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Combination of pegylated IFN-α2b with imatinib increases molecular response rates in patients with low- or intermediate-risk chronic myeloid leukemia

Authors :
Anders Själander
Johan Lanng Nielsen
Henrik Hjorth-Hansen
Satu Mustjoki
Kari Remes
Hans Ehrencrona
Ole Weiss Bjerrum
Anders Almqvist
Mats Björeman
Berit Markevärn
Fredrik Sandin
Franz Gruber
Kristina Myhr-Eriksson
Claes Malm
Max Flogegard
Arnon Nagler
V Kairisto
Ulla Strömberg
Perttu Koskenvesa
Anders Lindblom
Kimmo Porkka
Karin Olsson
Marjatta Sinisalo
Jesper Stentoft
Tobias Gedde-Dahl
Bengt Simonsson
Lotta Ohm
Anu Räsänen
Source :
Simonsson, B, Gedde-Dahl, T, Markevärn, B, Remes, K, Stentoft, J, Almqvist, A, Björeman, M, Flogegård, M, Koskenvesa, P, Lindblom, A, Malm, C, Mustjoki, S, Myhr-Eriksson, K, Ohm, L, Räsänen, A, Sinisalo, M, Själander, A, Strömberg, U, Bjerrum, O W, Ehrencrona, H, Gruber, F, Kairisto, V, Olsson, K, Sandin, F, Nagler, A, Nielsen, J L, Hjorth-Hansen, H, Porkka, K & Nordic CML Study Group 2011, ' Combination of pegylated IFN-α2b with imatinib increases molecular response rates in patients with low-or intermediate-risk chronic myeloid leukemia ', Ironic Blood, vol. 118, no. 12, pp. 3228-35 . https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2011-02-336685
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2011.

Abstract

Biologic and clinical observations suggest that combining imatinib with IFN-α may improve treatment outcome in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). We randomized newly diagnosed chronic-phase CML patients with a low or intermediate Sokal risk score and in imatinib-induced complete hematologic remission either to receive a combination of pegylated IFN-α2b (Peg–IFN-α2b) 50 μg weekly and imatinib 400 mg daily (n = 56) or to receive imatinib 400 mg daily monotherapy (n = 56). The primary endpoint was the major molecular response (MMR) rate at 12 months after randomization. In both arms, 4 patients (7%) discontinued imatinib treatment (1 because of blastic transformation in imatinib arm). In addition, in the combination arm, 34 patients (61%) discontinued Peg–IFN-α2b, most because of toxicity. The MMR rate at 12 months was significantly higher in the imatinib plus Peg–IFN-α2b arm (82%) compared with the imatinib monotherapy arm (54%; intention-to-treat, P = .002). The MMR rate increased with the duration of Peg–IFN-α2b treatment (< 12-week MMR rate 67%, > 12-week MMR rate 91%). Thus, the addition of even relatively short periods of Peg–IFN-α2b to imatinib markedly increased the MMR rate at 12 months of therapy. Lower doses of Peg–IFN-α2b may enhance tolerability while retaining efficacy and could be considered in future protocols with curative intent.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
118
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9674851dfcdb18ca880ccd2a0c5a7e59