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From the Departments of Hematology of Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nantes, Nantes, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Besançon, Besançon, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Reims, Reims, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nancy, Nancy, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Tours, Tours, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Rennes, Rennes, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire d'Amiens, Amiens, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Poitiers, Poitiers, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Dijon, Dijon, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Brest, Brest, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire d'Angers, Angers, France; Hôpital Beaujon Clichy, France; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint Etienne, Saint Etienne, France; Hôpital Avicenne, Bobigny, France; Hôpital de Colmar, Colmar, France; Pharmacia Upjohn Guyancourt, Guyancourt, France.
Three intensive consolidation strategies are currently proposed to younger adults with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in first complete remission (CR): allogeneic or autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT) and intensive consolidation chemotherapy (ICC). Patients aged 15 to 50 years with de novo AML received an induction treatment with 7 days of cytarabine and either idarubicin or rubidazone. After achievement of a CR, patients up to the age of 40 and having an HLA-identical sibling were assigned to undergo an allogeneic BMT. All the other patients received a first course of ICC with high-dose cytarabine and the same anthracycline as for induction. They were then randomly assigned to either receive a second course of ICC with amsacrine and etoposide or a combination of busulfan and cyclosphosphamide followed by an unpurged autologous BMT. Of 517 eligible patients, 367 had a CR, but only 219 (59.5%) actually received the planned intensive postremission treatment (73 allogeneic BMT, 75 autologous BMT, and 71 ICC). With a median follow-up of 62 months, the 4-year disease-free survival (DFS) of the 367 patients in CR was 39.5%. The 4-year overall survival (OS) of the 517 eligible patients was 40.5%. In multivariate analysis, DFS and OS were influenced only by the initial white blood cell count and by the French-American-British classification. The type of postremission therapy had no significant impact on the outcome. There was no difference in the 4-year DFS and OS between 88 patients for whom an allogeneic BMT was scheduled (respectively, 44% and 53%) and 134 patients of the same age category and without an HLA-identical sibling (respectively, 38% and 53%). Similarly, there was no difference in the outcome between autologous BMT and ICC. The 4-year DFS was 44% for the 86 patients randomly assigned to autologous BMT and 40% for the 78 patients assigned to ICC (P = .41). The 4-year OS was similar in the two groups (50% v 54.5%, P = .72). The median duration of hospitalization and thrombocytopenia were longer after autologous BMT (39 v 32 days, P = .006, and 109.5 v 18.5 days, P = .0001, respectively). After a first course of ICC, a second course of chemotherapy is less myelotoxic than an unpurged autologous BMT but yields comparable DFS and OS rates.
POSTREMISSION therapy remains a critical issue in acute myeloid leukemia (AML).1,2 During the past 10 years, aggressive postremission strategies have been proposed for younger patients in complete remission (CR) after induction treatment. These options include myeloablative therapy with either allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT) or autologous hematopoietic stem cell support and intensive consolidation chemotherapy (ICC).
Allogeneic BMT is currently the most effective antileukemic therapy, with a relapse rate lower than 30% when applied in first CR. However, because of its toxicity, mostly related to graft-versus-host disease, patients more than 50 years of age are generally not considered as eligible for this procedure. Moreover, its use is generally restricted to patients having an HLA-identical sibling.
Autologous stem cell transplantation offers the possibility to perform the same myeloablative regimen in patients without a compatible donor and without the risks associated with graft-versus-host disease. Whereas the toxic death rate is much lower than after allogeneic BMT, the relapse rate remains higher3 either because of the graft contamination by malignant cells or of the absence of graft-versus-leukemia effect due to the donor's lymphocytes.4,5 Several uncontrolled studies on autologous transplantation with unpurged BM,6-8 purged BM,9-11 or peripheral blood stem cells12,13 have shown that 3- to 5-year disease-free survival (DFS) rates of 30% to 60% were achieved in AML in first CR. These preliminary results were confirmed by the analysis of the EBMT registry.14 However, all these studies raised the issue of patient selection.
In pilot studies with ICC, DFS rates of 30% to 50% have also been achieved, but with the same concerns regarding patient selection.15-22
Therefore, large randomized studies comparing autologous transplantation and intensive chemotherapy as postremission therapy in adult AML were necessary. The first large randomized study comparing allogeneic BMT, autologous BMT (ABMT), and ICC was recently published by the EORTC and GIMEMA groups.23 In this study, allogeneic BMT and ABMT resulted in significantly better DFS than ICC with high-dose cytarabine (HD-ARA-C). We herein report the results of a multicenter randomized study conducted by the GOELAM group also comparing ABMT and ICC.
Patients.
Patients 15 to 50 years of age with previously untreated primary AML were eligible for entry into the trial. The diagnosis was assessed by a BM aspirate showing at least 30% blast cells or, in case of myelofibrosis, by a BM biopsy. Each case was classified according to the French-American-British (FAB) System.24 No central pathology review was performed. Informed consent was obtained according to the French regulation.
Between November 1987 and May 1994, 535 patients from 16 institutions were included in the study. Eighteen patients were considered ineligible, 9 because of an inadequate diagnosis, 7 because of age limits, and 2 because of other ineligibility criteria. The clinical characteristics of the 517 eligible patients are shown in Table 1. Thirteen patients were unevaluable, 4 because they died before having received the first day of treatment, 5 because of major protocol violation, and 4 because of a wrong randomization. There was no significant difference between the two groups (IDR or RBZ) regarding the initial characteristics.
In this study, three intensive strategies were used as postremission therapy in patients with de novo AML up to 50 years of age: allogeneic BMT or a first course of ICC followed by either an unpurged ABMT or a second course of ICC. As in previous reports on intensive postremission therapy,23,35,36 the feasibility of our protocol was an important issue. Only 59.5% of the patients achieving a CR could actually undergo the assigned intensive treatment and only 164 of the 517 eligible patients (32%) could be randomized between ABMT and ICC. Some of the exclusions were explained by patients' or even physicians' psychologic reticences regarding autologous transplantation. This study was initiated in 1987 when autologous transplantation was not as widely offered as it is currently. However, the majority of withdrawals were due to complications of the first intensive consolidation (hematologic or extrahematologic toxicities, poor hematologic reconstitution precluding BM harvest with sufficient hematopoietic quality). The use of hematopoietic growth factors could partly resolve these problems by reducing the morbidity and mortality related to hematologic toxicity of intensive chemotherapy. Several controlled studies have shown that the use of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) or granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in AML is not deleterious.37,38
Submitted October 21, 1996;
accepted June 18, 1997.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be hearly marked
``advertisment'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734 solely to
indicate this fact. The authors are greatly indebted to Mariette Mercier, Valérie Polin, and Erard Gilles for help in statistical analysis and to Charlotte Avet Loiseau for editing the manuscript.
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1996 |