| Literature DB >> 32461544 |
Jerome Paillassa1, Edouard Cornet2, Stephanie Noel3, Cecile Tomowiak3, Stephane Lepretre4, Sandrine Vaudaux4, Jehan Dupuis5, Alain Devidas6, Bertrand Joly6, Charlotte Petitdidier-Lionnet6, Stephanie Haiat6, Clara Mariette7, Catherine Thieblemont8, Didier Decaudin9, Patricia Validire-Charpy10, Bernard Drenou11, Jean-Claude Eisenmann11, Mario Ojeda Uribe11, Agnès Olivrie12, Mohamed Touati12, Olivier Lambotte13, Olivier Hermine14, Jean-Michel Karsenti15, Pierre Feugier16, Willy Vaillant17, Jean Gutnecht18, Eric Lippert19, Fabienne Huysman20, Kamel Ghomari20, Marouane Boubaya21, Vincent Levy21, Jeremie Riou22, Gandhi Damaj23, Aline Tanguy-Schmidt1,24,25,26, Mathilde Hunault-Berger1,24,25,26, Xavier Troussard27.
Abstract
In total, 279 patients with hairy-cell leukemia (HCL) were analyzed, with a median follow-up of 10 years. Data were collected up to June 2018. We analyzed responses to treatment, relapses, survival, and the occurrence of second malignancies during follow-up. The median age was 59 years. In total, 208 patients (75%) were treated with purine analogs (PNAs), either cladribine (159) or pentosatin (49), as the first-line therapy. After a median follow-up of 127 months, the median overall survival was 27 years, and the median relapse-free survival (RFS) was 11 years. The cumulative 10-year relapse incidence was 39%. In patients receiving second-line therapy, the median RFS was 7 years. For the second-line therapy, using the same or another PNA was equivalent. We identified 68 second malignancies in 59 patients: 49 solid cancers and 19 hematological malignancies. The 10-year cumulative incidences of cancers, solid tumors, and hematological malignancies were 15%, 11%, and 5.0%, respectively, and the standardized incidence ratios were 2.22, 1.81, and 6.67, respectively. In multivariate analysis, PNA was not a risk factor for second malignancies. HCL patients have a good long-term prognosis. PNAs are the first-line treatment. HCL patients require long-term follow-up because of their relatively increased risk of second malignancies.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32461544 PMCID: PMC7253459 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-020-0328-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 11.037
Patient characteristics at baseline.
| Age at HCL diagnosis (years), median [range] | 59 [29–88] |
|---|---|
| Hemoglobin (g/dL), median [range] | 12 [3–16.7] |
| Platelet count (×109/L), median [range] | 93.5 [7.4–503] |
| White blood cell count (×109/L), median [range] | 2.68 [0.5–107.2] |
| Neutrophil count (×109/L), median [range] | 0.99 [0.027–12.96] |
| Hairy cells (%), median [range] | 3 [0–94] |
| Flow cytometry analysis, | 170 (61) |
| CD25+, | 118 (69) |
| CD103+, | 123 (72) |
| CD11c+, | 109 (64) |
| Infectious disease at diagnosis, | 58 (21) |
Treatments according to the line of treatment.
| 1st line treatment | |
|---|---|
| PNA | 208 (75) |
| Cladribine | 159 (57) |
| Pentostatin | 49 (18) |
| Other | 59 (21) |
| IFN | 40 |
| IFN then cladribine | 7 |
| Splenectomy | 3 |
| Cladribine + rituximab | 2 |
| Pentostatin then cladribine | 2 |
| Splenectomy then pentostatin | 1 |
| IFN then pentostatin | 1 |
| R-CHOP | 1 |
| Pentostatin + rituximab | 1 |
| Unknown | 1 |
| No treatment | 12 (4) |
“then” means that patients received a sequential treatment.
PNA purine analogs, IFN interferon α, R-CHOP rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisolone, R-DHAX rituximab, dexamethasone, cytarabine, and oxaliplatin, HSCT hematopoietic (allogeneic) stem cell transplantation.
Fig. 1Overall survival.
a all 279 HCL patients, b in line with the first-line treatment: cladribine, pentostatin, and other treatments including IFNα, c in line with the first-line treatment: cladribine, pentostatin, and IFNα. Kaplan–Meier method.
Results after first-line treatment.
| Cladribine | Pentostatin | “Other” treatments | All treated patients | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Follow-up (months), median (range) | 116 (21–293) | 126 (2–292) | 221 (3–413) | 128 (2–413) |
| ORR, | 157 (99) | 45 (100) | 52 (96) | 255 (99) |
| CR, | 131 (83) | 38 (84) | 32 (58) | 201 (78) |
| Median RFS (months) | 163 | 159 | 55 | 136 |
| CIR | ||||
| 1 year (%) | 2.5 | 4.4 | 5.5 | 3.5 |
| 5 years (%) | 14 | 13 | 49 | 21 |
| 10 years (%) | 33 | 30 | 66 | 39 |
| Median OS (months) | NR | NR | 328 | 321 |
| OS, evaluable patients | ||||
| 1 year, | 100 (158) | 96 (47) | 98 (57) | 99 (263) |
| 5 years, | 97 (150) | 86 (42) | 95 (54) | 95 (246) |
| 10 years, | 94 (77) | 81 (25) | 89 (43) | 90 (145) |
| 20 years, | 69 (8) | 71 (3) | 82 (26) | 76 (37) |
Fig. 2Cumulative incidence of relapse (CIR): a all patients who responded to first-line treatment, b according to first-line treatment.
Second solid cancers (left) and second hematological malignancies (right) observed during the follow-up period.
| Solid cancers | Hematological malignancies | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Prostate | 11 | MGUS/MGCS | 6 |
| Nonmelanoma skin cancer | 11 | MDS | 4 |
| Lung | 7 | NHLa | 3 |
| Colorectal | 7 | MDS/MPN | 2 |
| Kidney | 4 | MPN | 1 |
| Pancreas | 2 | AML | 1 |
| Esophagus | 1 | MM | 1 |
| Pleural | 1 | CLL | 1 |
| Unknown | 1 | ||
| Kaposi | 1 | ||
| Biliary tract | 1 | ||
| Bladder | 1 | ||
| Breast | 1 |
a1 DLBCL, 1 FL, 1 SMZL.
AML acute myeloid leukemia, MM multiple myeloma, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, NHL non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, DLBCL diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, FL follicular lymphoma, SMZL splenic marginal zone lymphoma.
Fig. 3Cumulative incidence of a second cancer, b second solid cancers, c second hematological malignancies.
(Part 1). Other HCL cohorts with cancer incidence during follow-up. (Part 2). Other HCL cohorts with cancer incidence during follow-up.
| Study | Type | Treatments | Follow-up | Cumulative incidence of cancers | SIR or observed/expected ratio (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hisada et al. | Retrospective | 3104 | 6.5 years | 32% at 25 yearsa | 1.24 (1.11; 1.37) | |
| Kampmeier et al. | Prospective | 69 | IFNα | 91 months | 19%a | 4.33 |
| Goodman et al. | Retrospective | 209 | Cladribine | ≥7 years | 23%a | 2.03 (1.49; 2.71) |
| Saven et al. | Retrospective | 358 | Cladribine | 58 months | 8%a | 1.88 (1.24; 2.74) |
| Au et al. | Retrospective | 117 | Cladribine pentostatin splenectomy IFNα | 68 months | 24%a | 2.60 (1.82; 3.61) |
| Paltiel et al. | Retrospective | 181 | Cladribine | 80 months | 11%b | 1.3 (0.68; 2.28) for all cancers 3.23 (1.39; 6.36) for urogenital cancers |
| Kurzrock et al. | Retrospective | 350 | Cladribine pentostatin IFNα | 6 years | 7.40%b | 1.34 for all cancers 13.04 for myelomas 8.7 for lymphomas |
| Federico et al. | Retrospective | 1022 | 14% at 15 yearsb | 1.01 (0.74; 1.33) for all cancers 5.3 (1.9; 11.5) for NHL | ||
| Else et al. | Retrospective | 233 | Pentostatin cladribine | 16 years | 12% (excluding nonmelanoma skin cancers)c | No data |
| Flinn et al. | Prospective | 241 | Pentostatin +/−IFNα | 9.3 years | 16%c | 1.26 (0.86; 1.77) |
| Pawson et al. | Retrospective | 200 | Cladribine pentostatin IFNα | 65 months | 4%c | 1.29 (0.60; 2.65) |
| Maloisel et al. | Retrospective | 238 | Pentostatin | 63.5 months | 7.60%c | 0.95 (0.5; 1.92) |
| Rosenberg et al. | Retrospective | 88 | Cladribine | 21 years | 9.10%c | 1.60 (0.80; 2.89) |
| Watts et al. | Retrospective | 267 | Cladribine pentostatin | 11% at 10 years (melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers only)c | 1.30 (0.78; 2.03) (for melanoma only) | |
| Troussard et al. | Retrospective | 107 | IFNα | 102 months | 9.5% at 10 yearsc | 1.24 (0.54; 2.45) |
| Getta et al. | Retrospective | 331 | Cladribine splenectomy IFNα | 69 months | Age ≤ 40: 21% at 10 yearsd Age > 40: 29% at 10 yearsd | No data |
| Damaj et al. | Retrospective | 73 | Cladribine pentostatin splenectomy IFNα | 13 years | 27+/−6% at 13 yearsd | No data |
aExcess of second malignancies.
bExcess for some cancers only.
cNo excess of second malignancies.
dNo data about the excess of risk compared to the general population.