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Long-term follow-up of cladribine treatment in hairy cell leukemia: 30-year experience in a multicentric Italian study

Authors :
Livio Pagano
Marianna Criscuolo
Alessandro Broccoli
Alfonso Piciocchi
Marzia Varettoni
Eugenio Galli
Antonella Anastasia
Maria Cantonetti
Livio Trentin
Sofia Kovalchuk
Lorella Orsucci
Annamaria Frustaci
Angelica Spolzino
Stefano Volpetti
Ombretta Annibali
Sergio Storti
Caterina Stelitano
Francesco Marchesi
Massimo Offidani
Beatrice Casadei
Maria Elena Nizzoli
Maria Lucia De Luca
Luana Fianchi
Marina Motta
Luca Guarnera
Edoardo Simonetti
Andrea Visentin
Francesco Vassallo
Marina Deodato
Chiara Sarlo
Attilio Olivieri
Brunangelo Falini
Alessandro Pulsoni
Enrico Tiacci
Pier Luigi Zinzani
Source :
Blood Cancer Journal, Vol 12, Iss 7, Pp 1-8 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is a rare lymphoproliferative disease with an excellent prognosis after treatment with cladribine (2CDA), although relapse may occur during follow-up. The aim of the study is to review the efficacy, safety, long-term remission rate, and overall survival (OS) in those patients who received 2CDA as first-line treatment. We retrospectively reviewed data of HCL patients treated with 2CDA between March 1991 and May 2019 at 18 Italian Hematological centers: 513 patients were evaluable for study purpose. The median age was 54 years (range 24–88) and ECOG was 0 in 84.9% of cases. A total of 330 (64.3%) patients received 2CDA intravenously and 183 (35.7%) subcutaneously. ORR was 91.8%: CR was obtained in 335 patients (65.3%), PR in 96 (18.7%), and hematological response in 40 (7.8%) patients; in 42 (8.2%) no response was observed. Hemoglobin value (p = 0.044), frequency of circulating hairy cells (p = 0.039), recovery of absolute neutrophil count (p = 0.006), and normalization of spleen (p ≤ 0.001) were associated with CR compared to PR in univariable analysis. At a median follow-up of 6.83 years (range 0.04–28.52), the median time to relapse was 12.2 years. A significant difference in duration of response was identified between patients that obtained a CR and PR (19.4 years versus 4.8 years, p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20445385
Volume :
12
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Blood Cancer Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b587414ecc684a018ac33515eebf5f44
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-022-00702-9