Some abstracts on "Bfm" and childhood ALL

Ref index
  1. Recent advances in pediatric acute lymphoblastic and myeloid leukemia.
  2. Treatment results of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Austria--a report of 20 years' experience.
  3. Prognostic significance and modalities of flow cytometric minimal residual disease detection in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
  4. Treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia after the first relapse: curative strategies.
  5. Age, sex, haemoglobin level, and white cell count at diagnosis are important prognostic factors in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated with BFM-type protocol.
  6. Duration of first remission predicts remission rates and long-term survival in children with relapsed acute myelogenous leukemia.
  7. Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for a subset of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in third remission: a conceivable alternative?
  8. Peripheral blast counts at diagnosis of late isolated bone marrow relapse of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia predict response to salvage chemotherapy and outcome. Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster Relapse Study Group.
  9. [Leukemia in childhood]
  10. Six-year experience with a comprehensive approach to the treatment of recurrent childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL-REZ BFM 85). A relapse study of the BFM group.
  11. Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in second remission after intensive primary and relapse therapy according to the BFM- and CoALL-protocols: results of the German Cooperative Study.
1:PMID.12490758 Curr Opin Oncol 2003 Jan;15(1):23-35 Related Articles, Links

Recent advances in pediatric acute lymphoblastic and myeloid leukemia.

Ravindranath Y.

Acute leukemia is the most common form of childhood cancer and is the primary cause of cancer-related mortality in children. In the United approximately 3250 cases are diagnosed annually in children and adolescents younger than 20 years, of whom 2400 have acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Treatment results in childhood ALL continue to improve, and the expected current cure rates approach 75 to 80% of all children with ALL, including T-ALL and mature B-cell ALL, the two variants that, not too long ago, had a considerably poorer prognosis compared with the common form of BpALL. The most significant new development in the past 2 years has been the development of further evidence for fetal origin of childhood leukemias, and additional evidence to support the notion that postnatal events modulating the events of immune-mediated elimination of these leukemic clones play a major role in the eventual development of clinical disease. Other epidemiologic developments include (1) increased appreciation of the role of drug-metabolizing enzymes, both in determining the predisposition to leukemia and response to therapy; and (2) both clinical observations and gene expression studies seeming to identify a new approach to the evaluation and treatment of children with MLL (11q23) rearrangements. A most remarkable new development in the induction therapy of childhood leukemia and lymphoma in the United States is the use of urate oxidase for prevention of tumor lysis syndrome and the associated uric acid nephropathy. Drug resistance, determined either on leukemic blast cells or by studies of MRD, is being looked at critically in an effort to improve the treatment results further. Consolidation with HDMTX has gained wider popularity with the realization that effective CNS prophylaxis can be achieved with intrathecal therapy plus HDMTX for consolidation. In contrast to ALL, the progress in the therapy of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) lags behind, with cure rates of approximately 40 to 50%. There is no convincing evidence for substitution of daunorubicin with other anthracyclines, nor evidence for using high-dose cytarabine during induction in childhood AML. Rather, a 3 + 10 regimen with total daunorubicin 180 mg/m and cytarabine 100 to 200 mg/ for 10 days appears to yield the best results. The most important component of the postremission chemotherapy continues to be several courses of high-dose cytarabine. The results from the MRC 10, LAME 89/91 studies and the recent BFM 93 trial with high-dose cytarabine and mitoxantrone suggest that there may be some benefit to including this combination in the postremission phase of AML. Despite these improvements in chemotherapy, allogeneic BMT from a matched family donor remains the best option for most patients (excluding Down syndrome, APL, and possibly those with inv16). Newer prognostic markers of interest include FLT3/ITD and minimal residual disease at the end of induction therapy.

PMID: 12490758 [PubMed - in process]

2:PMID.12060981 Wien Klin Wochenschr 2002 Feb 28;114(4):148-57 Related Articles, Links

Treatment results of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in Austria--a report of 20 years' experience.

Comment in: Wien Klin Wochenschr. 2002 Feb 28;114(4):141-2.

Attarbaschi A, Mann G, Dworzak M, Urban C, Fink FM, Dieckmann K, Riehm H, Gadner H; Austrian Cooperative Study Group.

St. Anna Children's Hospital, Vienna.

Between 1981 and 1999, 890 Austrian children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were treated in 5 consecutive trials using protocols from the Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster (BFM) Group. In the trials BFM-A (Austria) 81 and ALL A 84, treatment stratification was performed using a risk factor, which was calculated from the initial peripheral blast cell count, and size of liver and spleen. In the following studies (BFM-A 86, 90 and 95) early response to a 7-day systemic mono-therapy with prednisone (as measured by the peripheral blast cell count) was used as an overriding stratification factor; in order to reduce the need for cranial radiotherapy, all patients received high-dose methotrexate (5 g/m2) for preventive central nervous system treatment. Event-free survival (EFS) rates increased from study BFM-A 81 (n = 141, probability (p) of EFS: 59% +/- 4%) and study ALL A 84 (n = 127, pEFS: 67% +/- 4%) to 77% +/- 4% in trial BFM-A 86 (n = 142), 79% +/- 3% in trial BFM-A 90 (n = 256), and 84% +/- 3% in trial BFM-A 95 (n = 224). However, the prognosis for high-risk patients has not significantly improved within the last 20 years (pEFS: 50%). Furthermore, conventional risk factors such as leukocyte count and age at time of diagnosis, could not be used to indicate patients in the low and intermediate risk group who might eventually relapse. Thus, in trial BFM-A 2000, detection of minimal residual disease by polymerase chain reaction-based methods after 5 and 12 weeks of therapy was introduced for treatment stratification. Minimal residual disease was prospectively shown to predict relapses more precisely and, as a matter of fact, may allow a more exact definition of which patients are at risk and which patients belong to the subgroup with a good prognosis despite reduced treatment.

PMID: 12060981 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

3:PMID.11877265 Blood 2002 Mar 15;99(6):1952-8 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Prognostic significance and modalities of flow cytometric minimal residual disease detection in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Dworzak MN, Froschl G, Printz D, Mann G, Potschger U, Muhlegger N, Fritsch G, Gadner H; Austrian Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster Study Group.

Children's Cancer Research Institute, St Anna Kinderspital, Kinderspitalgasse 6, A-1090 Vienna, Austria. dworzak@ccri.univie.ac.at

Detection of minimal residual disease (MRD) in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) predicts outcome. Previous studies were invariably based on relative quantification and did not investigate sample-inherent parameters that influence test accuracy, which makes comparisons and clinical conclusions cumbersome. Hence, we conducted a prospective, population-based MRD study in 108 sequentially recruited children with ALL uniformly treated with the ALL-Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster (ALL-BFM) 95 protocol in Austria (median follow-up of 40 months). Using sensitive, limited antibody panel flow cytometry applicable to 97% of patients, we investigated 329 bone marrow samples from 4 treatment time points. MRD was quantified by blast percentages among nucleated cells (NCs) and by absolute counts (per microliter). Covariables such as NC count, normal B cells, and an estimate of the test sensitivity were also recorded. Presence and distinct levels of MRD correlated with a high probability of early relapse at each of the time points studied. Sequential monitoring at day 33 and week 12 was most useful for predicting outcome independently from clinical risk groups: patients with persistent disease (> or =1 blast/microL) had a 100% probability of relapse, compared to 6% in all others. Absolute MRD quantification was more appropriate than relative, due to considerable variations in total NC counts between samples. Regeneration of normal immature B cells after periods of rest from treatment limited the test sensitivity. In conclusion, MRD detection by flow cytometry is a strong and independent outcome indicator in childhood ALL. Standardization regarding absolute quantification on the basis of NCs and assessment during periods of continuous treatment promise to increase the accuracy, simplicity, and cost efficiency of the approach.

PMID: 11877265 [PubMed - in process]

4:PMID.11268324 Haematologica 2000 Nov;85(11 Suppl):47-53 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia after the first relapse: curative strategies.

Uderzo C, Dini G, Locatelli F, Miniero R, Tamaro P.

Centro TMO, Clinica Pediatrica, Ospedale S. Gerardo di Monza, Universita di Milano Bicocca, via Donizetti 106, 20052 Monza, Milano, Italy. ctmomonza@libero.it

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Treatment of recurrent childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) has been controversial in the last decade. Conventional intensive chemotherapy (CHEMO) can cure up to 30% of children who have relapsed after ALL: similar results have been obtained with autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT), but allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (AlloBMT) seems to be the best therapeutic option. In this review the authors point out the contribution of current strategy in the setting of children with ALL who experience a first relapse and should be offered optimal treatment in order to obtain the best disease-free survival (DFS). The principal objective of this issue is to reach a possible consensus on the more controversial points regarding factors considered strong predictors of the outcome of the relapsed patients, second-line chemotherapy, optimal timing and type of transplantation. EVIDENCE AND INFORMATION SOURCE: Data published in the literature over the last decade concerning early and late relapse in childhood ALL suggest that improvements in cure rates may be achieved by intensification of the relapse treatment both with chemotherapy and with different types of transplantation. An accurate search for Medline data has been performed in order to understand the risk-benefit ratio of aggressive therapy adopted in this setting. STATE OF ART: Modern first-line treatment protocols for childhood ALL have contributed to curing an ever larger number of patients but this strategy could be responsible for creating a more resistant leukemic clone at the time of systemic or extramedullary relapse. This hypothesis emerges from a number of single or multicenter experiences; thus clinical and biological features in relapsed patients are being studied carefully in order to understand which risk-directed second-line therapy should be best adopted. The BFM group classified ALL relapses as "very early", "early", or "late" according to the time from diagnosis to first relapse (i.e. < 18, > 18 and < 30 or more than 30 months) and has shown that about 2/3 of the small fraction of children with late extramedullary relapses or late non T-marrow relapses or early combined non T-relapses can be rescued by chemotherapy; in contrast ALL early relapses or T-immunophenotype ALL relapses can be rescue only by AlloBMT. Since 1990 the AIEOP group adopted BFM-like first-line treatment and experienced similar situations for relapsed patients so that, even in absence of a real common relapse protocol, they went in the same direction as the BFM group as far as hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) procedures and decision were concerned. A recent AIEOP study on the destiny of 192 consecutive patients with ALL in 2nd complete remission and not having an HLA suitable sibling donor is presented in this issue. The value of different HSCT procedures is addressed and the protection against a new relapse seems to be real, although, of course, the risk-benefit ratio should always be evaluated. PERSPECTIVES: Very few prospective studies on the treatment of childhood ALL relapse have been set up in the last decade because of many difficulties regarding common second-line therapies, some reluctance versus HSCT in consideration of the transplant-related mortality and the so-called late effects. Additional modifications of allogeneic family and unrelated donor HSCT strategies and the promising results both of cord HSCT and auto-grafting methods including in vitro purging or post-transplant immunotherapy, are making transplantation procedures for ALL relapsed patients more appropriate and increasing confidence in their use. The possibility of performing common prospective international studies should be encouraged over the next years in order to elucidate an area of great research as is that of the treatment of childhood ALL relapse.

Publication Types: Review Review, Tutorial

PMID: 11268324 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

5:PMID.11191144 J Trop Pediatr 2000 Dec;46(6):338-43 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Age, sex, haemoglobin level, and white cell count at diagnosis are important prognostic factors in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated with BFM-type protocol.

Ng SM, Lin HP, Ariffin WA, Zainab AK, Lam SK, Chan LL.

Department of Paediatrics, University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. ngszemay@hotmail.com

The presenting features and treatment outcome for 575 Malaysian children (< or = 12 years of age) with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), admitted to the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia between 1 January 1980 and 30 May 1995 were evaluated to determine their prognostic significance. Two-year overall survival was achieved in 67 per cent of all patients and 55 per cent of patients were relapse-free at 2 years. All except 10 patients, with identified French-American-British L3 morphology were treated with the modified Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster 78 treatment protocol. Univariate analyses of failure rate conferred age, sex, white cell count and hemoglobin level as potentially significant prognostic factors. All four presenting features retained their prognostic strength in a multivariate analysis. Race, platelet count, morphological subtype, liver/spleen size, lymphadenopathy, central nervous system and mediastinal mass involvement did not show any significant effect on treatment outcome. The 2-year survival rate was significantly different with regard to age, white cell count and hemoglobin level. However, sex was not significantly related to overall survival. These prognostic factors may have implications on future stratification of risk-adjusted initial treatment in the management of childhood ALL. Our analysis of Malaysian children is similar to what could be predicted based on previous studies in other populations.

PMID: 11191144 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

6:PMID.9766496 Leukemia 1998 Oct;12(10):1534-8 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Duration of first remission predicts remission rates and long-term survival in children with relapsed acute myelogenous leukemia.

Stahnke K, Boos J, Bender-Gotze C, Ritter J, Zimmermann M, Creutzig U.

University Children's Hospital, Ulm, Germany.

Although treatment of childhood acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) has substantially improved in the last 15 years, in nearly half of the patients disease recurs. The aim of this study was to establish the prognosis of relapsed childhood AML and to identify prognostic factors for achievement of second remission and survival. From February 1988 to July 1996, 134 children with first relapse of AML were reported to the study center of the AML-BFM group. 102 patients treated intensively to induce second remission were prospectively followed. With various regimens, complete remission was achieved in 52 of 102 patients (51%), 27 children were alive in median 2.5 years (range, 0.4-7 years) after relapse. Disease-free survival was observed in seven of 16 patients transplanted from a matched sibling donor, one of four after matched unrelated bone marrow transplantation, 10 of 22 after autologous transplantation and five of nine patients after chemotherapy alone (two patients were lost to follow-up). Time until relapse reflecting the duration of first remission is the only variable correlating CR and survival rates. Defining early relapse as less than 1.5 years from diagnosis to relapse resulted in a 5-year survival of 10%, s.e. 5% for early relapses and 40%, s.e. 10% for late relapses (P-logrank test, 0.0001). Duration of first remission is a strong predictor for achievement of second CR and survival. It should be considered in reporting results of experimental therapies.

PMID: 9766496 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

7:PMID.9422472 Bone Marrow Transplant 1997 Dec;20(11):939-44 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for a subset of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in third remission: a conceivable alternative?

Borgmann A, Baumgarten E, Schmid H, Dopfer R, Ebell W, Gobel U, Niethammer D, Gadner H, Henze G.

Department of Paediatric Haematology and Oncology of the Virchow Medical Center, Berlin, Germany.

In the BFM Relapse Study registry we retrospectively identified 136 patients with a first marrow relapse who had undergone BMT in second complete remission (CR2) (group A) and 33 patients who received transplants only after a 2nd bone marrow (BM) relapse had occurred (group B). Event-free survival (EFS) rates at 6 years after BMT were 0.49 +/- 0.05 and 0.48 +/- 0.09 for patients transplanted in CR2 and CR3, respectively. In context with the BFM chemotherapy trials for relapsed childhood ALL there is a clear benefit from BMT in 2nd CR for children with unfavorable prognostic features (isolated early BM relapse, very early BM relapse or BM relapse of T cell ALL). Similar control of leukemia can be achieved with either chemotherapy or BMT in late BM relapse of ALL. Assuming a 60% failure rate with chemotherapy for patients in second relapse, a third remission can be achieved in about 60% of patients who have received chemotherapy, rendering them eligible for BMT in 3rd CR. With this strategy 58% of these patients would survive and late sequelae of BMT be restricted to a minority. To withhold BMT in CR2 and not perform BMT before a 2nd BM relapse has occurred, may be a conceivable alternative for children with late ALL BM relapse, at least if no related donor is available.

PMID: 9422472 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

8:PMID.8874343 J Clin Oncol 1996 Oct;14(10):2812-7 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Peripheral blast counts at diagnosis of late isolated bone marrow relapse of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia predict response to salvage chemotherapy and outcome. Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster Relapse Study Group.

Buhrer C, Hartmann R, Fengler R, Rath B, Schrappe M, Janka-Schaub G, Henze G.

Department of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Children's Hospital, Virchow Medical Center, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany.

PURPOSE: In newly diagnosed childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), a high tumor burden indicates a poor prognosis, while no such link has been established yet after relapse. The impact of the absolute peripheral blast count (PBC) at the time of relapse on the response to salvage chemotherapy after a late isolated bone marrow (BM) relapse is the subject of this prospective analysis. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Since 1983, 260 children with a first isolated BM relapse of ALL that occurred 6 months or later after elective cessation of front-line therapy were enrolled onto four consecutive multicenter trials of the Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster (BFM) Relapse Study Group. All patients received intensive multiagent induction and consolidation chemotherapy for 6 months, followed by maintenance therapy with methotrexate (MTX) and thioguanine for 2 years. Treatment of subclinical meningeal leukemia consisted of high-dose intravenous MTX and intrathecally administered cytostatic drugs, which was augmented by cranial irradiation since 1988. RESULTS: At the time relapse was diagnosed, PBC varied considerably among patients (median, 1,060/microL; range, 0 to 106,800/microL). Achievement of a second complete remission (CR) was not significantly different in children without detectable circulating blasts at relapse (37 of 38) and those with moderate (1 to 9,999/microL) PBC (165 of 171). In contrast, only 42 of 51 children with high PBC (> or = 10,000/microL) achieved a second CR (P = .0015). At a median follow-up time of 40 months, the 10-year event-free survival (EFS) probability was significantly (P = .0001) higher in children without circulating blasts (.64) than in children with moderate PBC (.32) or high PBC (.10). There was a preponderance of boys in the group without detectable circulating blasts, while the three PBC-defined groups did not differ with respect to frontline treatment, age at initial diagnosis, age at relapse, time off therapy, or salvage treatment protocol. On sequential univariate and multivariate analysis, only duration of first remission > or = 48 months was an additional independent indicator of adverse prognosis, while preventive cranial irradiation improved outcome independently of PBC. CONCLUSION: The absence of blasts on peripheral-blood smears at the time of a first late isolated BM relapse of childhood ALL is associated with a favorable response and prognosis in chemotherapy-treated children, who should be regarded as ineligible for bone marrow transplantation (BMT) unless a second round of chemotherapy has failed to produce a response.

PMID: 8874343 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

9:PMID.3050901 Pediatr Med Chir 1988 Mar-Apr;10(2):133-41 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

[Leukemia in childhood]

[Article in Italian]

Masera G, Adamoli L, Conter V, Piacentini G.

Clinica Pediatrica, Universita di Milano, Ospedale San Gerardo di Monza, Italia.

The prognosis of leukemia in children has changed remarkably in the last 20 years. Today more than 50% of children with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) and about 30% of children with Acute non Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ANLL) can be cured with chemotherapy. The German Group BFM has obtained a significant improvement of results, both in ALL and ANLL using multidrug intensive treatment schedules. In Italy, thanks to the Italian Pediatrics Association of Hematology and Oncology (AIEOP), results have been improved in the last 10 years; very recently, new protocols with the BFM strategy have been started. Allogenic matched bone marrow transplantation (BMT) is indicated in children with ALL in 2nd complete remission (CR) following a relapse during or shortly after discontinuing treatment and in patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. Chemotherapy results remain very poor in these patients. Allogenic BMT in usually performed also in children with ANLL in 1st CR. Autologous BMT, and allogenic BMT mismatched or from unrelated donors are being used with promising results when matched donors are not available. Most children cured of leukemia can enjoy a normal quality of life. However long term studies are still needed to determine the incidence of late effects, and to evaluate the psychosocial impact of the disease. In this context is becoming more and more important the role of the family doctor.

Publication Types: Review Review, Tutorial

PMID: 3050901 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

10:PMID.1878583 Blood 1991 Sep 1;78(5):1166-72 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Six-year experience with a comprehensive approach to the treatment of recurrent childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL-REZ BFM 85). A relapse study of the BFM group.

Henze G, Fengler R, Hartmann R, Kornhuber B, Janka-Schaub G, Niethammer D, Riehm H.

Department of Hematology and Oncology, University Children's Hospital, Berlin, Germany.

Between April 1985 and March 1987 130 children and adolescents up to 18 years of age with first relapse of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were registered on the stratified and randomized multicentric trial ALL-REZ BFM 85 designed for patients pretreated with intensive front-line therapies. Stratification criteria were time and site of relapse: bone marrow (BM) relapse on or up to 6 months after stopping front-line therapy (group A), BM relapse beyond 6 months after therapy (group B), and isolated extramedullary relapse at any time (group C). Treatment consisted of alternating courses of polychemotherapy including randomly administered high- or intermediate-dose methotrexate (HDMTX:12 g/m2 as 4-hour infusion; IDMTX: 1 g/m2 as 36-hour infusion). During maintenance therapy the patients received daily oral thioguanine and biweekly intravenous (IV) MTX. The overall second complete remission (CR) rate was 92% (groups A, B, and C: 88%, 92%, and 100%), and the probability of event-free survival (EFS) at 6 years is 0.31 +/- 0.04 (groups A, B, and C: 0.18 +/- 0.05, 0.30 +/- 0.07, and 0.72 +/- 0.11). HDMTX did not prove to be superior to IDMTX, which led to premature stopping of randomization. Risk factor analyses showed early relapse, particularly BM relapse within 18 months, and T-cell phenotype to be independent predictors of poor outcome. The incidence of central nervous system (CNS) relapses following BM relapse was 19%, indicating that reprophylaxis to the CNS with IV/intrathecal (IT) MTX was insufficient. For 17 children who received bone marrow transplantation in second CR from HLA-compatible siblings the EFS was 0.53 +/- 0.12 at 5 years. Their outcome was not influenced by the above-mentioned risk factors. With the proposed treatment regimen long-lasting second remissions can be achieved in about one third of patients even after intensive front-line treatment.

Publication Types: Clinical Trial Randomized Controlled Trial

PMID: 1878583 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

11:PMID.1824271 Blood 1991 Nov 15;78(10):2780-4 Related Articles, Books, LinkOut

Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia in second remission after intensive primary and relapse therapy according to the BFM- and CoALL-protocols: results of the German Cooperative Study.

Dopfer R, Henze G, Bender-Gotze C, Ebell W, Ehninger G, Friedrich W, Gadner H, Klingebiel T, Peters C, Riehm H, et al.

Department of Hematology/Oncology, Children's University Hospital, Tubingen, Germany.

Fifty-one children between 26 and 214 months of age (median, 100 months) with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were grafted in second remission from HLA-identical sibling donors (except for two patients who were grafted with a marrow with 1 antigen-mismatch). Initial treatment and relapse therapy were similar in all patients according to the BFM- and CoALL-protocols (front line: 38 patients according to BFM-protocols and 13 patients according to CoALL-protocols; relapse: 12 patients in study ALL-REZ-BFM 83, 17 in ALL-REZ-BFM 85, 20 in ALL-REZ-BFM 87, and two in ALL-REZ-BFM 90). The conditioning regimens were different, consisting of cyclophosphamide (CY) total body irradiation (TBI) plus (n = 27), VP-16-TBI (n = 23), and CY-TBI and ARA-C (n = 1). Three patients had a second graft after conditioning with CY-TBI for the first transplantation. The second ablative regimen consisted of CY plus VP-16 in the first patient and CY plus busulfan in the two other patients, one of whom relapsed again. All patients but three had bone marrow (BM), either isolated or combined, relapses. Twenty-nine of the patients are in continuous complete remission (CCR), ranging from 1 to 67 months after transplantation with a median time of 30 months. One patient was lost to follow-up in continuous remission. Nine patients died from treatment-related complications (infections and graft-versus-host disease) and 12 patients suffered a leukemic relapse; three of them received a second graft and two are in CCR. Kaplan-Meier analysis yields an event-free survival (EFS) of 0.52 +/- 0.08. The probability of a 7-year relapse-free interval (RFI) is 0.68 +/- 0.08. EFS for patients with late relapses is 0.47 +/- 0.12 and for patients with early relapses 0.56 +/- 0.1. The RFI for patients with late relapses is 0.65 +/- 0.12 and for patients with early relapses 0.69 +/- 0.11. There is a nonsignificant trend towards superior results for patients grafted after conditioning with VP-16 plus TBI. When all patients who are not in CCR at day +125 (which is the median interval between relapse diagnosis and BM transplantation [BMT]) are excluded from the chemotherapy results, there is no significant difference between the results of BMT and chemotherapy for late relapses. On the other hand, there is a significant advantage between chemotherapy and BMT for early relapses over chemotherapy (P less than or equal to .01).

Publication Types: Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial Multicenter Study

PMID: 1824271 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Source: PubMed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi).