| Literature DB >> 29518628 |
Simon Kavanagh1, Emily Heath1, Rose Hurren1, Marcela Gronda1, Samir H Barghout1, Sanduni U Liyanage1, Thirushi P Siriwardena1, Jaime Claudio1, Tong Zhang2, Mahadeo Sukhai2, Tracy L Stockley3, Suzanne Kamel-Reid4, Amr Rostom1, Andrzej Lutynski1, Dina Khalaf1, Anna Rydlewski1, Steven M Chan1, Vikas Gupta1, Dawn Maze1, Hassan Sibai1, Andre C Schuh1, Karen Yee1, Mark D Minden1, Aaron D Schimmer5.
Abstract
We evaluated outcomes of 100 patients with high risk AML treated with Ida-FLAG induction as first-line therapy. 72 achieved remission with one cycle; 19 did not. High risk cytogenetics and TP53 mutations were associated with failure to achieve remission. In those reaching remission, allogeneic bone marrow transplantation was associated with better relapse-free and overall survival. Those not achieving remission with induction therapy were extremely unlikely to reach remission with further therapy and had a dismal prognosis. Exploratory molecular analysis confirmed persistence of the dominant genetic mutations identified at diagnosis. Ex vivo chemosensitivity did not demonstrate significant differences between responders and non-responders. Thus, Ida-FLAG induction has a high chance of inducing remission in patients with high risk AML. Those achieving remission require allogeneic transplantation to achieve cure; those not achieving remission rarely respond to salvage chemotherapy and have a dismal outcome. Alternatives to conventional chemotherapy must be considered in this group.Entities:
Keywords: AML; Chemosensitivity; Chemotherapy; Molecular genetics
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29518628 DOI: 10.1016/j.leukres.2018.02.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leuk Res ISSN: 0145-2126 Impact factor: 3.156