Haematologica, Vol 92, Issue 11, 1519-1532 doi:10.3324/haematol.11203
Copyright © 2007 by Ferrata Storti Foundation
Pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: towards high-quality cure of all patients
Gertjan J.L. Kaspers,
Christian M. Zwaan
From the Pediatric Oncology/Hematology VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam The Netherlands (GJLK); Pediatric Oncology/Hematology, Erasmus MC/Sophia Childrens Hospital, Rotterdam (CNZ)
Correspondence: Gertjan J.L. Kaspers, Pediatric Oncology/Hematology, VU University Medical Center, De Boelelaan 1117 NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands. E-mail: gjl.kaspers{at}vumc.nl

ABSTRACT
Prognosis of childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has improved
significantly over the past decades, from nearly no child surviving
to a present probability of cure of approximately 60%. However,
this can only be achieved using very intensive chemotherapy
which results in relatively high rates of treatment related
deaths and significant late effects. This review summarizes
current and future classification of pediatric AML, ongoing
phase III studies, and subgroup-directed treatment. In addition,
the possibilities for more precise risk-group stratification
which would allow more tailored and further refined subgroup-directed
treatment are discussed. These include minimal residual disease
monitoring, pharmacogenomics and the detection of AML-specific
molecular abnormalities. Finally, we discuss the opportunities
for innovative therapy in pediatric AML, such as the use of
novel analogues, monoclonal antibody-mediated drugs, and receptor
tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Given the enormous increase in our
understanding of the underlying biology of AML, and the development
of many new targeted drugs, it should be possible to achieve
high-quality cure in nearly all children and adolescents with
AML within the next few decades.
Key words: acute myeloid leukemia, childhood, quality of life, prognosis, clinical trials, risk-group classification, molecular biology.
The prognosis of children and adolescents with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has improved significantly over the past decades. Nowadays, up to 65% of pediatric AML patients experience long-term survival.1 This has been achieved not only by the more effective use of anti-leukemic agents, but also by improvements in supportive care and by better risk-group stratification. Current risk-group classification is mainly based on cytogenetics and early response to treatment. Such early response is measured either by minimal residual disease (MRD) or, more often, by bone marrow response during or after the 1st course of chemotherapy. Therapy nowadays consists of a limited number of intensive courses of chemotherapy based on cytarabine and an anthracycline. While most European pediatric AML groups are abandoning stem cell transplantation in first complete remission,2,3 the Childrens Oncology Group (COG) and other groups still advocate its use in most patients up-front, except in good risk patients with t(8;21) or inv(16) (personal communication, Dr. A. Gamis, June 28, 2006). An important problem in the treatment of pediatric AML remains the high frequency of treatment related deaths as well as the long term side-effects.4–6 This also hampers further therapy-intensification, and most investigators therefore feel that we have reached a plateau in the number of patients that can be cured with current chemotherapy regimens. Our efforts should, therefore, focus on clarifying the biology of pediatric AML. This knowledge can be used for novel classification and risk-group stratification. In addition, it creates the potential for targeted, i.e. more leukemia-specific, therapy. It is anticipated that such therapies will increase the cure-rate and also decrease the toxicity of treatment of children with AML. A large number of new agents are currently under development, mainly in adults. Only the most promising of these new drugs should be adopted for pediatric studies, since the possibility of testing new agents in pediatric oncology is limited because of the small number of available patients. However, international collaboration between the various collaborative pediatric AML treatment groups does enable both drug development (through the ITCC consortium: Innovative therapies for children with cancer, www.itccconsortium.org), and phase III clinical studies. New intergroup phase III protocols have been developed for rare distinct subtypes of AML, such as myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome and acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). This review summarizes the most important areas in which progress is being made, with an emphasis on classification, current phase III clinical studies, subgroup-directed therapy, minimal residual disease monitoring and innovative drug treatment of AML.

AML classification: whats new?
Traditionally, AML is classified according to morphology, which
is described in the so-called FAB (French-American-British)
classification, as summarized in
Table 1.
7 In the more recent
additions to this classification, describing FAB M0 and M7,
immunophenotyping is considered essential to the correct diagnosis
of these subtypes.
8,9
More recently, karyotyping has become extremely important for
the classification of AML, since karyotypes were found to be
predictive of prognosis. The recent World Health Organization
(WHO) classification, which is also summarized in Table 1, is
therefore mainly based on cytogenetics.
10 This classification
is not yet routinely implemented in pediatric hematology/oncology.
This may be explained at least in part by the fact that several
factors specific for pediatric AML are not addressed in this
classification. First of all, to allow a diagnosis of AML, the
threshold for the percentage of blasts was lowered from 30 to
20%. Therefore, pediatric cases formerly classified as myelodysplasia,
i.e. refractory anemia in excess of blasts in transformation
(RAEBt), are now formally classified as AML. However, it has
not been demonstrated in well-designed clinical trials that
such patients benefit from intensive AML chemotherapy preceding
stem cell transplantation, and infact, the data from the European
Working Group on Myelodysplastic Syndrome (EWOG-MDS) even suggest
that this may not be the case.
11 As many cases of MDS in children
are hypoplastic, intensive chemotherapy may result in long-lasting
aplasia and infectious complications. A more practical approach
to differentiate between AML and MDS, rather than a definition
based on strict blast percentages, is to assess disease progression
with a wait-and-see policy, and to look for signs indicative
of AML such as hepato- and/or splenomegaly and non-random genetic
abnormalities.
12 Secondly, the WHO-classification does not recognize
rare but important subgroups in pediatric AML, such as infants
with AML FAB M7 and a translocation (1;22). In addition, children
with myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome are not mentioned as
a separate entity in the WHO classification for AML or myelodysplastic
syndrome.
12 Neither the WHO-or the FAB-classification uses age
criteria to classify AML. However, although the underlying biology
of certain well-defined cytogenetic subgroups may not differ
between adults and children, there are striking differences
between the various age-groups in AML: (i) prognosis declines
with increasing age, from 50–70% survival in children,
3,13–15 to approximately 40–50% for younger adults, and only 10%
for older adults;
16,17 (ii) this may be due to a different distribution
of risk-factors, since children have higher frequencies of the
good-risk cytogenetic subgroups defined as the core binding
factor (CBF) leukemias with either t(8;21) or inversion(16),
and acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). Children also have less
frequently myelodysplasia, preceding AML and have a lower frequency
of P-glycoprotein overexpression;
18,19 (iii) host factors differ
extensively. Children usually tolerate chemotherapy better and
treatment doses can be higher. Even within the pediatric age
group there may be differences in the distribution of AML subtypes,
such as for FAB M5, which is the predominant FAB-type in infants.
Recent data suggest that, apart from the translocations that interfere with transcription factors (referred to as type 2 abnormalities), other genetic abnormalities are of interest in AML. For instance, mutations in receptor tyrosine kinases, tyrosine phosphatases and in oncogenes such as RAS, may be important as they confer a proliferative advantage to these leukemias (referred to as type 1 abnormalities, see Figure 1).20–24 In pediatric AML, the frequencies of these abnormalities again differs from adult AML. For instance, the frequency of FLT3 internal tandem duplications (FLT3/ITD) is 10–15% in children and 20–30% in adults.22,25 The type 2 abnormalities are interrelated with morphology and conventional cytogenetics, and certain interesting new data emerge form these observations: (i) the pediatric CBF leukemias have a high frequency of KIT-mutations in exon 8 and 17 (40–50%).20 The true frequency may even be higher, as recently ITDs in KIT have been described in exon 11 and 12;26 (ii) FLT3/ITD can be found in 20–25% of pediatric cases with an otherwise normal karyotype, and in 35% of children with APL, but is rare in CBF-leukemias and in AML M5;22,24 (iii) PTPN11 mutations seem to occur in approximately 20% of AML M5 in pediatric patients from Southern Europe, but only 7% in Northern Europe.23,27
Recently, novel mutations of nucleophosmin (
NPM1) have been
discovered.
NPM1 is involved in the arf-p53 tumor suppressor
pathway, and
NPM1 mutations can be found in 5–10% of pediatric
AML cases, but up to 20–30% in the subgroup with a normal
karyotype.
28–30 This is a lower frequency than that is
found in adults, where
NPM1 mutations can be found in 50–60%
of normal karyotype patients and confer a favorable prognosis.
31 Children with AML usually present with
NPM1 mutations in their
leukemic cells (mainly type B mutations) that differ from those
found in adults (mainly type A mutations). This may indicate
differences in leukemia pathogenesis between adults and children.
32 NPM1 mutations are frequently associated with mutations in the
FLT3 gene, and loose their favorable prognostic impact when
a
FLT3 mutation is present in the same sample.
31,33 Pediatric
data from the COG show that mutated patients did not have an
improved outcome, although there was a trend for better prognosis
in the
normal karyotype subgroup.
30 Combined FLT3 and
NPM1 pediatric
data are not yet available. Apart from
NPM1 mutations and
FLT3/ITDs,
several new genetic abnormalities have been identified in normal
karyotype AML, such as mutations in
CEPB
, which occur in up
to 20% of adult normal karyotype AML and are associated with
favorable prognosis.
34 Other abnormalities, all associated with
poor outcome, include the MLL-partial tandem duplication,
35 and overexpression of the
ERG36 and BAALC genes.
37 However,
for most of these abnormalities only very limited pediatric
data are available.
Clearly, much progress has been made in understanding the genetic abnormalities underlying the various subtypes of AML, and new classification schemes will have to consider this new information.38,39

Ongoing phase III trias in pediatric AML
Recently published results of pediatric phase III trials are
summarized in
Table 2. In these studies, mainly performed in
the previous decade, most groups achieved survival rates of
between 40 and 60%, with the best outcome reported by the MRC
group (5-year overall survival of 68%).
3 However, the MRC AML
10 and 12 studies applied a relatively high cumulative dosage
(roughly 550 mg/m
2, when utilizing the most arbitrary conversion
factor of 1:5 to convert dosages of idarubicin and mitoxantrone
to the cumulative dosage of anthracyclines) of anthracyclines,
and cumulative dosages above 300 mg/m
2 are well-known for their
increased risk of cardiac toxicity.
40 Therefore, it would be
interesting if late cardiac toxicity data became available from
patients treated in the MRC studies, since this may allow us
to re-evaluate the excellent anti-leukemic results that were
reported using these protocols.
40 In the POG-9421 study, the
concept of MDR-reversal by adding cyclopsorin A was tested but
did not show better responses. This was possibly due to the
low expression of P-glycoprotein in pediatric AML.
18,19 The
ongoing phase III clinical studies in pediatric AML address
several important new issues, as summarized in
Table 3. Several
conclusions can be drawn from an analysis of these studies.
First of all, three different and relatively new drugs are being
investigated in phase III collaborative group studies, i.e.
gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO, Mylotarg
®), 2-chloro-deoxyadenosine
(2-CDA, Cladribine
®) and liposomal daunorubicin (DNX, DaunoXome
®).
Interestingly, GO is studied in all 3 phases of treatment, i.e.
in induction, consolidation and in a minimal residual disease
setting. Secondly, some of the aims reflect not just an attempt
to increase anti-leukemic efficacy, but also to reduce toxicity,
especially late cardiac toxicity. Both the current randomized
MRC-consolidation question and the randomized use of liposomal
daunorubicin in the AML-BFM study and the international Relapsed
AML 2001/01 study are examples of this. Finally, the concept
of subgroup-directed therapy is applied by administering 2-CDA
in high risk patients in the AML-BFM study, as well as in the
St. Jude trials. Although relatively small numbers are involved,
it has been reported that FAB M5 AML blasts in particular are
significantly more sensitive to 2-CDA, both
in vitro and
in vivo.
41,42
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Table 3. Clinical study questions and/or specific treatment in certain phases in ongoing, actively recruiting phase III clinical trials in pediatric AML (excluding acute promyelocytic leukemia and myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome).
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Tailored and subgroup therapy in pediatric AML risk groups
Most pediatric collaborative study groups use risk-stratified
therapy, based on a combination of cytogenetics and early treatment
response. Early treatment response is usually determined using
the day 15 bone marrow, or by achieving complete remission after
1 course of chemotherapy. This does not apply to patients with
APL, as they are being treated with ATRA which induces differentiation
and blasts disappear relatively slowly.
43 The MRC studies showed
that, in contrast to other subgroups, slow early response in
the CBF-leukemias does not compromise overall survival, and
therefore does not need to be considered in these studies.
3
An overview of current risk group classification used in the various collaborative groups is given in Table 4, demonstrating similarities but also discrepancies in risk-group classification. In the cytogenetic classification, the CBF leukemias and APL are generally considered a favorable risk.3,44 In addition, some study groups, i.e. the Nordic Society for Pediatric Hematology and Oncology (NOPHO) and St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital, consider the subgroup of AML patients with a t(9;11) as favorable.45,46 Although patients with t(8;21) are generally considered good-risk, their relapse rate is actually at best average1, and a good outcome is more likely to be explained by a high salvage-rate after relapse.47,48 Children with monosomy 7 or del(7q) are generally considered to have a poor prognosis, although a recent retrospective pediatric intergroup analysis confirmed the earlier finding in adults and children reported by Grimwade et al. that patients with del(7q) in fact have an intermediate prognosis.49,50 Myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome is considered a favorable AML subgroup and is discussed separately below.
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Table 4. Current risk group stratification in several pediatric AML collaborative group treatment protocols (excluding acute promyelocytic leukemia and myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome), and percentages of the total group of patients per risk-group.
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There is clear evidence that
FLT3 length mutations are associated
with a poor prognosis in children with AML.
21,22 Based on these
data, several groups have decided to stratify patients with
a
FLT3/ITD to the high-risk group. However, recent data suggest
that the presence of a
FLT3/ITD by itself does not indicate
an unfavorable prognosis in pediatric AML, but rather the allelic
ratio (AR) between mutant and wild-type FLT3.
51 Meschinchi
et al. reported that patients with an AR below or equal to 0.4
had a similar prognosis to patients without
FLT3/ITD, while
patients with an AR>0.4 had very poor outcome. Interestingly,
the point-mutations which occur in the kinase domain of the
FLT3 gene in almost 7% of patients have not been associated
with poor clinical outcome.
51 So far, no studies have been reported
in which flt3 inhibitors have been tested in pediatric AML patients.
Recent studies suggest that C-KIT mutations also confer poor outcome, especially within the subgroup of core-binding factor leukemias, although Boissel et al. report that KIT– mutations were not predictive in the inv(16) subgroup.20,52,53 So far this has not been applied to risk-group classification, and larger and prospective studies in pediatric AML are needed to confirm the prognostic significance of KIT– mutations.

Myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome
Children with Down syndrome have an increased risk of developing
leukemias,
54 not only myeloid leukemia but also acute lymphoblastic
leukemia (ALL). The myeloid leukemias differ from regular pediatric
AML and are considered a single entity.
55 They are therefore
referred to as
Myeloid Leukemia of Down syndrome.
12 They are
characterized by (i) a predominance of the FAB types M0, M6
and mainly M7, (ii) onset before the age of 5 years, (iii) a
low white blood cell count at diagnosis, (iv) the presence of
mutations in the
GATA1 gene, which encodes a hematopoietic transcription
factor ß and (5) a frequent pre-phase with thrombocytopenia
or myelodysplasia.
56,57 This pre-phase needs to be differentiated
from the transient leukemia which may be diagnosed in children
with Down syndrome in the neonatal period.
58 This transient
leukemia disappears spontaneously in most infants, but approximately
20% of them present later with myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome.
59 Furthermore, some children with transient leukemia die from
disease-related complications.
60 An important new question is
whether the progression from transient leukemia to later AML
can be prevented with chemotherapy prophylaxis. Several studies
have been set up in the pediatric community to investigate this
further. In the past, children with myeloid leukemia of Down
syndrome were often not offered curative treatment. However,
studies performed in the eighties showed that these patients
were curable with chemotherapy.
61,62 In vitro studies by us
and others demonstrated an enhanced sensitivity to anticancer
drugs of AML blasts from children with Down syndrome.
63,64 Because
children with Down syndrome also have an increased risk of treatment
related mortality, treatment intensity needs to be carefully
balanced against toxicity. Currently, excellent results have
been obtained with moderate intensity treatment protocols without
stem-cell transplantation.
57 This also led to the initiative
of an
International Pediatric AML Group protocol for children
with myeloid leukemia and Down syndrome which will start enrolling
patients in the near future.

Acute promyelocytic leukemia
Low-risk and high-risk APL patients can be distinguished by
white blood cell count at initial diagnosis.
43,65 APL is the
point of reference for targeted treatment in hematologic malignancies,
as all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) induces differentiation of
APL cells by targeting pml-rara.
66,67 ATRA is usually added
to chemotherapy in induction because, this reduces early mortality,
especially by decreasing the bleeding tendency which is typical
for APL.
68 In the case of high white blood cell counts, early
chemotherapy in addition to ATRA decreases the incidence of
the ATRA syndrome. This syndrome is characterised by fever,
weight gain, respiratory distress and pleural and pericardial
effusions, and occurs in approximately 10% of children with
APL treated with ATRA.
43 It is currently unknown whether prolonged
use of ATRA will further improve the prognosis for children
with APL.
43
High cumulative dosages of anthracyclines are very effective in APL, and in adults it has been debated whether APL can be treated with ATRA and anthracycline monotherapy.69 However, it is unknown whether this can be applied to pediatric APL, especially since we want to avoid higher dosages of anthracyclines (>300 mg/m2) which may result in significant cardiotoxicity.40,70 The so-called International Consortium for childhood APL recently developed an intergroup protocol for children with APL. ATRA will be used in all phases of treatment, and the cumulative doses of anthracyclines is limited to 355 mg/m2 in low risk, and 405 mg/m2 in high-risk patients. Gemtuzumab ozogamicin will be used in the salvage regimen.71
Quantitative molecular monitoring of minimal residual disease is recommended in APL, and molecular persisting or residual disease should be treated before full-blown relapse occurs.72,73 There is no clear-cut clinical evidence to support this, as it is unknown whether early treatment in an MRD-setting leads to a better outcome than treatment at frank relapse. However, there is sufficient evidence that molecular persisting disease after consolidation or rising RQ-PCR levels indicating molecular relapse will evolve to frank disease, and it makes sense to treat APL before clinical problems such as coagulation disorders become evident. Initiating treatment when there is still a relatively low tumor burden also reduces the risk of secondary mutations and clonal evolution. Several studies suggest the effectiveness of ATRA combined with arsenic trioxide without conventional chemotherapy.74 However, experts recently reported that it is too early to conclude that this should replace current ATRA and conventional chemotherapy-based protocols, until randomized studies are available.75 As far as children are concerned we need to have more data regarding safety and efficacy in adult AML before routinely introducing arsenic in up-front APL protocols.

Minimal residual disease monitoring
In ALL, measurement of minimal residual disease (MRD) by leukemia-specific
PCR-based quantitative techniques has emerged as a very powerful
prognostic factor,
76 and several groups are currently using
MRD-levels to stratify treatment. In AML, progress has been
less striking. MRD monitoring of fusion gene transcripts is
made difficult by the heterogeneity of AML, and because it has
been observed that persisting low levels of fusion genes (especially
for the CBF-leukemias) may exist in the absence of relapse.
77 However, this drawback may be overcome by the development of
quantitative PCR-technology which may be predictive of prognosis.
78–80
Several collaborative AML groups currently focus on MRD monitoring by flow cytometry.81 Only a few studies demonstrated the clinical significance of MRD in pediatric AML.82–84 MRD measurements by flow cytometry are based on leukemia-specific aberrant antigen expression and can be applied in the vast majority of AML patients. One problem is that immunophenotypic shifts between diagnosis and relapse occur in most patients.82 Also, the sensitivity of MRD by flow cytometry in AML is still too limited. While it became clear that in ALL it is important to be able to detect at least 1 in 104 cells, flow cytometry in AML currently has a sensitivity in the range of 0.1–0.01%.82 However, the technical possibilities are improving rapidly, and 8- to 12-color flow cytometry is now possible. This will undoubtedly make the technique more sensitive although more complex. Therefore, standardization of flow-based MRD technology is urgently required. Currently, only St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital is using MRD for treatment-stratification, and most other groups still have to perform trials to confirm its prognostic significance and define their cut-off values for further prospective studies.
Newly detected genes may be more promising as MRD targets. For instance, overexpression of the Wilms tumor gene 1 was found to be an independent predictor of relapse, although wt1 is also expressed by normal hematopoietic progenitors which may hamper its specificity at low MRD-levels.81,85 Alternatively, FLT3/ITDs may be used as MRD markers, although clonal instability has been described.86 NPM1 may be another candidate, although the frequency is relatively low in pediatric AML.87 However, most of these markers still need to be confirmed in larger and prospective clinical trials in pediatric AML before they can be used.

Pharmacogenomics
Recent studies have analyzed the influence of host-factors on
outcome in pediatric AML. CCG studies have shown that Hispanics
and black children have a poorer outcome than white children.
This may be because of pharmacogenetic differences.
88 Interestingly,
black children also had fewer HLA-identical sibling donors available.
There have been no larger prospective studies linking drug-metabolizing polymorphisms to outcome in pediatric AML.89 So far, mostly single gene polymorphisms have been studied. Davies et al., for example, reported that children who lacked glutathion s-transferase theta 1 (gstt1) had greater toxicity and reduced survival after chemotherapy for AML compared with children with at least one GSTT1 allele.90 However, polymorphisms in the gene encoding for XPD, which is involved in DNA-repair, did not affect the etiology or outcome of pediatric AML.91

Innovative therapies and drug development studies in pediatric AML
Drug development studies in pediatric AML are made more difficult
by the low number of patients, as well as by the fact that most
patients are heavily pretreated. This creates the problem that
potentially effective new drugs may be abandoned because of
lack of efficacy, when in fact this is caused by the resistance
phenotype of the leukemias rather than lack of efficacy of a
new drug. Another problem is that the market is too small to
interest pharmaceutical companies to carry out pediatric studies.
Since 1997, this has been addressed in the USA by creating specific
regulations regarding medicinal products for pediatric use and
the extension of market exclusivity (
the Pediatric Rule). In
Europe, a similar law (
Better Medicines for Children) is in
the last stages of implementation by the Agency for the Evaluation
of Medicinal Products (EMEA,
www.emea.eu). We discuss here the
results of several phase I/II studies in pediatric AML. In addition,
we briefly discuss drugs that are being explored in adults,
and that may become of interest to the pediatric population
in the near future.

2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (cladribine)
Resistance to cytarabine is a major cause of treatment failure
in AML, and new analogues have been designed to overcome this
resistance. Like cytarabine, cladribine is phosphorylated into
its triphosphate form and incorporated into the DNA of cycling
cells, resulting in cell death. However, cladribine may also
induce apoptosis in non-dividing cells, and is resistant to
inactivation by deamination.
41 Of interest,
in vitro, cladribine
was the only analogue that was significantly more cytotoxic
towards pediatric AML than ALL cells among an in-vitro panel
of more than 10 drugs.
41 Clinical studies with continuous infusion
of cladribine showed 59% of relapsed pediatric AML patients
responded, with a CR rate of 27%.
92 In
de novo AML, single-agent
cladribine induced CR in 42% of pediatric patients after 2 courses.
42 However, acute monoblastic leukemia (FAB M5) was seen to be
more sensitive than non-FAB type M5 cases (n=20,
p=0.002) with
a CR rate of 71%.
42 Subsequently, cladribine was combined with
cytarabine, and the combination appeared to be more effective
if cytarabine was given by continuous infusion rates than by
a 2-hour infusion, with a CR rate after 1 course of 63% vs.
32% respectively in pediatric AML patients.
93 The BFM-group
has currently also included cladribine in the BFM-AML 2004 study
for high-risk children, which includes most FAB M5 patients.

Clofarabine
Clofarabine is a designer nucleoside analog. It is orally bioavailable
and combines the most favorable pharmacokinetic properties of
fludarabine and cladribine. This results in a drug that potently
inhibits DNA polymerases and DNA synthesis as well as ribonucleotide
reductase. In relapsed/refractory pediatric AML, however, only
limited efficacy was found, with only 1 complete remission (with
insufficient platelet recovery) and 8 partial remissions out
of 35 children.
94 However, in elderly patients who were not
considered fit to undergo intensive multi-agent chemotherapy,
clofarabine 30 mg/m
2 for 5 days per course with a maximum of
5 courses was well tolerated, and 59% of patients achieved complete
remission after 1 course.
95 Clofarabine has now been registered
by the FDA and the EMEA for use in relapsed/refractory pediatric
ALL, based on data by Jeha
et al.
96 Several pediatric studies
with clofarabine in combination with other chemotherapeutic
agents, such as cytarabine and cyclophosphamide plus etoposide,
are ongoing. Ideally, a randomized study should confirm the
benefit of novel nucleoside analogs such as clofarabine as compared
with cytarabine or the combination of fludarabine, cytarabine
and G-CSF (FLAG).

Liposomal daunorubicin
Liposomal daunorubin was mainly known for its use in Kaposi
sarcoma. Among a cohort of nearly 1,000 adult patients treated
with liposomal daunorubicin at cumulative doses of up to 1,700
mg/m
2, only 1 patient developed clinically apparent cardiotoxicity.
97 In general, liposomal anthracyclines cause less cardiotoxicity
than conventional anthracyclines.
98 This may be explained by
a preferential release of daunorubicin in tumor cells. In a
mouse study, low incorporation of liposomal daunorubicin in
heart muscle was found when compared with tumor cells.
99 Several
other animal studies demonstrated a lack of cardiotoxicity of
liposomal anthracyclines, while other
in vitro and animal studies
showed that at an equivalent daunorubicin dose, liposomal daunorubicin
had more anti-tumor effect than conventional daunorubicin.
100,101 These findings stimulated the use of liposomal daunorubicin
in AML because the use of anthracyclines is limited by acute
and long-term cardiotoxicity.
40,70 In one study, liposomal daunrobicin
was combined with cytarabine in 69 children with pediatric relapsed/refractory
AML. This was feasible in terms of toxicity and induced a 2
nd remission in 67% of children.
102 The BFM group is currently
randomizing between liposomal daunorubicin and idarubicin in
induction for pediatric
de novo AML. The international study
Relapsed AML 2001/01 randomizes liposomal daunorubicin on a
basis of FLAG (fludarabine, cytarabine and G-CSF). This will
provide data on both efficacy and long-term cardiotoxicity.
So far, acute cardiotoxicity has not been a problem in these
studies.

Gemtuzumab ozogamicin
Gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO) is an anti-CD33 directed monoclonal
antibody which is linked to a potent cytotoxic agent, calicheamicin.
103 After binding to CD33, the drug is internalized and the calicheamicin
is released, resulting in apoptosis by inducing DNA double strand
breaks. Although GO was thought to be highly leukemia specific,
at least 2 major side-effects have occurred that were not anticipated,
maybe due to CD33 expression on the cells that are involved
in these complications. The first is the occurrence of sinusoidal
obstruction syndrome (SOS), and the second is slow platelet
recovery.
104,105 In pediatric AML, a phase I study was performed
which showed that the MTD was 2 infusions at 6 mg/m
2 with a
14-day interval, with SOS as dose-limiting toxicity at the 9
mg/m
2 dose-level.
106 All patients had myelosuppression, and
other toxicities included grade 3–4 hyperbilirubinemia
(7%) and elevated hepatic transaminases (21%). However, the
incidence of grade 3–4 mucositis (3%) and sepsis (24%)
was low. The remission rate was 28%. Thirteen patients were
transplanted within 3.5 months post re-induction with GO, of
which 6 (40%) developed SOS during this procedure. In an earlier
report, 15 children were reported, treated on compassionate
use basis with GO 4–9 mg/m
2, up to 3 infusions.
107 Eight
children had no evidence of leukemia, of which 5 were classified
as CRp (complete remission with insufficient platelet recovery).
Toxicity consisted of veno-occlusive disease (n=1), grade 3
hyperbilirubinemia (n=1), grade 3 transaminase elevation (n=1)
and grade 3 hypotension during GO administration (n=1). No infections
or mucositis occurred. Versluys
et al. reported on 5 children
with AML, and suggested that defibrotide may play a role in
the prevention of SOS at subsequent stem-cell transplantation
after re-induction with GO.
108 In another compassionate use
series, 12 children (including 9 AML cases) were treated with
GO, 3–9 mg/m
2 for 1–5 infusions.
109 There was a
25% response rate, and no SOS occurred. In general, GO seems
to be an active agent in these very resistant patients. The
toxicity profile is acceptable apart from the risk of SOS. In
adult AML studies, GO has been combined at induction and consolidation
with conventional chemotherapy.
110 This study showed that low
dose GO (3 mg/m
2) was very well tolerated when incorporated
in such regimens (although not in consecutive courses), and
that combination with thioguanine was not possible due to hepatotoxicity.
In pediatrics, GO has been combined with cytarabine in relapsed/refractory
AML.
111 Currently, several pediatric study groups have also
incorporated GO in their upfront treatment protocols (
Table 3).
Several study groups are investigating which role GO can play
and in which patient-groups, including the MRC and COG. The
recent MRC AML15 study in
de novo and secondary AML has shown
improved disease-free survival with GO, although not a significantly
improved overall survival.
112 Prolonged follow-up will show
if survival also improves with GO. GO should become available
for larger clinical studies in pediatric AML, but the current
lack of registration of GO in Europe is a problem still to be
resolved.

Potential new drugs for pediatric AML that are being tested in adults
The impressive results obtained with imatinib mesylate in chronic
myeloid leukemia have increased interest in inhibitors of type
1 genetic abnormalities in AML.
113 Apart from activity against
bcr-abl, imatinib also inhibits wild-type c-kit which is normally
expressed on AML cells. Given this, Kindler
et al. performed
a phase II study in which 21 patients were treated with 600
mg imatinib once daily.
114 Two patients had a complete hematologic
remission and one other patient showed no evidence of leukemia
after treatment. None of the patients were
KIT mutated. Whether
dasatinib will prove to be a more potent inhibitor of kit still
needs to be seen.
115 A potential advantage of dasatinib over
imatinib is that it also inhibits the D816V mutation which is
relatively frequent in pediatric AML.
20,115 Another flt3 and
c-kit inhibitor is PKC412. This is of clinical interest given
the mutually exclusive mutations in either C-KIT or FLT3 in
up to 30% of pediatric AML patients.
20 PKC412 has not yet been
studied in children, but a phase II study in adults showed clinical
activity.
116 Various other flt3-inhibitors have been tested
in phase I/II clinical trials in adults.
117,118 In general,
these inhibitors result in relatively short-lived reductions
in peripheral blood or bone-marrow blast counts.
116–118 This is similar to the experience with imatinib in Philadelphia-positive
acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and probably reflects the fact
that AML and Ph
+ ALL are genetically multi-hit diseases.
119 Current studies focus on the addition of these compounds to
regular chemotherapy. A recent in-vitro study of
MLL-gene rearranged
MLL suggests that flt3 inhibitors are best given directly after
exposure to chemotherapy.
120 Schedule dependency has also been
observed for imatinib in Philadelphia chromosome positive ALL.
121 Whether a newly developed antibody against flt3 will be more
effective than the small molecules has to be awaited.
122 A trial
with SU5416, which is an inhibitor with activity against multiple
targets relevant in AML (flt3, kit and vegf), also showed only
modest activity with 5% partial responses in 55 patients.
123 A phase I study with another multi-targeted tyrosine kinase
inhibitor, sunitinib (SU11248, Sutent
®),
124 obtained responses
in all
FLT3-mutated AML patients (n=4), as compared with 2 out
of 7 non-mutated AML patients, although the responses were short-lived.
125 Sunitinib is now registered for use in gastrointestinal stroma
cell tumors and metastatic renal cancer.
126 Farnesyltransferase
inhibitors (FTI) is a novel class of anti-cancer agents that
interfere with the farnesylation of several proteins, such as
ras and rhoB.
127 Tipifarnib, which is one of the FTIs, has shown
promising activity in a phase II study of previously untreated
elderly AML or MDS patients, with a complete response rate of
14% and an overall response rate of 23%.
128 However, in pre-treated
patients, activity was very limited.
129 Currently, no data on
tipifarnib in pediatric AML are available. Clearly, many new
compounds are available which may be of interest for pediatric
AML. Only the most promising can be adopted, given the low numbers
of patients available to test these compounds, and selection
must be guided by preliminary results in adults. Furthermore,
international collaboration is essential for most if not all
early clinical studies with targeted agents.

Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
Allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT) aims at reducing
the risk of relapse by administering high-dose anti-leukemic
therapy, and by inducing a graft-versus-leukemia (GvL) response
which matches that of graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). To assess
the potential benefit of allo-SCT, many studies focus on the
reduction of relapse risk only. However, treatment related mortality
should be taken into account, and therefore benefit should be
expressed as improvement in overall survival rather than the
cumulative incidence of relapse only. Autologous SCT has not
been shown to be superior to chemotherapy-based consolidation.
130,131 However, several studies in pediatric AML have shown the superiority
of allo-SCT compared to chemotherapy, as summarized by Bleakley
et al.
132 When interpreting these data, however, it should be
recognised that the actual reduction of relapse risk is highly
dependent on the efficacy and intensity of the control chemotherapy
arm.
133 In current studies, from for example, the MRC and BFM
groups, the role of SCT in 1
st CR seems very limited given the
relatively good results obtained with chemotherapy only.
2,3,133 Recent studies from the US however, still advocate allo-SCT
in most pediatric AML patients in first complete remission.
134 Most if not all groups consider allo-SCT to be indicated in
relapsed AML, ideally after achieving a subsequent complete
remission. However, there are no randomized studies to prove
that allo-SCT is better than intensive chemotherapy alone in
that setting. More experience is being acquired from the use
of matched unrelated donors and mismatched family donors for
patients in 2
nd remission who lack an HLA-identical sibling
donor.
102 Given that a GvL effect is demonstrable in pediatric
AML, another option would be to use a reduced-intensity rather
than a myeloablative conditioning regimen.
135,136 However, the
anti-leukemic efficacy in such transplants is highly dependent
on the induction and extent of GvHD. This has major limitations
in children because of its side-effects.
137 A similar immunologic
approach can be tried in patients who show increasing mixed
chimerism in the post-allo-SCT setting. These patients experience
a poor outcome, but early immunologic intervention with donor
lymphocyte infusions and rapid tapering of immunosuppresion
was able to rescue some patients.
135

Concluding remarks and future perspectives
Remarkable progress has been made in the treatment of pediatric
AML over the past decades, and the overall probability of survival
in newly diagnosed pediatric AML is now above 60%. However,
we may have reached a plateau in the cure rate with conventional
chemotherapy, given the treatment-related mortality rates and
the long-term side-effects associated with intensive chemotherapy
and stem-cell transplantation in selected patients.
Improvements may come from improved risk-group stratification, based either on novel genetic abnormalities, or on the monitoring of minimal residual disease. For instance, the development of specific subgroup-directed protocols for children with myeloid leukemia of Down syndrome and APL may further improve their outcome and reflects differences in the underlying biology of the disease. Further investigation into the genetic aberrations of pediatric AML cells may provide the knowledge needed to develop compounds directed against leukemia-specific targets. Treatment of APL with ATRA, as well as gemtuzumab ozogamicin, are examples of such a targeted approach. So far, the small molecularly targeted molecules have not shown an impressive efficacy in AML, and it still needs to be seen whether combination studies with chemotherapy will be more successful. However, subgroup-directed and rationally targeted therapy does offer possibilities for improved care of patients with AML, but will also have implications for the design of clinical trials. With more and more subgroups, sample sizes become smaller. In the long term, this may make large randomized trials including all children with AML impossible, but may be replaced with international subgroup specific protocols. Fortunately, platforms for international collaboration enabling the study of new agents in pediatric AML have been established, and it is therefore to be expected that high-quality cure can be achieved in the future for many if not most children and adolescents with AML.

Acknowledgments
Information enabling finalising tables III and IV was provided
in alphabetical order by Anne Auvrignon (FRALLE/LAME), Ursula
Creutzig (BFM-AML), Alan Gamis (COG), Brenda Gibson (MRC/UK
CCLG), Siebold de Graaf (DCOG), Henrik Hasle (NOPHO), Andrea
Pession (AIEOP), Jeffrey Rubnitz (St. Judes Children
Research Hospital), Akio Tawa (JPLSG).

Footnotes
Authors contributions
GJLK has designed the review and wrote parts of the manuscript, based on literature, intelluctual knowledge and personal communication with colleagues from the fiels (see acknowledgements). He revised the manuscript regarding parts written by CMZ. He approved the final version of the paper to be published; CMZ has helped in designing the review and wrote parts of the manuscript, based on literature and intellectual knowledge; revised the manuscript regarding parts written by GJLK, and approved the final version of the paper to be published.
Conflict of Interest
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Acknowledgments: the authors thank all colleagues for their helpful discussion, especially in the setting of ITCC, I-BFM-SG and the so-called International Pediatric AML Group. Information regarding Tables 3 and 4 was provided in alphabetical order by Anne Auvrignon (FRALLE/LAME), Ursula Creutzig (BFM-AML), Alan Gamis (COG), Brenda Gibson (MRC/UK CCLG), Siebold de Graaf (DCOG), Henrik Hasle (NOPHO), Andrea Pession (AIEOP), Jeffrey Rubnitz (St. Judes Children Research Hospital) and Akio Tawa (JPLSG).
Received for publication December 29, 2006.
Accepted for publication September 1, 2007.

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