| Literature DB >> 32720700 |
Julien Rohmer1,2, Amélie Couteau-Chardon1,3, Julie Trichereau1,4, Kewin Panel1,4, Cyrielle Gesquiere1, Raouf Ben Abdelali5, Audrey Bidet6, Jean-Sébastien Bladé7, Jean-Michel Cayuela8, Pascale Cony-Makhoul1,9, Vincent Cottin10,11, Eric Delabesse12, Mikaël Ebbo1,13, Olivier Fain14, Pascale Flandrin15, Lionel Galicier16, Catherine Godon17, Nathalie Grardel18, Aurélien Guffroy1,19, Mohamed Hamidou1,20, Mathilde Hunault21, Etienne Lengline22, Faustine Lhomme23, Ludovic Lhermitte24, Irène Machelart1,25, Laurent Mauvieux26, Catherine Mohr27, Marie-Joelle Mozicconacci28, Dina Naguib29, Franck E Nicolini30, Jerome Rey31, Philippe Rousselot32, Suzanne Tavitian33, Louis Terriou1,34, Guillaume Lefèvre1,34, Claude Preudhomme18, Jean-Emmanuel Kahn1,35, Matthieu Groh1,2.
Abstract
FIP1L1-PDGFRA-positive myeloid neoplasm with eosinophilia (F/P+ MN-eo) is a rare disease: robust epidemiological data are lacking and reported issues are scarce, of low sample-size and limited follow-up. Imatinib mesylate (IM) is highly efficient but no predictive factor of relapse after discontinuation has yet been identified. One hundred and fifty-one patients with F/P+ MN-eo (143 males; mean age at diagnosis 49 years; mean annual incidence: 0.18 case per million population) were included in this retrospective nationwide study involving all French laboratories who perform the search of F/P fusion gene (study period: 2003-2019). The main organs involved included the spleen (44%), skin (32%), lungs (30%), heart (19%) and central nervous system (9%). Serum vitamin B12 and tryptase levels were elevated in 74/79 (94%) and 45/57 (79%) patients, respectively, and none of the 31 patients initially treated with corticosteroids achieved complete hematologic remission. All 148 (98%) IM-treated patients achieved complete hematologic and molecular (when tested, n = 84) responses. Forty-six patients eventually discontinued IM, among whom 20 (57%) relapsed. In multivariate analysis, time to IM initiation (continuous HR: 1,01 [0.99-1,03]; P = .05) and duration of IM treatment (continuous HR: 0,97 [0,95-0,99]; P = .004) were independent factors of relapse after discontinuation of IM. After a mean follow-up of 80 (56) months, the 1, 5- and 10-year overall survival rates in IM-treated patients were 99%, 95% and 84% respectively. In F/P+ MN-eo, prompt initiation of IM and longer treatment durations may prevent relapses after discontinuation of IM.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32720700 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.25945
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047