Haematologica
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Haematologica, Vol 82, Issue 2, 152-155
Copyright © 1997 by Ferrata Storti Foundation


Journal Article

Hairy-cell leukemia and alpha-interferon treatment: long-term responders

PL Zinzani, F Lauria, M Salvucci, D Rondelli, D Raspadori, M Bendandi, M Magagnoli, and S Tura

Institute of Hematology and Oncology Seragnoli University of Bologna, Italy.

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: In the 1980s alpha-interferon (alpha-IFN) dramatically improved the management of hairy cell leukemia (HCL), producing normalization of hematologic parameters including the disappearance of circulating hairy cells in the majority of treated patients, within 6 months. The quality and durability of the response depended on the duration of alpha-IFN treatment; progression of the disease consistently followed discontinuation of alpha-IFN. In this report, we examine the characteristics of long-term responders from our series of 44 HCL patients treated with alpha-IFN. METHODS: We report follow-up data on 44 HCL patients who underwent alpha-IFN as first-line treatment between 1985 and 1990. The alpha-IFN dose was 3 x 10(6) U daily for 12-15 months, with 20 patients continuing to receive the same dose three times a week as maintenance treatment for an additional 6-12 months. Of the 44 patients, 8 achieved a CR, 28 a PR and 8 a MR, with an overall response rate of 82%. Thirty-eight (86%) of these patients showed disease progression and were retreated with alpha-IFN (2 pts), 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (35 pts), or pentostatin (1 pt). So far, all 38 patients are alive and in good unmaintained second response, except for two patients who developed a second neoplasm. RESULTS: Six of the 8 first complete responders are alive and have not required further treatment after completing alpha-IFN. These long responders most often (5/6) presented a hairy cell index (HCI) < 0.50 at diagnosis; all 6 registered a significant reduction in bone marrow infiltration (HCI < 0.10) after induction therapy and underwent alpha-IFN maintenance treatment. These three parameters turned out to be statistically significant when the long-term responders were compared with the failure patients subset (p = 0.003 for HCI at diagnosis; p = 0.001 for HCI at the end of the induction phase; p = 0.003 for the maintenance phase). The median progression-free survival of these 6 long-term responders was 75 months (range, 62 to 78). INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS: Overall, alpha-IFN represents an excellent palliative treatment for most HCL patients. A small subset of these patients could become long-term responders following first-line alpha-IFN therapy alone.


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Prolonging the half-life of human interferon-alpha 2 in circulation: Design, preparation, and analysis of (2-sulfo-9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl)7- interferon-alpha 2
PNAS, January 30, 2001; 98(3): 1212 - 1217.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1997 by the Ferrata Storti Foundation.