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Precision medicine treatment in acute myeloid leukemia using prospective genomic profiling: feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the Beat AML Master Trial

Authors :
Burd, Amy
Levine, Ross L.
Ruppert, Amy S.
Mims, Alice S.
Borate, Uma
Stein, Eytan M.
Patel, Prapti
Source :
Nature Medicine. December, 2020, Vol. 26 Issue 12, p1852, 7 p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the most common diagnosed leukemia. In older adults, AML confers an adverse outcome.sup.1,2. AML originates from a dominant mutation, then acquires collaborative transformative mutations leading to myeloid transformation and clinical/biological heterogeneity. Currently, AML treatment is initiated rapidly, precluding the ability to consider the mutational profile of a patient's leukemia for treatment decisions. Untreated patients with AML [greater than or equal to] 60 years were prospectively enrolled on the ongoing Beat AML trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03013998), which aims to provide cytogenetic and mutational data within 7 days (d) from sample receipt and before treatment selection, followed by treatment assignment to a sub-study based on the dominant clone. A total of 487 patients with suspected AML were enrolled; 395 were eligible. Median age was 72 years (range 60-92 years; 38% [greater than or equal to]75 years); 374 patients (94.7%) had genetic and cytogenetic analysis completed within 7 d and were centrally assigned to a Beat AML sub-study; 224 (56.7%) were enrolled on a Beat AML sub-study. The remaining 171 patients elected standard of care (SOC) (103), investigational therapy (28) or palliative care (40); 9 died before treatment assignment. Demographic, laboratory and molecular characteristics were not significantly different between patients on the Beat AML sub-studies and those receiving SOC (induction with cytarabine + daunorubicin (7 + 3 or equivalent) or hypomethylation agent). Thirty-day mortality was less frequent and overall survival was significantly longer for patients enrolled on the Beat AML sub-studies versus those who elected SOC. A precision medicine therapy strategy in AML is feasible within 7 d, allowing patients and physicians to rapidly incorporate genomic data into treatment decisions without increasing early death or adversely impacting overall survival. Preliminary results from the Beat AML umbrella trial demonstrates the feasibility and efficacy of applying prospective genomic profiling for matching newly diagnosed patients with AML with targeted therapies.<br />Author(s): Amy Burd [sup.1] , Ross L. Levine [sup.2] , Amy S. Ruppert [sup.3] , Alice S. Mims [sup.3] , Uma Borate [sup.4] , Eytan M. Stein [sup.2] , Prapti [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10788956
Volume :
26
Issue :
12
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.649527753
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-1089-8