Pession Andrea, Valsecchi Maria Grazia, Masera Giuseppe, Kamps Willem A, Magyarosy Edina, Rizzari Carmelo, van Wering Elisabeth R, Lo Nigro Luca, van der Does Anna, Locatelli Franco, Basso Giuseppe, Aricò Maurizio
Associazione Italiana di Ematologia Oncologia Pediatrica (AIEOP), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
J Clin Oncol. 2005 Oct 1;23(28):7161-7. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2005.11.411.
Between September 1991 and May 1997, within the International Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster Study Group (I-BFM-SG), a randomized study was performed aimed at assessing the efficacy of prolonged use of high-dose l-asparaginase (HD-l-ASP) during continuation therapy in children with standard risk (SR) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), treated with a reduced BFM-type chemotherapy.
The Italian, Dutch, and Hungarian groups participated in this study denominated IDH-ALL-91, and 494 children were enrolled. Treatment consisted of a BFM-type modified backbone with omission of the IB part in induction and elimination of two doses of anthracyclines during reinduction in both arms at the beginning of continuation therapy. Patients were randomly assigned to receive (YES-ASP) or not (NO-ASP) 20 weekly HD-l-ASP (25,000 IU/m2).
The event-free-survival and overall survival probabilities at 10 years for the entire group were 82.5% (1.8) and 90.3% (1.3), respectively. Of the 490 patients eligible for random assignment, 355 (72.4%) were randomly assigned (178 YES-ASP and 177 NO-ASP). After a median follow-up of 9 years, the probability of disease-free survival at 10 years was 87.5% (SE, 2.5) for YES-ASP arm versus 78.7% (SE, 3.3) for NO-ASP arm (P = .03). In multivariate analysis, NO-ASP arm (P = .03), male sex (P = .004), and age older than 10 years (P = .0003) had a significantly adverse impact on outcome.
In this subset of patients, selected with criteria not including monitoring of minimal residual disease, application of extended HD-l-ASP may improve prognosis, compensating reduced leukemia control that results from adoption of a reduced-intensity BFM-backbone for treatment of children with SR ALL.
在1991年9月至1997年5月期间,国际柏林-法兰克福-明斯特研究小组(I-BFM-SG)开展了一项随机研究,旨在评估在采用简化BFM型化疗方案治疗的标准风险(SR)急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)患儿的延续治疗期间,长期使用高剂量L-天冬酰胺酶(HD-L-ASP)的疗效。
意大利、荷兰和匈牙利小组参与了这项名为IDH-ALL-91的研究,共纳入494名儿童。治疗方案为改良的BFM型主干方案,诱导期省略IB部分,延续治疗开始时双臂再诱导期均省略两剂蒽环类药物。患者被随机分配接受(YES-ASP组)或不接受(NO-ASP组)每周20次的HD-L-ASP(25,000 IU/m²)治疗。
整个研究组10年时的无事件生存率和总生存率分别为82.5%(±1.8)和90.3%(±1.3)。在490名符合随机分配条件的患者中,355名(72.4%)被随机分组(178名YES-ASP组和177名NO-ASP组)。中位随访9年后,YES-ASP组10年无病生存率为87.5%(标准误,2.5),NO-ASP组为78.7%(标准误,3.3)(P = 0.03)。多因素分析显示,NO-ASP组(P = 0.03)、男性(P = 0.004)和年龄大于10岁(P = 0.0003)对预后有显著不利影响。
在这组未采用微小残留病监测标准选择的患者中,应用延长疗程HD-L-ASP可能改善预后,弥补因采用低强度BFM主干方案治疗SR ALL患儿导致的白血病控制减弱的情况。