Long-term outcome of older patients with newly diagnosed de novo acute promyelocytic leukemia treated with ATRA plus anthracycline-based therapy
Martínez-Cuadrón, David; Montesinos, Pau; Vellenga, Edo; Bernal, Teresa; Salamero, Olga; Holowiecka, Aleksandra; Brunet, Salut; Gil, Cristina; Benavente, Celina; Ribera, Josep Maria; Pérez Encinas, Manuel Mateo; de la Serna, Javier; Esteve, Jordi; Rubio, Vicente; González-Campos, José; Escoda, Lourdes; Amutio, María Elena; Arnan, M.; Arias Sampedro, Jesús; Negri, S.; Lowenberg, Bob; Sanz, Miguel A.
Identificadores
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/22461
PMID: 28584252
DOI: 10.1038/leu.2017.178
ESSN: 1476-5551
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Fecha de publicación
2018Título de revista
Leukemia
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
leucemia promielocítica aguda | antraciclinas | resultado del tratamiento | protocolos de quimioterapia antineoplásica combinada | recurrencia | tretinoina | inducción de remisión | anciano | supervivencia sin enfermedad | factores de riesgoMeSH
Disease-Free Survival | Recurrence | Aged | Risk Factors | Anthracyclines | Treatment Outcome | Remission Induction | Leukemia, Promyelocytic, Acute | Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols | TretinoinCIE
Leucemia promielocítica agudaResumen
[EN] Treatment outcome in older patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is lower compared with younger patients, mainly because of a higher induction death rate and postremission non-relapse mortality (NRM). This prompted us to design a risk- and age-adapted protocol (Programa Español de Tratamientos en Hematología (PETHEMA)/HOVON LPA2005), with dose reduction of consolidation chemotherapy. Patients aged ⩾60 years reported to the PETHEMA registry and were treated with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) plus anthracycline-based regimens according to three consecutive PETHEMA trials that were included. We compared the long-term outcomes of the LPA2005 trial with the preceding PETHEMA trials using non-age-adapted schedules (LPA96&LPA99). From 1996 to 2012, 389 older patients were registered, of whom 268 patients (69%) were eligible. Causes of ineligibility were secondary APL (19%), and unfit for chemotherapy (11%). Median age was 67 years, without relevant differences between LPA2005 and LPA96&LPA99 cohorts. Overall, 216 patients (81%) achieved complete remission with no differences between trials. The 5-year NRM, cumulative incidence of relapse, disease-free survival and overall survival in the LPA2005 vs the LPA96&99 were 5 vs 18% (P=0.15), 7 vs 12% (P=0.23), 87 vs 69% (P=0.04) and 74 vs 60% (P=0.06). A less intensive front-line regimen with ATRA and anthracycline monochemotherapy resulted in improved outcomes in older APL patients.










