TL;DR: One patient with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) in remission was given intensive chemotherapy (DAT regimen) as late intensification treatment, demonstrating that circulating hemopoietic stem cells are capable of complete hemopOietic reconstitution after marrow-ablative therapy with supralethal doses of chemoradiotherapy.
TL;DR: The overall response and CR rate in this group of previously treated AML patients is encouraging, and further studies are needed to evaluate these preliminary findings.
TL;DR: The prognostic value of marrow blast cell kinetics has been examined in 67 previously untreated ANLL patients and a significantly lower response rate was found to occur among those patients who manifested a significant increase of the LI 72 h after the first course of DAT.
TL;DR: The complete remission rate (25 per cent) in this group of very heavily pretreated ALL patients warrants further studies to evaluate these preliminary findings.
Abstract: Twelve patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) were treated with aclacinomycin A (60 mg/m2/day for five days) and VP-16-213 (100 mg/m2/day). All were heavily pretreated and had relapsed or were refractory to primary or subsequent treatment. Eight patients were refractory to reinduction therapy given for first, second, third or fourth relapse. One patient was treated in third relapse; one in second relapse (after a short second remission) and two in first relapse-one with the Ph1 chromosome, after a four-month remission, and one patient who relapsed while receiving consolidation therapy. Four patients (33 per cent) responded, three entered complete remission (25 per cent), and one a partial remission (8 per cent). Two of the patients treated for refractoriness to reinduction therapy went into complete remission. Side effects from this treatment were similar to the conventional DAT regimen (daunorubicin, cytosine arabinoside, thioguanine), although the gastrointestinal toxicity and mucositis appeared to be more severe in this study population. One of the patients had severe ventricular arrhythmias which contributed to her death. The complete remission rate (25 per cent) in this group of very heavily pretreated ALL patients warrants further studies to evaluate these preliminary findings.
TL;DR: It is reported that a reduced-dose DAT regimen is better than the standard dose for inducing CR in patients older than 60, and in elderly AML patients over 60, the dose-adjustment reported by Mori, or low-dose cytarabine with G-CSF, is recommended.
Abstract: Treatment of elderly patients with hematological malignancies is difficult and a matter of controversy. Low responsiveness to therapy and high risk of mortality have been reported. The risk of chemotherapeutic death increases after age 60, and an age-adjusted chemotherapy schedule is needed. In stage III and IV Hodgkin's disease, for example, an age-adjusted COPP regimen may be adopted. Many non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHL) of elderly patients have a slow course. However, for intermediate to high grade aggressive NHL, dose-reduced CHOP regimen, or non- or low-dose methotrexate-containing programs like BECALM, CNOP, and low dose-ACOP-B are acceptable. MACOP-B regimen with G-CSF may be used for patients under age 65. For the treatment of elderly patients with AML, it is reported that a reduced-dose DAT regimen is better than the standard dose for inducing CR in patients older than 60. In elderly AML patients over 60, the dose-adjustment reported by Mori, or low-dose cytarabine with G-CSF, is recommended. Information about elderly patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia is scarce. Aggressive treatments like L-17 M regimen are not tolerable by elderly patients, and a combination chemotherapy consisting of vincristine and prednisolone is recommended.