1. [Patients older than 80 years with de novo acute myeloid leukemias without erythroblastic and/or megakaryocytic dysplasia achieve complete remission and longer survival after classical chemotherapy 3 + 7].
- Author
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Lemez P, Gáliková J, Michalová K, Dvoráková D, MacWhannell A, Zemanová Z, and Stejskal J
- Subjects
- Aged, 80 and over, Cytarabine administration & dosage, Daunorubicin administration & dosage, Erythroblasts pathology, Female, Humans, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute blood, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute mortality, Male, Megakaryocytes pathology, Mitoxantrone administration & dosage, Remission Induction, Survival Rate, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute drug therapy
- Abstract
Chemotherapy in most patients with AML over 80 years of age is not recommended because their median survival is about 1 month. The aim of our study was to identify patients in this age group who might achieve complete remission with standard dose chemotherapy. We report 9 consecutive patients with de novo AML diagnosed and treated in 1992-2008. All bone marrow samples were hypercellular, classified as FAB types M2 in 2 cases, M4 in 6, and M5 in one case. Three patients opted for supportive or palliative therapy and survived 1-4 months. Six patients received standard dose chemotherapy. Two patients with a normal karyotype had resistant AML and survived 1.0 and 2.7 months; one patient with a complex karyotype died of septic shock on the 10th day of therapy. All these three patients exhibited erythroblastic and/or megakaryocytic dysplasia (EMD) at presentation (two in more than 26% erythroblasts, all three in a half or more of megakaryocytes). Three remaining patients with AML M4, a normal karyotype but without EMD, achieved complete remission in spite of co-morbidities and a poor performance status. Two of them survived 18.6 and 28 months on maintenance therapy, the third 16.5 months without it. Very elderly AML patients without EMD appear to represent a favorable prognostic biological category (single-lineage AML) that show a good response to standard dose chemotherapy.
- Published
- 2010