Treatment Experience of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia with Hgm/LAL07 Regimen at Hospital General De Mexico
Introduction Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a lymphoproliferative malignancy characterized by an uncontrolled growth of lymphoid progenitors of B or T lineage, who evade apoptosis and displace normal hematopoiesis. Based on the pediatric pre-induction steroid, the protocol assessed the impact ALL02...
Saved in:
Published in | Blood Vol. 126; no. 23; p. 4871 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier Inc
03.12.2015
|
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Abstract | Introduction
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a lymphoproliferative malignancy characterized by an uncontrolled growth of lymphoid progenitors of B or T lineage, who evade apoptosis and displace normal hematopoiesis. Based on the pediatric pre-induction steroid, the protocol assessed the impact ALL0288 GIMEMA 7 days pre-induction with steroids, complete remissions (CR). Similar to this study, our institutional protocol also considers the pre-induction with steroids, but unlike the Italian protocol fewer cases steroid responders and a lower rate of complete remissions were recorded. A 36 month follow-up overall survival was 32% The main objective of this study was to evaluate the results at 5 years of follow institutional protocol based on a pre-treatment with steroids HGMLAL07.
Patients.
We included patients diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia under morphological criteria French-American-British (FAB) and corroborated by flow cytometry. The criteria for complete remission was seen at 4 weeks of treatment (<5% blasts in bone marrow with normal number of leukocytes and platelets). Prophylaxis central nervous system was carried out by weekly and then monthly lumbar punctures to the maintenance stage. If express the BCR-ABL oncogene was added to treatment Imatinib 400mg PO every 24 hours you first 14 days of each cycle.
Materials and methods.
Study design. Retrospective cohort study of adult patients treated with institutional protocol HGMLAL07 carriers de novo acute lymphoid leukemia in the period from 2007 to 2015 in the Department of Hematology, General Hospital of Mexico. We excluded patients treated with another induction therapy and those of mixed lineage leukemia.
General treatment. It was considered relapse if they had at any time monitoring the presence of more than 10% blasts in bone marrow or isolation in the cerebrospinal fluid. If u have HLA-matched donor, he referred to the area of stem cell transplantation.
Statistic analysis. SPSS statistical software version 20.0 was used. Chi-Square test considered significant at p <0.05 (95% CI) was used to test hypothesis testing. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meyer test for comparing groups for overall survival and disease-free survival test was used log-rank2. The COX regression model was used for the risk function between different risk variables
Results. Of the 262 patients with LLA de novo, 255 patients met the inclusion criteria and were treated with institutional protocol HGMLAL07, 52.9% were male gender (n = 135) and 47.1% (n = 120) Gender female. The mean age was 31 years (range 16- 80 years), the average for older female compared with male (34 versus 29years, p = 0.001, 95% CI). The average of leukocytes at diagnosis was 56.1 x 10 (9) / L. Phenotypically, most were classified leukemia B-cell (95.3%, n = 243) and the remaining T lineage (4.7%, n = 12). Only 3.1% of cases expressed the oncogene BCRABL1 (n = 8). Finally concluding that 62.7% of cases were classified as high risk (n = 160) and 37.3% (n = 95) and normal risk.
Response to induction therapy.
Of the 255 patients who started the protocol remission induction in 1.6% of confirmed with CNS infiltration diagnosis (n = 4). The complete remission rate was around 82.7% (n = 211), registering an induction mortality 3.9% (n = 10). A total of 34 patients were considered refractory leukemia (n = 34), requiring a second line treatment. Among the variables that showed the impact of the failure to initial treatment (refractory or death) were the type of risk at diagnosis (p = 0.020) and white blood cell count> 30 x 10 (9) / L (p = 0.001). Mean neutrophil recovery was 28 days and the platelet recovery was at 32 days. The main cause of death was infectious processes, followed by central nervous system bleeding.
Postremisión treatment and outcome
Of the total patients, 51% (n = 130) presented relapse, the main site bone marrow, followed by infiltration of the central nervous system
Prognostic factors that impacted on survival
The median overall survival (OS) was 1053 days, with survival at 5 years of follow-up of 29%, overall survival at 5 years was influenced by the type of risk (p = 0.020, 95% CI). None of the risk factors impact on survival at one year. The disease-free survival was 11% at 5 years of follow-up, within the variables that impacted on the SLE, a leukocyte count> 30 (9) / L and age> 35 years directly impacted prognosis (p = 0.006 and p = 0.030, 95% CI respectively).
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare. |
---|---|
AbstractList | Abstract
Introduction
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a lymphoproliferative malignancy characterized by an uncontrolled growth of lymphoid progenitors of B or T lineage, who evade apoptosis and displace normal hematopoiesis. Based on the pediatric pre-induction steroid, the protocol assessed the impact ALL0288 GIMEMA 7 days pre-induction with steroids, complete remissions (CR). Similar to this study, our institutional protocol also considers the pre-induction with steroids, but unlike the Italian protocol fewer cases steroid responders and a lower rate of complete remissions were recorded. A 36 month follow-up overall survival was 32% The main objective of this study was to evaluate the results at 5 years of follow institutional protocol based on a pre-treatment with steroids HGMLAL07.
Patients.
We included patients diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia under morphological criteria French-American-British (FAB) and corroborated by flow cytometry. The criteria for complete remission was seen at 4 weeks of treatment (<5% blasts in bone marrow with normal number of leukocytes and platelets). Prophylaxis central nervous system was carried out by weekly and then monthly lumbar punctures to the maintenance stage. If express the BCR-ABL oncogene was added to treatment Imatinib 400mg PO every 24 hours you first 14 days of each cycle.
Materials and methods.
Study design. Retrospective cohort study of adult patients treated with institutional protocol HGMLAL07 carriers de novo acute lymphoid leukemia in the period from 2007 to 2015 in the Department of Hematology, General Hospital of Mexico. We excluded patients treated with another induction therapy and those of mixed lineage leukemia.
General treatment. It was considered relapse if they had at any time monitoring the presence of more than 10% blasts in bone marrow or isolation in the cerebrospinal fluid. If u have HLA-matched donor, he referred to the area of stem cell transplantation.
Statistic analysis. SPSS statistical software version 20.0 was used. Chi-Square test considered significant at p <0.05 (95% CI) was used to test hypothesis testing. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meyer test for comparing groups for overall survival and disease-free survival test was used log-rank2. The COX regression model was used for the risk function between different risk variables
Results. Of the 262 patients with LLA de novo, 255 patients met the inclusion criteria and were treated with institutional protocol HGMLAL07, 52.9% were male gender (n = 135) and 47.1% (n = 120) Gender female. The mean age was 31 years (range 16- 80 years), the average for older female compared with male (34 versus 29years, p = 0.001, 95% CI). The average of leukocytes at diagnosis was 56.1 x 10 (9) / L. Phenotypically, most were classified leukemia B-cell (95.3%, n = 243) and the remaining T lineage (4.7%, n = 12). Only 3.1% of cases expressed the oncogene BCRABL1 (n = 8). Finally concluding that 62.7% of cases were classified as high risk (n = 160) and 37.3% (n = 95) and normal risk.
Response to induction therapy.
Of the 255 patients who started the protocol remission induction in 1.6% of confirmed with CNS infiltration diagnosis (n = 4). The complete remission rate was around 82.7% (n = 211), registering an induction mortality 3.9% (n = 10). A total of 34 patients were considered refractory leukemia (n = 34), requiring a second line treatment. Among the variables that showed the impact of the failure to initial treatment (refractory or death) were the type of risk at diagnosis (p = 0.020) and white blood cell count> 30 x 10 (9) / L (p = 0.001). Mean neutrophil recovery was 28 days and the platelet recovery was at 32 days. The main cause of death was infectious processes, followed by central nervous system bleeding.
Postremisión treatment and outcome
Of the total patients, 51% (n = 130) presented relapse, the main site bone marrow, followed by infiltration of the central nervous system
Prognostic factors that impacted on survival
The median overall survival (OS) was 1053 days, with survival at 5 years of follow-up of 29%, overall survival at 5 years was influenced by the type of risk (p = 0.020, 95% CI). None of the risk factors impact on survival at one year. The disease-free survival was 11% at 5 years of follow-up, within the variables that impacted on the SLE, a leukocyte count> 30 (9) / L and age> 35 years directly impacted prognosis (p = 0.006 and p = 0.030, 95% CI respectively).
Disclosures
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare. Introduction Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a lymphoproliferative malignancy characterized by an uncontrolled growth of lymphoid progenitors of B or T lineage, who evade apoptosis and displace normal hematopoiesis. Based on the pediatric pre-induction steroid, the protocol assessed the impact ALL0288 GIMEMA 7 days pre-induction with steroids, complete remissions (CR). Similar to this study, our institutional protocol also considers the pre-induction with steroids, but unlike the Italian protocol fewer cases steroid responders and a lower rate of complete remissions were recorded. A 36 month follow-up overall survival was 32% The main objective of this study was to evaluate the results at 5 years of follow institutional protocol based on a pre-treatment with steroids HGMLAL07. Patients. We included patients diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia under morphological criteria French-American-British (FAB) and corroborated by flow cytometry. The criteria for complete remission was seen at 4 weeks of treatment (<5% blasts in bone marrow with normal number of leukocytes and platelets). Prophylaxis central nervous system was carried out by weekly and then monthly lumbar punctures to the maintenance stage. If express the BCR-ABL oncogene was added to treatment Imatinib 400mg PO every 24 hours you first 14 days of each cycle. Materials and methods. Study design. Retrospective cohort study of adult patients treated with institutional protocol HGMLAL07 carriers de novo acute lymphoid leukemia in the period from 2007 to 2015 in the Department of Hematology, General Hospital of Mexico. We excluded patients treated with another induction therapy and those of mixed lineage leukemia. General treatment. It was considered relapse if they had at any time monitoring the presence of more than 10% blasts in bone marrow or isolation in the cerebrospinal fluid. If u have HLA-matched donor, he referred to the area of stem cell transplantation. Statistic analysis. SPSS statistical software version 20.0 was used. Chi-Square test considered significant at p <0.05 (95% CI) was used to test hypothesis testing. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meyer test for comparing groups for overall survival and disease-free survival test was used log-rank2. The COX regression model was used for the risk function between different risk variables Results. Of the 262 patients with LLA de novo, 255 patients met the inclusion criteria and were treated with institutional protocol HGMLAL07, 52.9% were male gender (n = 135) and 47.1% (n = 120) Gender female. The mean age was 31 years (range 16- 80 years), the average for older female compared with male (34 versus 29years, p = 0.001, 95% CI). The average of leukocytes at diagnosis was 56.1 x 10 (9) / L. Phenotypically, most were classified leukemia B-cell (95.3%, n = 243) and the remaining T lineage (4.7%, n = 12). Only 3.1% of cases expressed the oncogene BCRABL1 (n = 8). Finally concluding that 62.7% of cases were classified as high risk (n = 160) and 37.3% (n = 95) and normal risk. Response to induction therapy. Of the 255 patients who started the protocol remission induction in 1.6% of confirmed with CNS infiltration diagnosis (n = 4). The complete remission rate was around 82.7% (n = 211), registering an induction mortality 3.9% (n = 10). A total of 34 patients were considered refractory leukemia (n = 34), requiring a second line treatment. Among the variables that showed the impact of the failure to initial treatment (refractory or death) were the type of risk at diagnosis (p = 0.020) and white blood cell count> 30 x 10 (9) / L (p = 0.001). Mean neutrophil recovery was 28 days and the platelet recovery was at 32 days. The main cause of death was infectious processes, followed by central nervous system bleeding. Postremisión treatment and outcome Of the total patients, 51% (n = 130) presented relapse, the main site bone marrow, followed by infiltration of the central nervous system Prognostic factors that impacted on survival The median overall survival (OS) was 1053 days, with survival at 5 years of follow-up of 29%, overall survival at 5 years was influenced by the type of risk (p = 0.020, 95% CI). None of the risk factors impact on survival at one year. The disease-free survival was 11% at 5 years of follow-up, within the variables that impacted on the SLE, a leukocyte count> 30 (9) / L and age> 35 years directly impacted prognosis (p = 0.006 and p = 0.030, 95% CI respectively). No relevant conflicts of interest to declare. |
Author | Ramos Peñafiel, Christian Omar Castellanos Sinco, Humberto Baldemar Collazo Jaloma, Juan Kassack Ipiña, Juan Julio Martinez Murillo, Carlos Montaño Figueroa, Efreen Leon Gonzalez, María Guadalupe Rozen Fuller, Etta |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Christian Omar surname: Ramos Peñafiel fullname: Ramos Peñafiel, Christian Omar organization: HOSPITAL GENERAL DE MEXICO, MEXICO DF, Mexico – sequence: 2 givenname: Humberto Baldemar surname: Castellanos Sinco fullname: Castellanos Sinco, Humberto Baldemar organization: Servicio de Hematología, Hospital General de México, Mexico City, Mexico – sequence: 3 givenname: Efreen surname: Montaño Figueroa fullname: Montaño Figueroa, Efreen organization: HOSPITAL GENERAL DE MEXICO, MEXICO DF, Mexico – sequence: 4 givenname: María Guadalupe surname: Leon Gonzalez fullname: Leon Gonzalez, María Guadalupe organization: HOSPITAL GENERAL DE MEXICO, MEXICO DF, Mexico – sequence: 5 givenname: Etta surname: Rozen Fuller fullname: Rozen Fuller, Etta organization: HOSPITAL GENERAL DE MEXICO, MEXICO DF, Mexico – sequence: 6 givenname: Juan Julio surname: Kassack Ipiña fullname: Kassack Ipiña, Juan Julio organization: HOSPITAL GENERAL DE MEXICO, MEXICO DF, Mexico – sequence: 7 givenname: Carlos surname: Martinez Murillo fullname: Martinez Murillo, Carlos organization: HOSPITAL GENERAL DE MEXICO, MEXICO DF, Mexico – sequence: 8 givenname: Juan surname: Collazo Jaloma fullname: Collazo Jaloma, Juan organization: HOSPITAL GENERAL DE MEXICO, MEXICO DF, Mexico |
BookMark | eNqFkN9OwjAchRuDiYg-g32BQdv96Xa5IILJjIlBb5uu-w2q27q0ReHtHcN7b865Ol9Ovls06UwHCD1QMqc0ZYuyMaaaf1CWzFk4j1JOx7hCUxqzNCCEkQmaEkKSIMo4vUG3zn0SQqOQxVOktxakb6HzeHXswWroFGBT41wdPODi1PZ7UzbSea1wAYcvaLXEP9rv8WbXLoq8IBy_wU4PCCw93hjXay8bvIYO7NCPgF_gqJW5Q9e1bBzc__UMvT-ttstNULyun5d5ESgaxzRgZU1AJbJOq4zShJQhJ1RyIGmV0JKrEDJGyiSSslQ8yqIIsrpOpOKMMVllaThD_MJV1jhnoRa91a20J0GJOBsTozFxNiZYKM6yxhiW-WUJw71vDVY4NfqotAXlRWX0v4xfaMt4nw |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | 2015 American Society of Hematology |
Copyright_xml | – notice: 2015 American Society of Hematology |
DBID | 6I. AAFTH AAYXX CITATION |
DOI | 10.1182/blood.V126.23.4871.4871 |
DatabaseName | ScienceDirect Open Access Titles Elsevier:ScienceDirect:Open Access CrossRef |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef |
DatabaseTitleList | CrossRef |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Medicine Chemistry Biology Anatomy & Physiology |
EISSN | 1528-0020 |
EndPage | 4871 |
ExternalDocumentID | 10_1182_blood_V126_23_4871_4871 S0006497118518619 |
GroupedDBID | --- -~X .55 1CY 23N 2WC 34G 39C 4.4 53G 5GY 5RE 5VS 6I. 6J9 AAEDW AAFTH AAXUO ABOCM ABVKL ACGFO ADBBV AENEX AFOSN AHPSJ ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS BAWUL BTFSW CS3 DIK DU5 E3Z EBS EJD EX3 F5P FDB FRP GS5 GX1 IH2 K-O KQ8 L7B LSO MJL N9A OK1 P2P R.V RHF RHI ROL SJN THE TR2 TWZ W2D W8F WH7 WOQ WOW X7M YHG YKV ZA5 0R~ 0SF AALRI AAYXX ADVLN AITUG AKRWK AMRAJ CITATION H13 |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c1551-2bf0ec6af8d91160b3701a7e08d61b7c3e920b64aabc74944e9ff6ac7222ad983 |
IEDL.DBID | ABVKL |
ISSN | 0006-4971 |
IngestDate | Fri Aug 23 02:19:45 EDT 2024 Fri Feb 23 02:43:39 EST 2024 |
IsDoiOpenAccess | true |
IsOpenAccess | true |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 23 |
Language | English |
License | This article is made available under the Elsevier license. |
LinkModel | DirectLink |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c1551-2bf0ec6af8d91160b3701a7e08d61b7c3e920b64aabc74944e9ff6ac7222ad983 |
OpenAccessLink | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006497118518619 |
PageCount | 1 |
ParticipantIDs | crossref_primary_10_1182_blood_V126_23_4871_4871 elsevier_sciencedirect_doi_10_1182_blood_V126_23_4871_4871 |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 2015-12-03 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2015-12-03 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 12 year: 2015 text: 2015-12-03 day: 03 |
PublicationDecade | 2010 |
PublicationTitle | Blood |
PublicationYear | 2015 |
Publisher | Elsevier Inc |
Publisher_xml | – name: Elsevier Inc |
SSID | ssj0014325 |
Score | 2.215617 |
Snippet | Introduction
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a lymphoproliferative malignancy characterized by an uncontrolled growth of lymphoid progenitors of B or T... Abstract Introduction Acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a lymphoproliferative malignancy characterized by an uncontrolled growth of lymphoid progenitors of B or... |
SourceID | crossref elsevier |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Publisher |
StartPage | 4871 |
Title | Treatment Experience of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia with Hgm/LAL07 Regimen at Hospital General De Mexico |
URI | https://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.V126.23.4871.4871 |
Volume | 126 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV3PS-wwEA6i6PMiuvrwN3MQb91tkzRtvNVVWbS-g6h4K0mayiLuiuyC_vdO0tSnILzDu4RSmLZkppNvkplvCDmSXCU6bTAscSXuXGc0UhiERSyVVhqZNmnL9vlHjO745UP6sECGXS2MS6sMvr_16d5bhzuDMJuDl_HY1fjiciozRMhpkgtH_blEEf3i37lUnN5flZ-HCZzRtpEBBs9OIKR5IbIe-Ozw_n1CRZ-yPoL3xA8_L1JfFp6LdbIWECMU7UdtkAU76ZHNYoLR8vM7HIPP4fSb4z2yfNpd_Rp2ndx6ZOU6HKBvkvFtl1gOf0mOYdpAYeYzC-U7KneqEVHjy6C08yd8iAK3WQujx-dBWZRxBjf20fUEADWDru0IBPpqOLNwbd_QvLbI3cX57XAUhW4LkXGwKaK6ia0RqslrdIAi1iyLE5XZOK9FojPDrKSxFlwpbTIuObeyaYQyGSIMVcuc_SaLk-nEbhPQ2pHkO6yXS24d5VwsTM3qxDQYcRuxQ-JuequXllSj8sFITiuvkcpppKKscsrwww456dRQfbOPCl3_v4R3_0d4j6wiSEp9CgvbJ4uz17k9QCAy04fB0D4A3K7Xtg |
link.rule.ids | 315,783,787,27581,27936,27937,45675 |
linkProvider | Elsevier |
linkToHtml | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwpV1Ra9swED5KSte9jC3tWLt100PpmxPbkiVrb262kq5OH0Za-iYkWS5hNCkjgfbf7yTLWweDPuxFGMPJRnecvpPuvgM4lkxnpmgxLPEl7syIPNEYhCW0kE5aWbRFx_Z5yadX7NtNcbMFk74WxqdVRt_f-fTgreObcVzN8f1i4Wt8cTuVAhFykZXcU39uIxoQxQC2q9Pri_r3ZQKjedfIAINnLxDTvBBZj0N2-Og6y_kopyME71kY_r1JPdl4zl7Dq4gYSdX91BvYcssh7FVLjJbvHskJCTmc4XB8CDun_dPupO_kNoQXs3iBvgeLeZ9YTv6QHJNVSyq7WTtSP6JyVwYRNX6M1G7zAyfRxB_Wkunt3biu6lSQ7-7W9wQgek36tiMk0leTL47M3AOa1z5cnX2dT6ZJ7LaQWA-bkty0qbNct2WDDpCnhoo008KlZcMzIyx1Mk8NZ1obK5hkzMm25doKRBi6kSV9C4PlauneATHGk-R7rFdK5jzlXMptQ5vMthhxW34Aab-86r4j1VAhGClzFTSivEZUTpVXRhgO4HOvBvWXfSh0_c8JH_6P8CfYnc5ntarPLy_ew0sETEVIZ6EfYLD-uXFHCErW5mM0ul8jjNqk |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Treatment+Experience+of+Acute+Lymphoblastic+Leukemia+with+Hgm%2FLAL07+Regimen+at+Hospital+General+De+Mexico&rft.jtitle=Blood&rft.au=Ramos+Pe%C3%B1afiel%2C+Christian+Omar&rft.au=Castellanos+Sinco%2C+Humberto+Baldemar&rft.au=Monta%C3%B1o+Figueroa%2C+Efreen&rft.au=Leon+Gonzalez%2C+Mar%C3%ADa+Guadalupe&rft.date=2015-12-03&rft.issn=0006-4971&rft.eissn=1528-0020&rft.volume=126&rft.issue=23&rft.spage=4871&rft.epage=4871&rft_id=info:doi/10.1182%2Fblood.V126.23.4871.4871&rft.externalDBID=n%2Fa&rft.externalDocID=10_1182_blood_V126_23_4871_4871 |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0006-4971&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0006-4971&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0006-4971&client=summon |