Literature DB >> 32190831

Timed sequential salvage chemotherapy for relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia.

Bogdan Popescu1, Sheenu Sheela1, Julie Thompson1, Sophia Grasmeder1, Therese Intrater1, Christin B DeStefano1, Christopher S Hourigan1, Catherine Lai1.   

Abstract

Therapy for those with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia is suboptimal. Studies have suggested that timed sequential salvage combination cytotoxic chemotherapy may have particular utility for that indication. We report here a series of ten such adult patients treated sequentially at a single center with EMA (cytarabine 500 mg/m2/day as continuous infusion on days 1-3 and days 8-10, mitoxantrone 12 mg/m2/day on days 1-3, and etoposide 200 mg/m2/day as continuous infusion on days 8-10). The overall complete remission rate was 40% (including 3 of 4 of those with relapsed disease) but use of this regimen was associated with prolonged cytopenia and a high rate of infectious adverse events. Even with the availability of modern infectious prophylaxis and therapies, the EMA regimen is likely best reserved for those with relapsed disease treated with curative intent prior to an allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 32190831      PMCID: PMC7079712          DOI: 10.2991/chi.d.191128.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Hematol Int        ISSN: 2590-0048


INTRODUCTION

Novel therapeutic interventions for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) include molecularly targeted agents and immunotherapy, but the traditional backbone of induction therapy remains an anthracycline and cytarabine based regimen [1-4]. Up to 80% of newly diagnosed patients will respond to cytotoxic chemotherapy if eligible to receive it; however, those who do not respond and those who later experience relapse require salvage interventions [5,6]. Genetic profiling of AML prior to treatment allows stratification into subgroups with differing prognosis [1], yet failure to achieve or maintain a complete remission (CR) confers a dismal outcome irrespective of initial risk group [6-9]. While there are many options for relapsed/refractory (R/R) AML patients, there is no consensus on the optimal approach other than the enrollment in clinical trials whenever available [9]. Aside from patients with known actionable mutations, the predominant regimens used for salvage therapy remain chemotherapy-based [9]. Timed sequential therapy (TST) is an approach aimed to enhance the anti-leukemic effect, by using an initial sequence of chemotherapy followed by a subsequent second sequence of cell-cycle active drugs at the peak time of recruitment of AML cells in the S phase of the cell cycle induced by the first sequence [10-12]. Archimbaud et al. demonstrated the clinical utility of such an approach with the EMA regimen including administration of cytarabine and mitoxantrone on days 1–3, followed by cytarabine and etoposide on days 8–10, with an overall CR rate of 61% [13]. In a randomized double-blind phase III study (EMA91), the addition of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) aimed at increasing the recruitment of AML cells in the S phase of the cell cycle between the first and second sequence of chemotherapy; however, no difference was seen in CR rates between the two arms [14]. Over thirty years have passed since the development of EMA, in which advancements have occurred in blood banking services, infectious disease prophylaxis and treatment, and bone marrow transplant. Therefore, we wanted to re-assess the use of TST in the modern era. Herein, we report a series of ten R/R AML patients treated at a single institution with the EMA86 regimen.

METHODS

All patients provided written informed consent and were treated on National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) IRB-approved protocol (NCT00001397) with co-enrollment on laboratory protocol PEARL15 (NCT02527447) [15] at the of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center. Patients with non-APL AML, no prior hematopoietic cell transplant and ECOG performance status ≤ 2 were included. Baseline clinical characteristics are presented in Table 1. We considered as relapsed AML the re-occurrence of leukemia in patients who obtained at least one CR, whereas the patients who failed to achieve CR after one or more cycles of induction were referred to as refractory.
Table 1

Baseline patient clinical characteristics.

Median age, years (range)56 (23–66)
Gender n (%)
  Male4 (40)
  Female6 (60)
Relapsed/refractory status, n (%)
  Relapsed4 (40)
  Refractory6 (60)
WHO AML subtype, n (%)
  AML with myelodysplasia related changes4 (40)
  AML with t(8;21)1 (10)
  AML NOS with monocytic differentiation2 (20)
  AML NOS3 (30)
Median bone marrow blast infiltrate at admission, % (range)35 (19–58)
Median WBC count at admission, n/µL (range)2,425 (300–42,230)
MRC cytogenetic risk, n (%)
  Favorable1 (10)
  Intermediate4 (40)
  Adverse4 (40)
  Normal karyotype1 (10)
ELN risk score, n (%)
  Favorable2 (20)
  Intermediate2 (20)
  Adverse6 (60)
Previous chemotherapy, n (%)
  < /= 2 previous lines8 (80)
  >2 previous lines2 (20)

AML = acute myeloid leukemia; ELN = European Leukemia Network; MRC = Medical Research Council; NOS = not otherwise specified; WBC = white blood cell; WHO = World Health Organization.

Baseline patient clinical characteristics. AML = acute myeloid leukemia; ELN = European Leukemia Network; MRC = Medical Research Council; NOS = not otherwise specified; WBC = white blood cell; WHO = World Health Organization. All patients underwent pre-treatment bone marrow aspiration and trephine biopsy assessment with morphological and immunohistochemical evaluation, cytogenetics and flow cytometry analysis. Baseline molecular characterization to detect mutations in 54 genes frequently mutated in AML was performed using next generation sequencing (NGS). All patients received chemotherapy according to the EMA-86 protocol (cytarabine 500 mg/m2/day as continuous infusion on days 1–3 and days 8–10, mitoxantrone 12 mg/m2/day on days 1–3, and etoposide 200 mg/m2/day as continuous infusion on days 8–10). Response was assessed by bone marrow examinations performed between days 14 and 20 of treatment for interim assessments, and between days 28 and 35 for final response assessment. The CR and complete remission with incomplete hematological recovery (CRi) were defined according to the ELN 2017 guidelines [1]. In addition, early assessment of molecular measurable residual disease (MRD) was performed on days 1 and 4 of EMA for nine of the ten patients using an NGS assay as previously described [15]. Patients received antimicrobial prophylaxis based on NCCN guidelines [16], with fluoroquinolones (n = 8), sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim (n = 1) acyclovir (n = 10), micafungin (n = 3), posaconazole (n = 3) until the resolution of neutropenia or the escalation of antimicrobial therapy for neutropenic fever. Severity of chemotherapy-related toxicities was assessed according to the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Effects (CTCAE) v4.0.

RESULTS

The patients had a median age of 56 years (range 23–66), and all had an ECOG performance status of 0 or 1. The median white blood cell (WBC) count prior to chemotherapy was 2,425/µL (range 300–42,230/µL) with a median of 13.7% circulating blasts (range 6–80%). The median bone marrow AML infiltrate was 35% (range 19–58%). Four patients had AML with myelodysplasia-related changes, one had AML with t(8;21), three had AML NOS and two AML NOS with monocytic differentiation. Only one patient presented with proliferative disease with a WBC count of 42,230/µL, all the others had leukopenia or a normal WBC count. The most frequent cytogenetic abnormalities identified were trisomy 8 (n = 4), del(7) (n = 2), del(5) or del(5q) (n = 2), del(3) (n = 2), del(9) (n = 2). Three patients had complex karyotype and only one had normal karyotype. The most common molecular variants identified by NGS were mutations in DNMT3A (n = 6), ASXL1, IDH1, IDH2 and TP53 (n = 2) Figure 1. According to the 2017 European Leukemia Network (ELN) risk classification [1], 60% (n = 6) of the patients were classified as adverse, 20% (n = 2) intermediate and 20% (n = 2) favorable risk. All the refractory patients had adverse-risk AML. All patients received at least one cycle of standard induction chemotherapy, with a median of 2.5 cycles of previous total chemotherapy (range 1–6) with 60% (n = 6) of the patients refractory to prior chemotherapy (Table 1).
Figure 1

Baseline patient molecular characteristics prior to etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine (EMA) salvage chemotherapy.

Baseline patient molecular characteristics prior to etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine (EMA) salvage chemotherapy. The overall CR rate after EMA-86 was 40%, with 75% of the patients with relapsed AML and 17% with refractory disease obtaining CR after salvage chemotherapy (Table 2). Within the adverse ELN adverse risk group, the CR rate was only 16.66% (n = 1), 50% for the favorable and 100% (n = 2) for the intermediate risk group. The median overall survival (OS) was 80.5 days (range 30–1205), being 41 (range 30–116) days in refractory and 332.5 days (range 42–1205) in relapsed patients. Two patients were refractory to EMA-86 and did not receive any further treatment, and two were refractory to EMA-86, enrolled in other protocols and eventually died from disease progression. Two patients underwent allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (alloHCT) in CR: one died due to transplant-related veno-occlusive disease (VOD) and the other remains in persistent CR at more than 1,000 days post-transplant [17]. Another two patients obtained CR from EMA-86, received consolidation regimens outside the NHLBI and were leukemia-free at the last follow-up.
Table 2

Clinical outcomes following salvage EMA chemotherapy.

Clinical Responses
Relapsed (n = 4) Refractory (n = 6)
Response, n (%)
  CR2 (50)1 (17)
  CRi1 (25)0 (0)
  RD1 (25)5 (83)
Hematological recovery, n (%)
  ANC > 1,000/µL4 (100)1 (17)
  Platelets > 100,000/µL2 (50)2 (33)
Overall survival, days, median (range)332.5 (42–1205)41 (33–116)
Cause of death, n (%)
  Sepsis0 (0)2 (33)
  AML progression1 (25)3 (50)
  AlloHCT complications1 (25)0 (0)
Length of hospitalization, days, median (range)42.5 (38–74)41 (33–60)

AML = acute myeloid leukemia; ANC = absolute neutrophil count; CR = complete remission; CRi = complete remission with incomplete hematological recovery; RD = refractory disease; HCT = hematopoietic cell transplant; EMA = etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine.

Clinical outcomes following salvage EMA chemotherapy. AML = acute myeloid leukemia; ANC = absolute neutrophil count; CR = complete remission; CRi = complete remission with incomplete hematological recovery; RD = refractory disease; HCT = hematopoietic cell transplant; EMA = etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine. The early assessment of MRD identified NGS-trackable variants in 70% of the patients (n = 7). All variants present in the peripheral blood at day 1 of EMA remained detectable at day 4, with consistent variant allele frequencies, and were not contributors to the clinical response prediction [15]. Among the ten patients, only half managed to recover the absolute neutrophil count (ANC) to more than 1,000/µL and only four recovered the platelet count to 100,000/µL (Figure 2). The median recovery time was 38 days (range 32–57) and 43 days (range 33–46) for ANC and platelets, respectively, with a median duration of hospitalization of 42.5 days. All relapsed patients recovered their ANC. Despite receiving antimicrobial prophylaxis, all patients developed febrile neutropenia and six of them had documented localized or systemic infections—fungal (n = 4), bacterial (n = 2) or mycobacterial (n = 1)—requiring broad spectrum antibiotic and prolonged antifungal treatment courses. Two patients developed invasive aspergillosis, one patient had disseminated tuberculosis, and one patient had systemic infection with fusarium (pulmonary, sinusal and cutaneous) [17], with two patients eventually dying of sepsis and multiple system organ failure. The toxicities associated with the administration of EMA are summarized in Table 3.
Figure 2

Absolute neutrophil count (ANC) and platelet count recovery after etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine (EMA) salvage chemotherapy.

Table 3

Toxicities during EMA salvage chemotherapy.

Adverse Effects According to CTCAE v4.0
Adverse Effect Grade 3, n Grade 4, n Grade 5, n Total, n
Febrile neutropenia1010
Infectious
Catheter related infection11
Infectious colitis11
Lung infection516
Skin infection22
Sinusitis11
Sepsis325
Gastro-intestinal
Mucositis55
Typhilitis11
Appendicitis11
Pancreatitis11
Renal
Acute kidney injury11
Metabolic
Hypernatremia11
Skin
Rash22

CTCAE = common terminology criteria for adverse effects; EMA = etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine.

One patient died with concurrent lung infection and sepsis.

Absolute neutrophil count (ANC) and platelet count recovery after etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine (EMA) salvage chemotherapy. Toxicities during EMA salvage chemotherapy. CTCAE = common terminology criteria for adverse effects; EMA = etoposide, mitoxantrone and cytarabine. One patient died with concurrent lung infection and sepsis.

DISCUSSION

R/R AML patients have an overall poor prognosis, with a 5-year OS of 5–10% [18]. There is no consensus on the superiority of an individual salvage therapy, and no difference in survival between most non-targeted regimens. A multicenter randomized phase III clinical trial to investigate elacytarabine versus investigator's choice in 381 R/R AML did not show any significant difference in OS among any of the eight regimens investigated, with an overall CR rate of 22%, emphasizing the lack of an effective standard of care for R/R AML patients [19]. TST with cytarabine, mitoxantrone and etoposide as salvage chemotherapy previously showed encouraging efficacy with a CR rate of 61% (45% of refractory and 81% of relapsed AML patients) as a single-arm study [13]. Our small single institution experience showed 40% of the patients achieved CR or CRi (17% of refractory and 75% of relapsed patients), comparable to results from other salvage intensive chemotherapy studies [19,20]. A major benefit of achieving a CR after a salvage regimen in R/R AML patients is the opportunity to undergo alloHCT with curative intent. Two of the patients in our cohort were eligible for the procedure and were transplanted in CR after EMA; one of them was alive with no measurable residual AML detectable at the last post-transplant follow-up, and the other one died of transplant-related VOD without any evidence of persistence of leukemia. All the patients treated in this series had a ECOG performance status of 0 to 1, and had a plan to go to alloHCT following achievement of remission. An alternative approach to intensive cytotoxic salvage chemotherapy is to perform alloHCT after timed sequential conditioning to reduce the leukemic burden before engraftment. The combination of initial cytoreductive chemotherapy followed by reduced-intensity conditioning (RIC) and donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) showed a 2-year OS of 46% in 103 refractory AML patients [21]. Furthermore, a more recent thiotepa-based RIC sequential approach showed similar efficacy in haploidentical transplants with improved relapse-free survival compared to unrelated donor transplants [22]. The decision to perform or not perform alloHCT, choice of conditioning regimen, and the type of transplant should be based on individual patient factors which weigh risks and benefits of morbidity and mortality. More recently, the MRD status prior to transplant has been recognized as an important prognostic factor in post-transplant outcomes [7]. Assessment of early MRD prior to the standard response assessment time points needs to be further explored. However, very early molecular response measurement by NGS at day 4 of chemotherapy in our analysis did not correlate with the clinical outcome [15]. Interestingly, despite advances in supportive care services over the last 30 years, there were significant toxicities associated with EMA-TST, similar to those reported by Archimbaud et al. in the early 1990s [13]. Prolonged cytopenias and deaths secondary to infection occurred in 20% of the patients, while only 50% recovered the ANC to a value greater than 1,000/µL. Therefore, for this particular regimen, the benefit associated with the scientific approach of prolonged and sequential leukemia cell kill must be carefully weighed against risks associated with prolonged cytopenia. Overall, our retrospective single institution study shows that even in the modern era, timed sequential chemotherapy has considerable toxicity, and perhaps should be reserved for select relapsed patients where the goal is a potentially curative alloHCT, and for whom novel targeted therapy is not an option.
  21 in total

Review 1.  Acute Myeloid Leukemia.

Authors:  Hartmut Döhner; Daniel J Weisdorf; Clara D Bloomfield
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2015-09-17       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Prevention and Treatment of Cancer-Related Infections, Version 2.2016, NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology.

Authors:  Lindsey Robert Baden; Sankar Swaminathan; Michael Angarone; Gayle Blouin; Bernard C Camins; Corey Casper; Brenda Cooper; Erik R Dubberke; Ashley Morris Engemann; Alison G Freifeld; John N Greene; James I Ito; Daniel R Kaul; Mark E Lustberg; Jose G Montoya; Ken Rolston; Gowri Satyanarayana; Brahm Segal; Susan K Seo; Shmuel Shoham; Randy Taplitz; Jeffrey Topal; John W Wilson; Karin G Hoffmann; Courtney Smith
Journal:  J Natl Compr Canc Netw       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 11.908

Review 3.  Diagnosis and management of AML in adults: 2017 ELN recommendations from an international expert panel.

Authors:  Hartmut Döhner; Elihu Estey; David Grimwade; Sergio Amadori; Frederick R Appelbaum; Thomas Büchner; Hervé Dombret; Benjamin L Ebert; Pierre Fenaux; Richard A Larson; Ross L Levine; Francesco Lo-Coco; Tomoki Naoe; Dietger Niederwieser; Gert J Ossenkoppele; Miguel Sanz; Jorge Sierra; Martin S Tallman; Hwei-Fang Tien; Andrew H Wei; Bob Löwenberg; Clara D Bloomfield
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 22.113

4.  Intensive sequential chemotherapy with mitoxantrone and continuous infusion etoposide and cytarabine for previously treated acute myelogenous leukemia.

Authors:  E Archimbaud; V Leblond; M Michallet; C Cordonnier; P Fenaux; P Travade; F Dreyfus; J Jaubert; Y Devaux; D Fiere
Journal:  Blood       Date:  1991-05-01       Impact factor: 22.113

5.  Fate of patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia who fail primary induction therapy.

Authors:  Megan Othus; Frederick R Appelbaum; Stephen H Petersdorf; Kenneth J Kopecky; Marilyn Slovak; Thomas Nevill; Joseph Brandwein; Richard A Larson; Patrick J Stiff; Roland B Walter; Martin S Tallman; Leif Stenke; Harry P Erba
Journal:  Biol Blood Marrow Transplant       Date:  2014-12-20       Impact factor: 5.742

6.  Advances in patient care through increasingly individualized therapy.

Authors:  Courtney D DiNardo; Alexander E Perl
Journal:  Nat Rev Clin Oncol       Date:  2019-02       Impact factor: 66.675

7.  Long-term survival in refractory acute myeloid leukemia after sequential treatment with chemotherapy and reduced-intensity conditioning for allogeneic stem cell transplantation.

Authors:  Christoph Schmid; Michael Schleuning; Rainer Schwerdtfeger; Bernd Hertenstein; Eva Mischak-Weissinger; Donald Bunjes; Stephanie V Harsdorf; Christoph Scheid; Udo Holtick; Hildegard Greinix; Felix Keil; Barbara Schneider; Michael Sandherr; Gesine Bug; Johanna Tischer; Georg Ledderose; Michael Hallek; Wolfgang Hiddemann; Hans-Jochem Kolb
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2006-03-21       Impact factor: 22.113

8.  Sequential Conditioning with Thiotepa in T Cell- Replete Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation for the Treatment of Refractory Hematologic Malignancies: Comparison with Matched Related, Haplo-Mismatched, and Unrelated Donors.

Authors:  Rémy Duléry; Anne-Lise Ménard; Sylvain Chantepie; Jean El-Cheikh; Sylvie François; Jérémy Delage; Federica Giannotti; Annalisa Ruggeri; Eolia Brissot; Giorgia Battipaglia; Florent Malard; Ramdane Belhocine; Simona Sestili; Anne Vekhoff; François Delhommeau; Oumédaly Reman; Ollivier Legrand; Myriam Labopin; Marie-Thérèse Rubio; Mohamad Mohty
Journal:  Biol Blood Marrow Transplant       Date:  2018-01-11       Impact factor: 5.742

Review 9.  Personalizing initial therapy in acute myeloid leukemia: incorporating novel agents into clinical practice.

Authors:  Christin B DeStefano; Christopher S Hourigan
Journal:  Ther Adv Hematol       Date:  2018-03-27

10.  Successful salvage chemotherapy and allogeneic transplantation of an acute myeloid leukemia patient with disseminated Fusarium solani infection.

Authors:  Sheenu Sheela; Sawa Ito; Jeffrey R Strich; Maura Manion; Celina Montemayor-Garcia; Hao-Wei Wang; Karolyn A Oetjen; Kamile A West; Austin J Barrett; Mark Parta; Juan Gea-Banacloche; Steven M Holland; Christopher S Hourigan; Catherine Lai
Journal:  Leuk Res Rep       Date:  2017-07-18
View more
  4 in total

1.  Characteristics and Outcomes of Adult Patients in the PETHEMA Registry with Relapsed or Refractory FLT3-ITD Mutation-Positive Acute Myeloid Leukemia.

Authors:  David Martínez-Cuadrón; Josefina Serrano; José Mariz; Cristina Gil; Mar Tormo; Pilar Martínez-Sánchez; Eduardo Rodríguez-Arbolí; Raimundo García-Boyero; Carlos Rodríguez-Medina; Carmen Martínez-Chamorro; Marta Polo; Juan Bergua; Eliana Aguiar; María L Amigo; Pilar Herrera; Juan M Alonso-Domínguez; Teresa Bernal; Ana Espadana; María J Sayas; Lorenzo Algarra; María B Vidriales; Graça Vasconcelos; Susana Vives; Manuel M Pérez-Encinas; Aurelio López; Víctor Noriega; María García-Fortes; María C Chillón; Juan I Rodríguez-Gutiérrez; María J Calasanz; Jorge Labrador; Juan A López; Blanca Boluda; Rebeca Rodríguez-Veiga; Joaquín Martínez-López; Eva Barragán; Miguel A Sanz; Pau Montesinos
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-06       Impact factor: 6.575

Review 2.  Clinical practice recommendation on hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for acute myeloid leukemia patients with FLT3-internal tandem duplication: a position statement from the Acute Leukemia Working Party of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation.

Authors:  Ali Bazarbachi; Gesine Bug; Frederic Baron; Eolia Brissot; Fabio Ciceri; Iman Abou Dalle; Hartmut Döhner; Jordi Esteve; Yngvar Floisand; Sebastian Giebel; Maria Gilleece; Norbert-Claude Gorin; Elias Jabbour; Mahmoud Aljurf; Hagop Kantarjian; Mohamed Kharfan-Dabaja; Myriam Labopin; Francesco Lanza; Florent Malard; Zinaida Peric; Thomas Prebet; Farhad Ravandi; Annalisa Ruggeri; Jaime Sanz; Christoph Schmid; Roni Shouval; Alexandros Spyridonidis; Jurjen Versluis; Norbert Vey; Bipin N Savani; Arnon Nagler; Mohamad Mohty
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2020-04-02       Impact factor: 9.941

3.  B cell deficiency in patients with relapsed and refractory acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Meghali Goswami; Katherine E Lindblad; Rahul Ramraj; Pradeep K Dagur; Julie Thompson; J Philip McCoy; Christopher S Hourigan
Journal:  Clin Hematol Int       Date:  2020-07-29

4.  Drug responsiveness of leukemic cells detected in vitro at diagnosis correlates with therapy response and survival in patients with acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors:  Maria A Kolesnikova; Aleksandra V Sen'kova; Tatiana I Pospelova; Marina A Zenkova
Journal:  Cancer Rep (Hoboken)       Date:  2021-03-06
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.