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Impact of invasive aspergillosis occurring during first induction therapy on outcome of acute myeloid leukaemia (SEIFEMā€12B study)

Authors :
Gianpaolo Nadali
Chiara Cattaneo
Rosa Fanci
Luisa Verga
Luana Fianchi
Anna Chierichini
Katia Perruccio
Alessandro Busca
Livio Pagano
Giuseppe Petruzzellis
Bruno Martino
Giulia Dragonetti
Mariagrazia Garzia
Roberta Di Blasi
Marianna Criscuolo
Francesca Farina
Mario Delia
Nicola Vianelli
Maria Elena Zannier
Anna Candoni
Maria Ilaria Del Principe
Source :
Mycoses. 63:1094-1100
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) patients are at high risk of invasive aspergillosis (IA) after first induction chemotherapy (CHT). Although IA risk factors have been identified, few data are available on impact of IA, occurring during induction phase, on overall AML outcome. PATIENTS AND RESULTS The end point of this multicentre, case-control, study was to evaluate whether IA, occurring after first induction CHT, can affect treatment schedule and patient's outcome. We identified 40 AML patients (cases) who developed IA during first induction phase, 31 probable (77.5%) and 9 proven (22.5%). These cases were matched with a control group (80 AML) without IA, balanced according to age, type of CHT, AML characteristics and cytogenetic-molecular risk factors. The overall response rate to induction CHT was the same in the 2 groups. In the 40 cases with IA, the overall response rate to antifungal treatment was favourable (80%) but it was significantly affected by the achievement of leukaemia complete remission (CR) with induction CHT. In fact, in cases with AML responsive to induction CHT, responses of IA to antifungal therapy were 96% compared to 21% in cases of AML not responsive to induction treatment (P

Details

ISSN :
14390507 and 09337407
Volume :
63
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mycoses
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....340e667a609dea7a9b1c5c3cbe2eab29