| Literature DB >> 31932839 |
Richard Dillon1,2,3, Robert Hills4, Sylvie Freeman5, Nicola Potter1,2, Jelena Jovanovic1, Adam Ivey1, Anju Shankar Kanda1, Manohursingh Runglall1, Nicola Foot2, Mikel Valganon2, Asim Khwaja6, Jamie Cavenagh7, Matthew Smith7, Hans Beier Ommen8, Ulrik Malthe Overgaard9, Mike Dennis10, Steven Knapper11, Harpreet Kaur12, David Taussig13, Priyanka Mehta14, Kavita Raj3, Igor Novitzky-Basso15, Emmanouil Nikolousis16, Robert Danby17, Pramila Krishnamurthy18, Kate Hill19, Damian Finnegan20, Samah Alimam1,3, Erin Hurst21, Peter Johnson22, Anjum Khan23, Rahuman Salim24, Charles Craddock25, Ruth Spearing26, Amanda Gilkes11, Rosemary Gale6, Alan Burnett27, Nigel H Russell3,28, David Grimwade1,3.
Abstract
Relapse remains the most common cause of treatment failure for patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who undergo allogeneic stem cell transplantation (alloSCT), and carries a grave prognosis. Multiple studies have identified the presence of measurable residual disease (MRD) assessed by flow cytometry before alloSCT as a strong predictor of relapse, but it is not clear how these findings apply to patients who test positive in molecular MRD assays, which have far greater sensitivity. We analyzed pretransplant blood and bone marrow samples by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction in 107 patients with NPM1-mutant AML enrolled in the UK National Cancer Research Institute AML17 study. After a median follow-up of 4.9 years, patients with negative, low (<200 copies per 105ABL in the peripheral blood and <1000 copies in the bone marrow aspirate), and high levels of MRD had an estimated 2-year overall survival (2y-OS) of 83%, 63%, and 13%, respectively (P < .0001). Focusing on patients with low-level MRD before alloSCT, those with FLT3 internal tandem duplications(ITDs) had significantly poorer outcome (hazard ratio [HR], 6.14; P = .01). Combining these variables was highly prognostic, dividing patients into 2 groups with 2y-OS of 17% and 82% (HR, 13.2; P < .0001). T-depletion was associated with significantly reduced survival both in the entire cohort (2y-OS, 56% vs 96%; HR, 3.24; P = .0005) and in MRD-positive patients (2y-OS, 34% vs 100%; HR, 3.78; P = .003), but there was no significant effect of either conditioning regimen or donor source on outcome. Registered at ISRCTN (http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN55675535).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31932839 PMCID: PMC7059484 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2019002959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113