July 09, 2014
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MRD may guide augmented post-remission treatment in pediatric ALL

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Children and adolescents with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who had minimal residual disease at the end of remission induction therapy demonstrated improved outcomes with augmented post-remission therapy compared with standard treatment, according to study results.

Perspective from Daniel S. Wechsler, MD, PhD

However, patients who received augmented therapy experienced higher rates of adverse events, results showed.

Ajay Vora, MD, of the department of pediatric hematology at Sheffield Children’s Hospital in the United Kingdom, and colleagues evaluated data from 533 patients with ALL. Patients ranged in age from 1 to 24 years. All patients had minimal residual disease (MRD) of ≥0.01% after 29 days of induction therapy.

Vora and colleagues assigned 266 patients to standard post-remission therapy and 267 patients to augmented post-remission therapy. Those in the augmented cohort received eight additional doses of pegylatedasparaginase, 18 doses of vincristine and escalated-dose IV methotrexate without folinic acid rescue during interim maintenance courses.

Median follow-up was 70 months (interquartile range, 52-91).

Five-year rates for DFS were significantly higher in the augmented therapy cohort (89.6% vs. 82.8%; OR=0.61; 95% CI, 0.39-0.98).

More patients who received augmented therapy achieved 5-year OS (92.9% vs. 88.9%; OR=0.67; 95% CI, 0.38-1.17); however, this difference was not statistically significant.

Patients assigned augmented therapy experienced higher rates of asparaginase-related hypersensitivity (6.7% vs. 0.8%), asparaginase -related pancreatitis (3% vs. 0.4%), IV methotrexate-related mucositis (4.1% vs. 1.1%) and methotrexate-related stomatitis (18% vs. 4.5%).

Michael E. Rytting, MD 

Michael E. Rytting

“To reduce the toxicity of augmented therapy, and based on the results of a US Childhood Cancer Group study of NCI high-risk patients that showed no benefit from a second delayed intensification course, MRD high-risk patients receive only one delayed intensification course in our ongoing trial, UKALL 2011,” Vora and colleagues wrote. “In the future, new drugs designed to target leukemia-specific receptors and proteins could replace elements of conventional chemotherapy regimens responsible for some of the major toxicities, thereby reducing toxicity while retaining the overall efficacy of treatment, as has already been demonstrated for Philadelphia chromosome-positive ALL.”

The clinical rationale to test for MRD still needs to be substantiated by data from ongoing trials, Michael E. Rytting, MD, of the departments of pediatrics and leukemia at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

“MRD might successfully guide therapy decrements in selected patients. Until now, however, little to no evidence had been published from randomized trials showing that intensified chemotherapy can overcome the poor prognosis of MRD positivity,” Rytting wrote. “Results are pending from large, ongoing trials (eg, NCT01406756) that are intensifying therapy by adding agents such as clofarabine [Clolar, Genzyme] or by using early transplant for MRD-positive patients. Hopefully, information from these trials will further support the use of MRD status in treatment decision-making to improve cure rates in children and young adults with precursor B-cell ALL who have a less-than-optimal response to treatment.”

For more information:

Disclosure: The researchers report no relevant financial disclosures. Rytting reports no relevant financial disclosures.