| Literature DB >> 30275528 |
Jan Braess1,2, Susanne Amler3,4, Karl-Anton Kreuzer5, Karsten Spiekermann6, Hans Walter Lindemann7, Eva Lengfelder8, Ullrich Graeven9, Peter Staib10, Wolf-Dieter Ludwig11, Harald Biersack12, Yon-Dschun Ko13, Michael J Uppenkamp14, Maike De Wit15, Stefan Korsten16, Rudolf Peceny17, Tobias Gaska18, Xaver Schiel19, Dirk M Behringer20, Michael G Kiehl21, Bettina Zinngrebe22, Gerald Meckenstock23, Eva Roemer24, Dirk Medgenberg25, Ernst Spaeth-Schwalbe26, Gero Massenkeil27, Heidrun Hindahl28, Rainer Schwerdtfeger29, Guido Trenn30, Cristina Sauerland3, Raphael Koch3, Martin Lablans3,31, Andreas Faldum3, Dennis Görlich3, Stefan K Bohlander6,32, Stephanie Schneider6, Annika Dufour6, Christian Buske6,33, Michael Fiegl6, Marion Subklewe6, Birgit Braess34,6, Michael Unterhalt6, Anja Baumgartner6, Bernhard Wörmann35, Dietrich Beelen36, Wolfgang Hiddemann6.
Abstract
Dose-dense induction with the S-HAM regimen was compared to standard double induction therapy in adult patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia. Patients were centrally randomized (1:1) between S-HAM (2nd chemotherapy cycle starting on day 8 = "dose-dense") and double induction with TAD-HAM or HAM(-HAM) (2nd cycle starting on day 21 = "standard"). 387 evaluable patients were randomly assigned to S-HAM (N = 203) and to standard double induction (N = 184). The primary endpoint overall response rate (ORR) consisting of complete remission (CR) and incomplete remission (CRi) was not significantly different (P = 0.202) between S-HAM (77%) and double induction (72%). The median overall survival was 35 months after S-HAM and 25 months after double induction (P = 0.323). Duration of critical leukopenia was significantly reduced after S-HAM (median 29 days) versus double induction (median 44 days)-P < 0.001. This translated into a significantly shortened duration of hospitalization after S-HAM (median 37 days) as compared to standard induction (median 49 days)-P < 0.001. In conclusion, dose-dense induction therapy with the S-HAM regimen shows favorable trends but no significant differences in ORR and OS compared to standard double induction. S-HAM significantly shortens critical leukopenia and the duration of hospitalization by 2 weeks.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30275528 PMCID: PMC6286323 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-018-0268-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528
Fig. 1Flow chart of protocol treatment
Fig. 2Study flow diagram (CONSORT)
Patient characteristics by randomization
| Treatment arm | All randomized and evaluable patients in the study | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | S-HAM |
| |
| No. of patients, | 184 (48) | 203 (52) | |
| Age, years | 0.722a | ||
| Median (range) | 58 (18–86) | 58 (19–81) | |
| Sex | 0.026b | ||
| Female/male, | 76/108 (41/59) | 107/96 (53/47) | |
| Patient age (chronological), | 0.760b | ||
| <60 years | 101 (55) | 108 (53) | |
| ≥60 years | 83 (45) | 95 (47) | |
| Patient age (biological), | |||
| Younger: <60 (−70) | 119 (65) | 132 (65) | |
| Median (range) | 51 (18–68) | 52 (19–70) | 0.815a |
| Older: ≥60 (−70) | 65 (35) | 71 (35) | |
| Median (range) | 68 (60–86) | 68 (57–81) | 0.101a |
| AML subtype, | 0.091b | ||
| de novo AML | 143 (78) | 154 (76) | |
| AML secondary to MDS (s-AML) | 22 (12) | 37 (18) | |
| AML therapy-related (t-AML) | 19 (10) | 12 (6) | |
| Blasts in bone marrow, % | 0.551a | ||
| Median | 65 | 68 | |
| Range | 10‒97 | 6‒100 | |
| LDH, U/L | 0.721a | ||
| Median (range) | 334 (107–4833) | 356 (117–3431) | |
| ECOG, | 0.631b | ||
| 0 | 65 (36) | 62 (31) | |
| 1 | 94 (52) | 107 (53) | |
| 2 | 17 (9) | 23 (11) | |
| 3 | 5 (3) | 7 (4) | |
| 4 | 0 | 2 (1) | |
| Missing/unknown | 3 | 2 | |
| Karyotype, | 0.006b | ||
| Favorable | 15 (9) | 5 (3) | |
| Intermediate | 104 (65) | 146 (78) | |
| Unfavorable | 41 (26) | 37 (20) | |
| Missing/unknown | 24 | 15 | |
| Molecular aberrations, | 0.178b | ||
| NPM1 | |||
| Pos. | 53 (33) | 74 (41) | |
| Neg. | 106 (67) | 107 (59) | |
| Missing/unknown | 25 | 22 | |
| FLT3-ITD | 0.895b | ||
| Pos. | 34 (21) | 38 (21) | |
| Neg. | 125 (79) | 146 (79) | |
| Missing/unknown | 25 | 19 | |
| FLT3-TKD | 1.000b | ||
| Pos. | 11 (8) | 10 (8) | |
| Neg. | 120 (92) | 121 (92) | |
| Unknown | 53 | 72 | |
| MLL-PTD | 0.554b | ||
| Pos. | 11 (7) | 17 (9) | |
| Neg. | 143 (93) | 164 (91) | |
| Missing/unknown | 30 | 22 | |
| CEBPA | 0.676b | ||
| Pos. | 4 (11) | 2 (6) | |
| Neg. | 32 (89) | 30 (94) | |
| Missing/unknown | 148 | 171 | |
MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, LDH lactate dehydrogenase serum level, ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, NPM1 nucleophosmin, FLT3 fms-like tyrosine kinase 3, ITD internal tandem duplication, TKD tyrosine kinase domain, MLL-PTD mixed linage leukemia-partial tandem duplication, CEBPA CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein alpha
aP-values are from Wilcoxon rank-sum test
bP-values are from Fisher’s exact test
Treatment outcome by randomization
| Treatment arm | All randomized and evaluable patients in the study | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total patients | Standarda | S-HAM | |||||
| 95% CI | 95% CI | 95% CI |
| ||||
| Patients randomized | |||||||
| Total | 387 | 184 | 203 | ||||
| Younger | 251 | 119 | 132 | ||||
| Older | 136 | 65 | 71 | ||||
| Overall response (CR + CRi) | |||||||
| Total | 289 (75) | 70–79 | 133 (72) | 65–79 | 156 (77) | 70–83 | 0.202b |
| Younger | 197 (79) | 73–83 | 91 (76) | 68–83 | 106 (80) | 73–86 | 0.539c |
| Older | 92 (68) | 59–75 | 42 (65) | 53–75 | 50 (70) | 59–80 | 0.582c |
| Induction result | |||||||
| Total | 0.309c | ||||||
| CR | 200 (52) | 46–57 | 86 (47) | 39–54 | 114 (56) | 49–63 | |
| CRi | 89 (23) | 19–28 | 47 (25) | 19–32 | 42 (21) | 15–27 | |
| Persistent leukemia | 48 (12) | 9–16 | 24 (13) | 8–19 | 24 (12) | 7–17 | |
| Early death | 50 (13) | 9–17 | 27 (15) | 9–21 | 23 (11) | 7–17 | |
| Younger | 0.717c | ||||||
| CR | 136 (54) | 47–60 | 60 (50) | 41–60 | 76 (57) | 48–66 | |
| CRi | 61 (24) | 19–30 | 31 (26) | 18–35 | 30 (23) | 16–31 | |
| Persistent leukemia | 24 (10) | 6–14 | 12 (10) | 6–17 | 12 (9) | 5–15 | |
| Early death | 30 (12) | 8–17 | 16 (14) | 8–21 | 14 (11) | 6–17 | |
| Older | 0.438c | ||||||
| CR | 64 (47) | 38–56 | 26 (40) | 28–53 | 38 (53) | 41–65 | |
| CRi | 28 (20) | 14–28 | 16 (25) | 15–37 | 12 (17) | 9–28 | |
| Persistent leukemia | 24 (18) | 12–25 | 12 (18) | 10–30 | 12 (17) | 9–27 | |
| Early death | 20 (15) | 9–22 | 11 (17) | 8–28 | 9 (13) | 6–23 | |
| Early death until day 90 | |||||||
| Total | 60 (16) | 12–20 | 29 (16) | 11–22 | 31 (15) | 11–21 | 1.000c |
| Younger | 36 (14) | 11–19 | 16 (13) | 8–21 | 20 (15) | 10–22 | 0.722c |
| Older | 24 (18) | 12–25 | 13 (20) | 12–31 | 11 (16) | 9–26 | 0.509c |
| Overall survival | |||||||
| Total | 0.323d | ||||||
| Median, months | 29 | 20–38 | 25 | 15–34 | 35 | 21–49 | |
| Younger | 0.742d | ||||||
| Median, months | 48 | 25–71 | 45 | 16–74 | 48 | 25–71 | |
| Older | 0.219d | ||||||
| Median, months | 19 | 12–25 | 19 | 10–27 | 19 | 11–28 | |
| Event-free survival | |||||||
| Total | 0.753d | ||||||
| Median, months | 11 | 8–13 | 10 | 6–15 | 11 | 8–14 | |
| Younger | 0.980d | ||||||
| Median, months | 14 | 7–22 | 18 | 7–29 | 14 | 6–21 | |
| Older | 0.441d | ||||||
| Median, months | 7 | 4–10 | 6 | 3–9 | 9 | 4–14 | |
CR complete remission, CRi incomplete remission
aStandard treatment in “younger” patients was TAD-HAM (double induction mandatory), in “older” patients it was HAM(-HAM) (double induction only conditional if no adequate blast clearance ( 5%) had been achieved after one cycle of HAM)
bP-values are from one-sided sequential truncated probability ratio test (Whitehead)
cP-values are from Fisher’s exact test
dP-values are from log-rank test
Fig. 3Overall survival and event-free survival. Overall survival of all patients (a), of patients younger than <60 years (b), of patients older than ≥60 years (c). Event-free survival of all patients (d), of patients younger than <60 years (e), of patients older than ≥60 years (f)—always biological age as defined in “Patients and methods”
Incidence of non-hematological toxicities grade 3 and 4 by randomization
| Treatment arm | All randomized and evaluable patients in the study | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total patients | Standard | S-HAM | ||||
| Alopecia | 141/259 | (54.4) | 70/132 | (53.0) | 71/127 | (56.0) |
| Infection | 166/349 | (47.6) | 80/181 | (44.2) | 86/168 | (51.2) |
| Pulmonary toxicity | 66/352 | (18.8) | 28/181 | (15.5) | 38/171 | (22.2) |
| Prothrombin | 17/281 | (6.0) | 6/149 | (4.0) | 11/132 | (8.3) |
| Fever | 45/353 | (12.7) | 26/183 | (14.2) | 19/170 | (11.2) |
| Diarrhea | 39/352 | (11.1) | 17/181 | (9.4) | 22/171 | (12.9) |
| Pain | 55/351 | (15.7) | 22/180 | (12.2) | 33/171 | (19.3) |
| Nausea/vomiting | 31/351 | (8.8) | 16/180 | (8.9) | 15/171 | (8.8) |
| PCHE | 3/209 | (1.4) | 1/110 | (0.9) | 2/99 | (2.0) |
| Hypoproteinemia | 30/296 | (10.1) | 15/151 | (9.9) | 15/145 | (10.3) |
| Mucositis | 22/344 | (6.4) | 5/177 | (2.8) | 17/167 | (10.2) |
| Weight gain | 43/352 | (12.2) | 22/183 | (12.0) | 21/169 | (12.4) |
| Cardiac function | 12/346 | (3.5) | 8/179 | (4.5) | 4/167 | (2.4) |
| Bleeding | 25/350 | (7.1) | 8/183 | (4.4) | 17/167 | (10.2) |
| SGOT/SGPT | 37/351 | (10.5) | 18/180 | (10.0) | 19/171 | (11.1) |
| Central nervous system | 18/349 | (5.2) | 5/179 | (2.8) | 13/170 | (7.7) |
| Bilirubin | 16/352 | (4.5) | 6/181 | (3.3) | 10/171 | (5.9) |
| Effusion | 17/350 | (4.9) | 8/180 | (4.4) | 9/170 | (5.3) |
| Edema | 21/350 | (6.0) | 8/179 | (4.5) | 13/171 | (7.6) |
| Cutaneous toxicity | 8/348 | (2.3) | 2/181 | (1.1) | 6/167 | (3.6) |
| Alkaline phosphatase | 4/306 | (1.3) | 2/156 | (1.3) | 2/150 | (1.3) |
| Cardiac rhythm | 7/344 | (2.0) | 3/180 | (1.7) | 4/164 | (2.4) |
| Creatinine/renal toxicity | 3/352 | (0.9) | 3/181 | (1.7) | 0/171 | (0.0) |
| Obstipation | 5/351 | (1.4) | 2/181 | (1.1) | 3/170 | (1.8) |
| Hematuria | 1/347 | (0.3) | 1/179 | (0.6) | 0/168 | (0.0) |
| Extrapyramidal symptoms | 4/350 | (1.1) | 2/180 | (1.1) | 2/170 | (1.2) |
| Allergic reaction | 2/346 | (0.6) | 1/181 | (0.6) | 1/165 | (0.6) |
| Peripheral nervous system | 3/351 | (0.9) | 2/181 | (1.1) | 1/170 | (0.6) |
| Pericarditis | 0/346 | (0.0) | 0/178 | (0.0) | 0/168 | (0.0) |
PCHE pseudocholinesterase, SGOT/SGPT serum-glutamat-oxalacetat-transaminase/serum-glutamat-pyruvat-transferase
Fig. 4Duration of leukopenia. Duration of critical leukopenia (<1.000 leukocytes/µl) in all patients (a), in patients younger than <60 years (b), in patients older than ≥60 years (c). Duration of critical leukopenia was calculated from the start of therapy until recovery of peripheral blood counts and was presented as inverse Kaplan–Meier curves. In (c) please note the “bump” in the standard group (blue line), which is due to the fact that one subgroup of patients received only one cycle of HAM (positive selection because of adequate blast clearance in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate) and the other subgroup received two cycles of HAM (negative selection because of residual blasts in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate). Comparison of the duration of critical leukopenia (<1.000 leukocytes/µl) of all S-HAM patients older than ≥60 years versus those standard arm patients who received only one cycle of HAM (positive selection because of adequate blast clearance in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate) (d), of all S-HAM patients older than ≥60 years versus those standard arm patients who received two cycles of HAM (negative selection because of residual blasts in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate) (e)
Fig. 5Duration of hospitalization. Duration of hospitalization in all patients (a), in patients younger than <60 years (b), in patients older than ≥60 years (c). Duration of hospitalization was calculated from the start of therapy until the day of discharge and was presented as inverse Kaplan–Meier curves. In (c) please note the “bump” in the standard group (blue line), which is due to the fact that one subgroup of patients received only one cycle of HAM (positive selection because of adequate blast clearance in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate) and the other subgroup received two cycles of HAM (negative selection because of residual blasts in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate). Comparison of the duration of hospitalization of all S-HAM patients older than ≥60 years versus those standard arm patients who received only one cycle of HAM (positive selection because of adequate blast clearance in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate) (d), of all S-HAM patients older than ≥60 years versus those standard arm patients who received two cycles of HAM (negative selection because of residual blasts in the day 16 bone marrow aspirate) (e)