| Literature DB >> 28929332 |
Naoto Takahashi1, Tetsuzo Tauchi2, Kunio Kitamura3, Koichi Miyamura4, Yoshio Saburi5, Yoshihiro Hatta6, Yasuhiko Miyata7, Shinichi Kobayashi8, Kensuke Usuki9, Itaru Matsumura10, Yosuke Minami11, Noriko Usui12, Tetsuya Fukuda13, Satoru Takada14, Maho Ishikawa15, Katsumichi Fujimaki16, Hiroshi Gomyo17, Osamu Sasaki18, Kohshi Ohishi19, Takaaki Miyake20, Kiyotoshi Imai21, Hitoshi Suzushima22, Hideki Mitsui23, Kazuto Togitani24, Toru Kiguchi25, Yoshiko Atsuta26, Shigeki Ohtake27, Kazunori Ohnishi28, Yukio Kobayashi29, Hitoshi Kiyoi30, Yasushi Miyazaki31, Tomoki Naoe7.
Abstract
The objective of this prospective clinical trial (JALSG-STIM213, UMIN000011971) was to evaluate treatment-free remission (TFR) rates after discontinuation of imatinib in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). CML patients who received imatinib treatment for at least 3 years and sustained deep molecular response for at least 2 years were eligible. Molecular recurrence was defined as loss of major molecular response (MMR). Of the 68 eligible patients, 38.2% were women, the median age was 55.0 years, and the median duration of imatinib treatment was 97.5 months. The 12-month TFR rate was 67.6%. Patients who lost MMR were immediately treated with imatinib again; all re-achieved MMR. Three-year treatment-free survival (TFS) was estimated as 64.6% using the Kaplan-Meier method. Undetectable molecular residual disease (UMRD) was defined as no BCR-ABL1 in > 100,000 ABL1 control genes using international scale polymerase chain reaction. UMRD at the study baseline was found to be predictive of continuation of TFR. Our findings suggest that CML patients who meet all the eligibility criteria that have commonly been used in the TFR trials are able to discontinue imatinib use safely. TFR may thus be valuable as a new goal for CML treatment in Japan.Entities:
Keywords: BCR-ABL1; Deep molecular response; Imatinib; Treatment-free remission; Undetectable molecular residual disease
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28929332 DOI: 10.1007/s12185-017-2334-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hematol ISSN: 0925-5710 Impact factor: 2.490