cell transplantation in acute myeloid leukemia. As in allogeneic transplantation, veno-occlusive disease is an uncommon complication after an autograft using intravenous busulfan. Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24816236 PMCID: PMC4116838 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2014.105197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941