| Literature DB >> 24951123 |
Lisa Pleyer1, Sonja Burgstaller, Michael Girschikofsky, Werner Linkesch, Reinhard Stauder, Michael Pfeilstocker, Martin Schreder, Christoph Tinchon, Thamer Sliwa, Alois Lang, Wolfgang R Sperr, Peter Krippl, Dietmar Geissler, Daniela Voskova, Konstantin Schlick, Josef Thaler, Sigrid Machherndl-Spandl, Georg Theiler, Otto Eckmüllner, Richard Greil.
Abstract
Data on efficacy and safety of azacitidine in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with >30 % bone marrow (BM) blasts are limited, and the drug can only be used off-label in these patients. We previously reported on the efficacy and safety of azacitidine in 155 AML patients treated within the Austrian Azacitidine Registry (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT01595295). We herein update this report with a population almost twice as large (n = 302). This cohort included 172 patients with >30 % BM blasts; 93 % would have been excluded from the pivotal AZA-001 trial (which led to European Medicines Agency (EMA) approval of azacitidine for high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and AML with 20-30 % BM blasts). Despite this much more unfavorable profile, results are encouraging: overall response rate was 48 % in the total cohort and 72 % in patients evaluable according to MDS-IWG-2006 response criteria, respectively. Median OS was 9.6 (95 % CI 8.53-10.7) months. A clinically relevant OS benefit was observed with any form of disease stabilization (marrow stable disease (8.1 months), hematologic improvement (HI) (9.7 months), or the combination thereof (18.9 months)), as compared to patients without response and/or without disease stabilization (3.2 months). Age, white blood cell count, and BM blast count at start of therapy did not influence OS. The baseline factors LDH >225 U/l, ECOG ≥2, comorbidities ≥3, monosomal karyotype, and prior disease-modifying drugs, as well as the response-related factors hematologic improvement and further deepening of response after first response, were significant independent predictors of OS in multivariate analysis. Azacitidine seems effective in WHO-AML, including patients with >30 % BM blasts (currently off-label use). Although currently not regarded as standard form of response assessment in AML, disease stabilization and/or HI should be considered sufficient response to continue treatment with azacitidine.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24951123 PMCID: PMC4176957 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-014-2126-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
Comparison of all current full publications on AML patients treated with azacitidine
| Variable | No. of AML patients | Inhabitants (mio) | No. of AML patients | Phase | Median age (range) | AZA schedule | AZA dose | Median cycles (range) | Median FU months | Median OS months | ORR (ITT), % CR/(m)CR, PR, HI | BM blasts | Cytogenetics, % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CALGB 8421 | 25 | 311.6 | 0.08 | I/II-subanal. | 65 (33–82) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | ND | ND | ND | 48 12, 4, 32 | WHO-AML ND | ND |
| CALBG 8921 | 26 | 311.6 | 0.08 | II-subanal. | 66 (23–82) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | ND | ND | ND | 35 12, 0, 23 | WHO-AML ND | ND |
| CALG 9221 | 27 | 311.6 | 0.09 | III-subanal. | 69 (31–92) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | ND | ND | 19.3 | 37 7, 0, 30 | WHO-AML ND | ND |
| Germany | 40 | 81.7 | 0.49 | I/II | 72 (46–87) | d1–5 | 75 mg/m2 | 3 (0–16) | 13 | 3 | 30 5, 8, 18 | 17 ND | Int: 70a High: 30 |
| AZA 001 | 55 | 897.3b | 0.06 | III-subanal. | 70 (52–80) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | 8 (1–39) | 20 | 24.5 | ND 18, ND, ND | 13 0 | Int: 69c High: 26 |
| Pennsylvania | 20 | 12.7 | 1.57 | Retrosp. | 69 (44–80) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | ND | ND | 2.5–15d | 60 20, 25, 15 | ND 6 | Int: 60e High: 20 |
| France | 26 | 65.4 | 0.40 | Retrosp. | 69 (37–89) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | 6 (1–28) | 20 | 8 | ≥39 16, 23, ND | MPD-AML 17 | Int: 38f High: 46 |
| Holland | 31 | 16.7 | 1.86 | Retrosp. | 70 (40–84) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | 5 (1–19) | 8 | 6–16d | 39 23, 3, 13 | WHO-AML ND | Int: 68c High: 32 |
| Lausanne | 38g | 2.0h | 19 | Retrosp. | 68 (25–86) | d1–5 | 100 mg/m2 | 6 (3–20) | 12.2 | 8.6 | ≥31 13, 4, 31 | 9 29 | Int: 64i, g High: 29 |
| Holland | 55 | 16.7 | 3.29 | Retrosp. | 73 (59–84) | d1–7 | 75 mg/m2 | 6 (1–27) | ND | 12.3 | 42 31, 11, 7 | 38 17 | Int: 64a High: 33 |
| Italy | 82 | 60.6 | 1.36 | Retrosp. | 77 (46–87) | d1–7 | 60 %, 75 mg/m2 40 %, 100 mg flat | 4 (1–22) | 12 | 7–9d | 36 20, 12, 34 | 33 49 | Int: 37a High: 23 |
| France | 149 | 65.4 | 2.28 | Retrosp. | 74 (31–91) | d1–5 (18 %) d1–7 (78 %) others (4 %) | 85 %, 75 mg/m2 15 %, 100 mg flat 41 %, +ATRA ± VPA 22 %, +HU | 5 (1–31) | ND | 9.4 | 28 23, 5, ND | 62 87 | Int: 53a High: 40 |
| Austria | 155 | 8.2 | 18.9 | Retrosp. | 73 (33–91) | d1–5 (16 %) d1–7 (57 %) 5-2-2 (22 %) others (5 %) | 78 %, 75 mg/m2 22 %, 100 mg flat | 4 (1–24) | 7.7 | 9.8 | 45 13, 21, 9 | 57 98 | Int: 74a High: 17 |
| Present study | 302 | 8.2 | 36.83 | Retrosp. | 73 (30–93) | d1–5 (15 %) d1–7 (53 %) 5-2-2 (24 %) others (7 %) | 66 %, 75 mg/m2 34 %, 100 mg flat | 4 (1–37) | 8.4 | 9.6 | 48 17, 13, 19 | 130 172 | Int: 67a High: 19 |
AAR Austrian Azacitidine Registry, subanal. subanalysis, AZA azacitidine, retrosp. retrospective, FU follow-up, mo months, OS overall survival, ORR overall response rate, CR complete response, mCR marrow complete response, PR partial response, HI hematologic improvement, ND not determined, BM bone marrow, WHO World Health Organization, Int. intermediate, ND not done, MPD myeloproliferative disease
aMRC-criteria, MRC cytogenetic risk groups, Medical research Council cytogenetic risk groups
bOne hundred eight participating centers from 15 countries (http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/study/NCT00071799?show_locs=Y#locn)
cISCN criteria, International System for Cytogenetic Nomenclature
dRanges are given, as no separate subanalysis of AML patients was performed. OS ranges thus comprise MDS and AML patients
eMerely defined as normal, simple, and complex cytogenetic abnormalities
fIPSS cytogenetic risk criteria, IPSS cytogenetic risk groups, International Prognostic Scoring Index cytogenetic risk groups
gBaseline characteristics were reported from 52 patients, but only 38 were evaluated for response (14 patients were excluded from survival analyses since they did not reach the minimal 8-week observation period)
hPatient recruitment area 2.0 million (as defined by http://www.nzz.ch/aktuell/schweiz/wir-erleben-einen-voelligunethischen-wettbewerb-1.16961164)
iHOVON classification
Baseline characteristics at azacitidine treatment start
| Median age, years (range) | 73 (30–93) |
|---|---|
| Gender, male, | 175 (57.9) |
| WHO diagnosis, | |
| t-AML | 24 (7.9) |
| AML-RCAc/gene mutationsd | 61 (20.2) |
| AML-RCA | 13 (4.3) |
| AML with gene mutations | 52 (17.2) |
| AML-MRF | 203 (67.2) |
| AML-MRC | 75 (22.2) |
| AML with antecedent hematologic disease | 89 (29.5) |
| Antecedent MDS | 60 (19.9) |
| Antecedent CMML | 11 (3.6) |
| Antecedent CMPD | 18 (6.0) |
| AML with myelodysplasia (MLD) | 173 (57.3) |
| AML-NOS | 61 (20.2) |
| Peripheral blood blasts, | |
| No data | 14 (4.6) |
| 0 % | 101 (33.4) |
| >0 % | 187 (61.9) |
| Median (range), % | 3.5 (0–97) |
| Bone marrow blasts, | |
| <20 %e | 51 (16.9) |
| 20–30 % | 79 (26.2) |
| >30 % (off-label use) | 172 (57.0) |
| Median (range), % | 32 (0–98) |
| WBC count, | |
| <10 G/l | 150 (49.7) |
| ≥10 G/l | 61 (20.2) |
| ≥15 G/l | 40 (13.2) |
| ≥20 G/l | 29 (9.6) |
| ≥30 G/l | 15 (5.0) |
| ≥50 G/l | 7 (2.3) |
| Transfusion dependence, | |
| Any type of TD | 183 (60.6) |
| RBC-TD | 175 (57.9) |
| PLT-TD | 113 (37.4) |
| RBC-TD + PLT-TD | 105 (34.8) |
| IPSS cytogenetic risk, | |
| Not evaluable | 33 (10.9) |
| Good | 161 (53.3) |
| Intermediate | 55 (18.2) |
| Poor | 53 (17.5) |
| MRC cytogenetic risk, | |
| Not evaluable | 33 (10.9) |
| Good | 11 (3.6) |
| Intermediate | 201 (66.6) |
| High | 57 (18.9) |
| Specific chromosomal aberrations, | |
| Not evaluable/not evaluated | 33 (10.9) |
| Normal karyotype | 149 (49.3) |
| Specific aberrationsb | 120 (39.7) |
| Complex karyotype | 31 (10.3) |
| Monosomal karyotype | 32 (10.6) |
| MK only | 6 (2.0) |
| MK and complex | 26 (8.6) |
| −5q | 33 (10.9) |
| −7 | 25 (8.3) |
| −7q | 17 (5.6) |
| +8 | 26 (8.6) |
| −20q | 5 (1.7) |
| −Y | 8 (2.6) |
| Others | 79 (26.2) |
| Molecular diagnosticsb, | |
| Not done/no data | 148 (49.0) |
| Normal | 89 (29.5) |
| FLT3 | 43 (14.2) |
| NPM1 | 36 (11.9) |
| nv(16) | 4 (1.3) |
| Others | 91 (30.1) |
| Comorbiditiesb, | |
| Cardiace | 124 (41.5) |
| Renal insufficiency | 54 (17.9) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 54 (17.9) |
| Solid tumor | 41 (13.6) |
| Liver disease | 35 (11.6) |
| Pulmonary | 33 (10.9) |
| Hematologic neoplasmf | 31 (10.3) |
| Thromboembolic episodes | 28 (9.3) |
| Infection | 28 (9.3) |
| Obesity (BMI >35 kg/m2) | 25 (8.3) |
| Cerebrovascular disease | 25 (8.3) |
| Psychiatric disturbance (requiring consult/treatment) | 20 (6.6) |
| Rheumatologic | 11 (3.6) |
| Peptic ulcer (requiring treatment) | 8 (2.6) |
| Inflammatory bowel disease | 3 (1.0) |
| Number of comorbidities, | |
| 0 | 62 (20.5) |
| 1 | 90 (29.8) |
| 2 | 73 (24.2) |
| 3 | 43 (14.2) |
| >3 | 34 (11.3) |
| ECOG ≥2, | 73 (24.2) |
| HCT-CI, | |
| Low risk | 93 (30.8) |
| Int. risk | 117 (38.7) |
| High risk | 92 (30.5) |
| Treatment prior to AZAg, | |
| None | 115 (38.1) |
| Growth factors and/or iron chelators | 24 (7.9) |
| Prior disease modifying treatment | 163 (54.0) |
| Treatment prior to AZAb, | |
| None | 115 (38.1) |
| Erythropoietin stimulating agents | 23 (7.6) |
| G-CSF | 34 (11.3) |
| Thrombopoietin-stimulating agents | 2 (0.7) |
| Iron chelation therapy | 12 (4.0) |
| Thalidomide | 5 (1.7) |
| Lenalidomide | 11 (3.6) |
| ATG, CyA | 4 (1.3) |
| Low-dose cytarabine | 13 (4.3) |
| Intensive chemotherapy for MDS/AML | 125 (41.4) |
| Chemotherapy for other neoplasm | 22 (7.3) |
| Hydroxyurea | 26 (8.6) |
| Others | 14 (4.6) |
| Reason for treatment, | |
| 1st line treatmenth | 139 (46.0) |
| Bridging to allo-SCT | 10 (3.3) |
| Maintenance after CR to CTX | 13 (4.3) |
| No CR to conventional chemotherapy/allo-SCT | 98 (32.5) |
| No CR to other disease modifying treatment | 42 (13.9) |
t-AML treatment-related AML, AML-RCA AML with recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities, AML-MRF AML with MDS-related features, CMPD, chronic myeloproliferative disease, AML-NOS AML not otherwise specified, MP myeloproliferative, COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, NHL non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group
aIf a patient fulfilled criteria for more than one WHO category, weighting was performed as follows: t-AML > AML-RCA > AML-MRF
bAmounts to >100 % due to multiple choice nature
cIncludes the following structural abnormalities: inversion 16, t(8;21), t(15;17), t(9;11), t(6;9), t(1;22)
dIncludes mutations in FLT3, NPM1, and/or CEBPα
eIncludes arrhythmia (atrial fibrillation or flutter, sick sinus syndrome, or ventricular arrhythmias), coronary artery disease, coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction or ejection fraction ≤50 %, and/or valvular heart disease (except mitral valve prolapse)
fIncludes monoclonal gammopathy of unknown significance, multiple myeloma, low-grade NHL, high-grade NHL, M. Hodgkin, Burkitt’s lymphoma, chronic myeloid leukemia, hypereosinophilic syndrome, chronic myeloproliferative diseases, and others
gBM blast count was <20 %, in those patients with established AML who were refractory to -or had no CR after-conventional chemotherapy or allogeneic stem cell transplantation
hDefined as patients without prior disease modifying treatment (i.e., growth factors and iron chelation were allowed)
Specific adverse eventsa
| Variable | Grade | No. of patients, (%) | No. of total events |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hematologic toxicityb | G3-4 | 145 (48.0) | 330 |
| Thrombopenia | G3-4 | 91 (30.1) | 195 |
| Neutropenia | G3-4 | 105 (34.8) | 223 |
| Anemia | G3-4 | 84 (27.8) | 177 |
| Bleeding events | – | 35 (11.6) | 60 |
| Febrile neutropenia | – | 56 (18.5) | 95 |
| Infectious complications | G1-2 | 91 (30.1) | 311 |
| G3-4 | 100 (33.1) | 112 | |
| Non-hematologic toxicity | |||
| Liver | G1-2 | 2 (0.7) | 3 |
| G3-4 | 2 (0.7) | 2 | |
| Kidney | G1-2 | 12 (4.0) | 12 |
| G3-4 | 3 (1.0) | 3 | |
| Heartc | G1-2 | 8 (2.6) | 14 |
| G3-4 | 29 (9.6) | 34 | |
| Blood pressure | G1-2 | 3 (1.0) | 3 |
| G3-4 | 5 (1.7) | 5 | |
| Metabolic | G1-2 | 4 (1.3) | 4 |
| G3-4 | 0 (0.0) | 0 | |
| Thromboembolic | G1-2 | 11 (3.6) | 12 |
| G3-4 | 2 (0.7) | 2 | |
| Neurologic | G1-2 | 19 (6.3) | 26 |
| G3-4 | 2 (0.7) | 2 | |
| Nausea | G1-2 | 33 (10.9) | 46 |
| G3-4 | 1 (0.3) | 1 | |
| Vomiting | G1-2 | 9 (3.0) | 12 |
| G3-4 | 0 (0.0) | 0 | |
| Constipation | G1-2 | 21 (7.0) | 28 |
| G3-4 | 1 (0.3) | 1 | |
| Diarrhea | G1-2 | 26 (8.6) | 35 |
| G3-4 | 0 (0.0) | 0 | |
| Gastrointestinal, others | G1-2 | 24 (7.9) | 31 |
| G3-4 | 0 (0.0) | 0 | |
| Injection site reaction | G1-2 | 64 (21.2) | 123 |
| G3-4 | 2 (0.7) | 2 | |
| Fatigue | Relieved by rest | 46 (15.2) | 89 |
| Not relieved by rest | 36 (11.9) | 63 | |
| Limiting self care | 37 (12.3) | 42 | |
| Pain | Mild | 43 (14.2) | 82 |
| Moderate | 39 (12.9) | 51 | |
| Severe | 9 (3.0) | 9 | |
| Surgery | Elective | 19 (6.3) | 23 |
| Emergency | 10 (3.3) | 11 | |
| Fall | Total | 26 (8.6) | 29 |
| With fracture | 10 (3.3) | 11 | |
| With hemorrhage | 11 (3.6) | 11 | |
| Novel solid tumor | Yes | 3 (1.0) | 3 |
aAssessed according to NCI Toxicity Criteria (http://ctep.cancer.gov/protocolDevelopment/electronic_applications/ctc.htm) and Common Terminology Criteria for AE (CTCAEv.4) (http://evs.nci.nih.gov/ftp1/CTCAE/About.html)
bGrade 3–4 cytopenias reported, are those that were documented as adverse events, and thus felt to be a worsening of pre-existing cytopenia by the respective treating physicians
cReported cardiac AE were left ventricular output failure (n = 23), arrhythmia (n = 7), hypertension (n = 5), myocardial infarction (n = 3), angina pectoris (n = 1)
Fig. 1Kaplan–Meier curves of baseline factors that did not affect overall survival (OS). a Effect of bone marrow blast count on OS (total cohort). b Effect of bone marrow blast count on OS (AZA first line). c Effect of age on OS. d Effect of WHO-AML type on OS. e Effect of white blood cell (WBC) count on OS. f Effect of WBC ≥15 G/l on OS. g Effect of achievement of EMA/FDA-target dose on OS. h Effect of azacitidine (AZA) schedule: 5 vs. 7 days of azacitidine per cycle on OS
Fig. 2Forrest plot of factors significantly influencing overall survival of azacitidine-treated AML patients (n = 302) in multivariate analysis
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier curves of baseline factors that significantly affected overall survival (OS) in multivariate analysis. a Effect of monosomal karyotype (MK) on OS. b Effect of MK in comparison to complex karyotype on OS. c Effect of prior disease-modifying treatment (i.e., azacitidine first-line no vs. yes) on OS. d Effect of hematologic improvement (HI) on OS. e Effect of response deepening (i.e., achievement of BM blast reduction in terms of mCR/CR/PR after HI) on OS. f Overall survival by best response
Comparison of prognostic factors for OS in multivariate analysis (MVA) of all full publications on azacitidine treated AML patients
| Variable | Italy | Holland | Lausanne | France | Austria | Present study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 82 | 55 | 38a | 149 | 155 | 302 |
|
| 49 | 17 | 29 | 87 | 98 | 172 |
| Prognostic factors for OS | ||||||
| Age | No MVA for OS performed | ND | No | No | No | No |
| Gender | ND | No | No | No | No | |
| Cytogenetic risk group | Yes (** | Nod | Yes (** | Nob | Nob | |
| Monosomal karyotype | ND | ND | ND | ND | Yes (** | |
| WBC </≥15 g/l | Yes (** | ND | Yes (** | No | No | |
| LDH </≥225 IU/l | No | ND | ND | No | Yes (* | |
| ECOG performance score </≥2 | Yes (** | ND | Yes (** | Yes (* | Yes (* | |
| Number of comorbidities </≥4 | ND | ND | ND | No ( | Yes (** | |
| AZA first line | ND | ND | ND | ND | Yes (* | |
| AML typeg | No | Noh | No | No | No | |
| BM blasts </≥30 % | No | No | No | No | No | |
| PB blasts </≥0 % | No | Noi | ND | Yes (* | No | |
| Transfusion dependence | No | Yes (** | ND | No | No | |
| RBC-TI | ND | ND | Yes (** | Yes (* | ||
| PLT-TI | ND | No | ND | |||
| Hematologic improvement | ND | ND | ND | |||
| AZA schedule (5 vs. 7 days) | ND | ND | No | No | No | |
| AZA dose (</=75 mg/m2/day) | ND | ND | No | No | No | |
aBaseline characteristics were reported from 52 patients, but only 38 were evaluated for response
bDefined according to MRC classification
cOnly the poor risk-group predicted OS, the good vs. intermediate risk group did not (p = 0.91)
dDefined according to the HOVON classification
eCutoff, >10 G/l; however, this variable was not significant in univariate analysis (p = 0.11)
fAccording to WHO performance score
gPrimary AML, post-MDS, post-MPN, refractory/relapsed disease or therapy-related AML
hOnly therapy-related AML (n = 10 patients) had an impact when looked at separately (**p < 0.001), whereas AML type did not (p = 0.086)
iPB blast cut off of ≥20 % used
jNot reported on separately, i.e., patients that were transfusion independent at baseline, or who achieved RBC-TI during treatment were grouped together