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Azacitidine in 302 patients with WHO-defined acute myeloid leukemia: results from the Austrian Azacitidine Registry of the AGMT-Study Group.

Authors :
Pleyer L
Burgstaller S
Girschikofsky M
Linkesch W
Stauder R
Pfeilstocker M
Schreder M
Tinchon C
Sliwa T
Lang A
Sperr WR
Krippl P
Geissler D
Voskova D
Schlick K
Thaler J
Machherndl-Spandl S
Theiler G
Eckmüllner O
Greil R
Source :
Annals of hematology [Ann Hematol] 2014 Nov; Vol. 93 (11), pp. 1825-38. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jun 21.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Data on efficacy and safety of azacitidine in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with >30 % bone marrow (BM) blasts are limited, and the drug can only be used off-label in these patients. We previously reported on the efficacy and safety of azacitidine in 155 AML patients treated within the Austrian Azacitidine Registry (clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT01595295). We herein update this report with a population almost twice as large (n = 302). This cohort included 172 patients with >30 % BM blasts; 93 % would have been excluded from the pivotal AZA-001 trial (which led to European Medicines Agency (EMA) approval of azacitidine for high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and AML with 20-30 % BM blasts). Despite this much more unfavorable profile, results are encouraging: overall response rate was 48 % in the total cohort and 72 % in patients evaluable according to MDS-IWG-2006 response criteria, respectively. Median OS was 9.6 (95 % CI 8.53-10.7) months. A clinically relevant OS benefit was observed with any form of disease stabilization (marrow stable disease (8.1 months), hematologic improvement (HI) (9.7 months), or the combination thereof (18.9 months)), as compared to patients without response and/or without disease stabilization (3.2 months). Age, white blood cell count, and BM blast count at start of therapy did not influence OS. The baseline factors LDH >225 U/l, ECOG ≥2, comorbidities ≥3, monosomal karyotype, and prior disease-modifying drugs, as well as the response-related factors hematologic improvement and further deepening of response after first response, were significant independent predictors of OS in multivariate analysis. Azacitidine seems effective in WHO-AML, including patients with >30 % BM blasts (currently off-label use). Although currently not regarded as standard form of response assessment in AML, disease stabilization and/or HI should be considered sufficient response to continue treatment with azacitidine.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-0584
Volume :
93
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annals of hematology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24951123
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00277-014-2126-9