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International cooperative study identifies treatment strategy in childhood ambiguous lineage leukemia

Authors :
Hrusak, Ondrej
de Haas, Valerie
Stancikova, Jitka
Vakrmanova, Barbora
Janotova, Iveta
Mejstrikova, Ester
Capek, Vaclav
Trka, Jan
Zaliova, Marketa
Luks, Ales
Bleckmann, Kirsten
Möricke, Anja
Irving, Julie
Konatkowska, Benigna
Alexander, Thomas B.
Inaba, Hiroto
Schmiegelow, Kjeld
Stokley, Simone
Zemanova, Zuzana
Moorman, Anthony V.
Rossi, Jorge Gabriel
Felice, Maria Sara
Dalla-Pozza, Luciano
Morales, Jessa
Dworzak, Michael
Buldini, Barbara
Basso, Giuseppe
Campbell, Myriam
Cabrera, Maria Elena
Marinov, Neda
Elitzur, Sarah
Izraeli, Shai
Luria, Drorit
Feuerstein, Tamar
Kolenova, Alexandra
Svec, Peter
Kreminska, Olena
Rabin, Karen R.
Polychronopoulou, Sophia
da Costa, Elaine
Marquart, Hanne Vibeke
Kattamis, Antonis
Ratei, Richard
Reinhardt, Dirk
Choi, John K.
Schrappe, Martin
Stary, Jan
Source :
Blood; July 2018, Vol. 132 Issue: 3 p264-276, 13p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Despite attempts to improve the definitions of ambiguous lineage leukemia (ALAL) during the last 2 decades, general therapy recommendations are missing. Herein, we report a large cohort of children with ALAL and propose a treatment strategy. A retrospective multinational study (International Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster Study of Leukemias of Ambiguous Lineage [iBFM-AMBI2012]) of 233 cases of pediatric ALAL patients is presented. Survival statistics were used to compare the prognosis of subsets and types of treatment. Five-year event-free survival (EFS) of patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)–type primary therapy (80% ± 4%) was superior to that of children who received acute myeloid leukemia (AML)–type or combined-type treatment (36% ± 7.2% and 50% ± 12%, respectively). When ALL- or AML-specific gene fusions were excluded, 5-year EFS of CD19+ leukemia was 83% ± 5.3% on ALL-type primary treatment compared with 0% ± 0% and 28% ± 14% on AML-type and combined-type primary treatment, respectively. Superiority of ALL-type treatment was documented in single-population mixed phenotype ALAL (using World Health Organization and/or European Group for Immunophenotyping of Leukemia definitions) and bilineal ALAL. Treatment with ALL-type protocols is recommended for the majority of pediatric patients with ALAL, including cases with CD19+ ALAL. AML-type treatment is preferred in a minority of ALAL cases with CD19− and no other lymphoid features. No overall benefit of transplantation was documented, and it could be introduced in some patients with a poor response to treatment. As no clear indicator was found for a change in treatment type, this is to be considered only in cases with ≥5% blasts after remission induction. The results provide a basis for a prospective trial.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971 and 15280020
Volume :
132
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs46048471
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2017-12-821363