Visani G, Olivieri A, Malagola M, Brunori M, Piccaluga P P, Capelli D, Pomponio G, Martinelli G, Isidori A, Sparaventi G, Leoni P
Hematology, San Salvatore Hospital, Pesaro, Italy.
Leuk Lymphoma. 2006 Jun;47(6):1091-102. doi: 10.1080/10428190500513595.
Post-remission therapy in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remains problematic. It has been demonstrated that younger patients can maintain longer complete remissions (CR) with aggressive post-remission therapies after induction treatment: allogeneic (allo), autologous (auto) stem cell transplantation (SCT), or intensive chemotherapy (ICC). The purpose of our study was to identify the most important randomized and controlled studies comparing these three therapeutic options, in order to draw conclusions and possible suggestions for post-remission therapy of AML, according to the evidence based medicine (EBM) rules. We performed an exhaustive analysis of the literature, searching either in electronic databases or among the references of the identified articles (hand searching). We searched the MEDLINE computer database for reports from 1985 through January 2005 and selected for analysis the clinical trials conducted over adults affected by newly diagnosed AML aged less than 65 years. The study design had to satisfy strict methodological criteria and must consider global mortality and/or disease free survival as primary outcomes. Overall we found 7750 papers; by using the limits "clinical trial" as publication type, "all adults 19+ years", we were able to select 344 papers. Among these, a further selection was made, based on two main clinical queries: 1) is auto-SCT superior to ICC/no other therapy in improving DFS and/or OS in adult AML patients in first CR? 2) is allo-SCT superior to auto-SCT/other therapeutic options in improving DFS and/or OS in adult AML patients in first CR? Concerning the first query, a possible advantage of auto-SCT over ICC was not clearly supported by data from clinical trials; there is no evidence that auto-SCT is superior in terms of OS to chemotherapy. Nevertheless, the reported TRM has been significantly reduced within the past years. Thus, the percentage of patients suitable for auto-SCT in CR has increased. Moreover, the scarce data concerning the comparison between auto-SCT and chemotherapy in different subsets of patients are unable to suggest a differentiated approach in patients with high-risk, standard-risk or low-risk AML. Data from the literature show that patients with unfavorable risk disease are more often addressed to allo-SCT and patients with low-risk disease receive more often intensive consolidation chemotherapy. Concerning the second query, interpretation of data from the main prospective studies about the role of allo-SCT in previously untreated AML is not easy. The first problem is the lack of real randomized clinical trials; in fact, according to the reported studies, AML patients generally receive allo-SCT on the basis of donor availability (the so called "genetic randomization"). The second problem is the frequent absence of intention to treat analysis. Despite methodological limitations, it was possible to compare allo-SCT with auto-SCT on a donor versus no-donor analysis and within risk groups. No overall benefit of allo-grafting on survival was demonstrated by any trial. In conclusion, the EBM approach highlighted the limitations observed in the published studies concerning consolidation therapy in AML; some suggestions, emerging from non-randomized, as well as randomized studies, are adequate, but not conclusive. This point, coupled with the intrinsic complexity to study AML biological heterogeneity, is probably a major obstacle to draw conclusive evidences for consolidation therapy in AML. These observations should plan to address new randomized studies on AML therapy; however, due to the emergence of genetic subgroups and new drugs targeting specific abnormalities, these trials should probably be designed directly focusing on the single entities. In this way, the cure of AML could eventually become the cure of each specific AML subset with its peculiar biological, molecular and prognostic features.
急性髓系白血病(AML)缓解后的治疗仍然存在问题。已经证明,年轻患者在诱导治疗后采用积极的缓解后治疗方法,如同种异体(allo)、自体(auto)干细胞移植(SCT)或强化化疗(ICC),可以维持更长时间的完全缓解(CR)。我们研究的目的是根据循证医学(EBM)规则,确定比较这三种治疗选择的最重要的随机对照研究,以便得出关于AML缓解后治疗的结论和可能的建议。我们对文献进行了详尽的分析,在电子数据库或已识别文章的参考文献中进行检索(手工检索)。我们在MEDLINE计算机数据库中搜索了1985年至2005年1月的报告,并选择分析针对年龄小于65岁的新诊断AML成年患者进行的临床试验。研究设计必须满足严格的方法学标准,并且必须将总死亡率和/或无病生存期作为主要结局。总体而言,我们找到了7750篇论文;通过使用“临床试验”作为出版类型、“所有19岁及以上成年人”的限制条件,我们能够选择344篇论文。在这些论文中,基于两个主要临床问题进行了进一步筛选:1)自体SCT在改善首次完全缓解的成年AML患者的无病生存期(DFS)和/或总生存期(OS)方面是否优于强化化疗(ICC)/无其他治疗?2)在改善首次完全缓解的成年AML患者的DFS和/或OS方面,异基因SCT是否优于自体SCT/其他治疗选择?关于第一个问题,临床试验数据并未明确支持自体SCT相对于强化化疗的可能优势;没有证据表明自体SCT在总生存期方面优于化疗。然而,在过去几年中,报告的移植相关死亡率(TRM)已显著降低。因此,处于完全缓解状态适合进行自体SCT的患者比例有所增加。此外,关于不同患者亚组中自体SCT与化疗比较的稀缺数据,无法为高危、中危或低危AML患者提供差异化的治疗方法。文献数据表明,预后不良的患者更常接受异基因SCT,而低危患者更常接受强化巩固化疗。关于第二个问题,对关于异基因SCT在初治AML中作用的主要前瞻性研究数据的解释并不容易。第一个问题是缺乏真正的随机临床试验;事实上,根据已报道的研究,AML患者通常根据供体可用性接受异基因SCT(所谓的“基因随机化”)。第二个问题是经常缺乏意向性分析。尽管存在方法学上的局限性,但在供体与无供体分析以及风险组内比较异基因SCT与自体SCT是可行的。任何试验均未证明异基因移植在生存方面有总体益处。总之,循证医学方法突出了已发表研究中关于AML巩固治疗所观察到的局限性;来自非随机以及随机研究的一些建议是合理的,但并非结论性的。这一点,再加上研究AML生物学异质性的内在复杂性,可能是为AML巩固治疗得出确凿证据的主要障碍。这些观察结果应计划开展关于AML治疗的新的随机研究;然而,由于基因亚组的出现以及针对特定异常的新药,这些试验可能应直接针对单个实体进行设计。通过这种方式,AML的治愈最终可能成为每个具有其独特生物学、分子和预后特征的特定AML亚组的治愈。