Teniposide (VM-26) and continuous infusion cytosine arabinoside for initial induction failure in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. A Pediatric Oncology Group pilot study.
Judith Ochs,Gaston K. Rivera,Brad H. Pollock,George Buchanan,William M. Crist,Arnold I. Freeman +5 more
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TL;DR: Only one patient is alive and a longterm event‐free survivor (after allogeneic marrow transplant) and more intensive regimens of continuation therapy or alternative therapies, such as bone marrow transplant, should be considered.
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Abstract: Twenty-six evaluable children with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) who failed to achieve initial remission after receiving two to seven drugs for at least a 4-week period were given teniposide (VM-26) and continuous infusion cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C). Twenty-two received 150 mg/m2 of VM-26 on days 1 and 2 with 100 mg/2 of Ara-C as a continuous infusion on days 1 through 5; a second shortened course was given on day 14 to eight patients who had evidence of some antileukemic effect or were clinically judged able to tolerate a second course. The last four patients received three daily doses of VM-26 and a 7-day infusion of Ara-C at the same daily dosages. Twelve (48%) achieved complete remission (CR) of ALL. There was a trend toward decreasing response rates with an increasing number of drugs used in the initial induction regimen, i.e., five CR among seven patients with a prior two-drug induction attempt, six CR among 14 patients with a prior three- to four-drug induction attempt, and one CR among four patients with a prior five- to seven-drug induction attempt (P = 0.14). Ten of 17 non-T-cell patients and two of nine T-cell patients achieved remission (P = 0.10). The median time required to achieve a complete remission from the initiation of treatment was 26 days (range, 14-72 days). This period was shorter in those who required one course compared with those who required two induction courses, i.e., 25 days median vs. 44 days median. Toxicity was significant and due mainly to marrow aplasia and infection; one patient had severe prolonged VM-26-induced hypotension. Of the 12 patients entering remission, two were removed for marrow transplant and one was removed due to parental request. In the remaining nine patients, median remission duration was only 2 months (range, 1-18 months). All nine patients relapsed in the marrow. Among the entire group of 26 patients, only one patient is alive and a long-term event-free survivor (after allogeneic marrow transplant). Due to the current use of more aggressive initial induction regimens and the extremely poor prognosis in children who fail to achieve initial remission, more intensive regimens of continuation therapy or alternative therapies, such as bone marrow transplant, should be considered.
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Citations
Prognostic Factors for Leukemic Induction Failure in Children With Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia and Outcome After Salvage Therapy: The FRALLE 93 Study
Caroline Oudot,Marie-Françoise Auclerc,Vincent Levy,Raphaël Porcher,Christophe Piguet,Yves Perel,Virginie Gandemer,Marianne Debré,Christiane Vermylen,Brigitte Pautard,Claire Berger,Claudine Schmitt,Thierry Leblanc,Jean-Michel Cayuela,Gérard Socié,Gérard Michel,Guy Leverger,André Baruchel +17 more
TL;DR: Three risk categories for LIF in children with ALL were identified and approximately one third of patients with LIF can be successfully treated with salvage therapy overall.
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Induction failure in acute lymphoblastic leukemia of childhood
Lewis B. Silverman,Richard D. Gelber,Mary L. Young,Virginia Dalton,Ronald D. Barr,Stephen E. Sallan +5 more
TL;DR: Although it is widely accepted that failure to achieve complete remission (CR) portends a poor prognosis in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), there is variability in the precise definition of induction failure and few published data exist regarding the outcome of patients who are slow to achieve CR.
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Epipodophyllotoxins in the treatment of childhood cancer
Gaston K. Rivera,Ching-Hon Pui,Ching-Hon Pui,Victor M. Santana,Victor M. Santana,Charles B. Pratt,Charles B. Pratt,William M. Crist,William M. Crist +8 more
TL;DR: Current data show that the most important risk factor is the schedule of drug delivery, which has led to appropriate protocol modifications, and is also used extensively in the treatment of newly diagnosed childhood solid tumors, including neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and germ-cell tumors.
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Outcome of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia with induction failure treated by the Japan Association of Childhood Leukemia Study (JACLS) ALL F-protocol
Nobuhiro Suzuki,Keiko Yumura-Yagi,Makoto Yoshida,Junichi Hara,Shin-Ichiro Nishimura,Tooru Kudoh,Akio Tawa,Ikuya Usami,Akihiko Tanizawa,Hiroki Hori,Yasuhiko Ito,Ryosuke Miyaji,Megumi Oda,Koji Kato,Kazuko Hamamoto,Yuko Osugi,Yoshiko Hashii,Tatsutoshi Nakahata,Keizo Horibe +18 more
TL;DR: Children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who fail to achieve complete remission (CR) after induction therapy (induction failure: IF) have a poor prognosis; however, there have been few prospective studies in patients with IF.
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Treatment of childhood acute myelogenous leukemia with an intensive regimen (AML-87) that individualizes etoposide and cytarabine dosages: short- and long-term effects.
MK Arnaout,KM Radomski,Deokumar Srivastava,Xin Tong,J. Belt,Susana C. Raimondi,Frederick G. Behm,Victor M. Santana,Victor M. Santana,William R. Crom,J. Mirro,J. Mirro,Raul C. Ribeiro,Raul C. Ribeiro +13 more
TL;DR: The feasibility and efficacy of a treatment regimen that uses four rotating drug pairs and adjusts dosages of etoposide and cytarabine to target specific plasma concentrations was assessed, but the potential clinical efficacy was offset by substantial acute and long-term toxicity.
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Jorge A. Ortega,Mark E. Nesbit,Milton H. Donaldson,Robert E. Hittle,John M. Weiner,Myron Karon,Denman Hammond +6 more
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