Original Article |
1 Hematology Branch and
2 Office of Biostatistics Research, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
Correspondence: Phillip Scheinberg, Hematology Branch, NHLBI, 10 Center Drive, Building 10 CRC, Room 3-5140, MSC 1202, Bethesda, MD 20892-1202, USA. E-mail:scheinbp{at}mail.nih.gov
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Design and Methods: To test this hypothesis, we conducted a prospective randomized study comparing hATG/CsA/sirolimus to standard h-ATG/CsA. A total of 77 patients were treated from June 2003 to November 2005; 35 received h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus and 42 h-ATG/CsA. The two groups were well matched demographically and in blood counts prior to therapy. The primary end-point was hematologic response rate at 3 months, defined as no longer meeting the criteria for severe aplastic anemia. The study was powered to show a superior hematologic response rate of h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus compared to standard h-ATG/CsA.
Results: The overall response rate at 3 months was 37% for h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus and 50% for h-ATG/CsA and at 6 months 51% for h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus and 62% for h-ATG/CsA. After a planned interim analysis of 30 evaluable patients in each arm, accrual to the h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus arm was closed, as the conditional power for rejecting the null hypothesis was less than 1%. The rate of relapse, clonal evolution, and survival (secondary outcomes) did not differ significantly between patients treated with the two different regimens.
Conclusions: Despite a theoretical rationale for its use, sirolimus did not improve the response rate in patients with severe aplastic anemia when compared to standard h-ATG/CsA
Key words: aplastic anemia, antithymocyte globulin, cyclosporine, sirolimus, immunosuppression, pancytopenia.
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In our experience and that of others, from one quarter to one third of patients with SAA do not show hematologic improvement after treatment with the standard combination of horse ATG (h-ATG) and CsA, about one third of responders relapse, continued CsA is often required in order to maintain adequate blood counts, clonal evolution occurs in 10-15% of cases, and long-term survival is closely correlated to hematologic recovery following treatment.2–6 Thus, although advances in response rates and survival with combined immunosuppression are encouraging, many patients with SAA are not adequately treated with a single course of standard h-ATG + CsA (h-ATG/CsA) due to unresponsiveness to ATG, relapse and/or clonal evolution. Novel immunosuppressive regimens to circumvent these problems are needed. As the addition of CsA to ATG had marked effects on response rates and survival,7 intensification of immunosuppression with agents that complement or are synergistic to h-ATG/CsA is rational. However, efforts to improve h-ATG/CsA with additional immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory agents have been frustrating. The addition of a third drug, such as high dose corticosteroids, androgens, or mycophenolate mofetil to the standard h-ATG/CsA regimen has not resulted in better response rates or a decrease in relapse and clonal evolution;4,8–10 and the use of cyclophosphamide is controversial because of infectious complications.11
Sirolimus is a macrocyclic antibiotic that blocks the multifunctional serine-threonine kinase, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR),12 which mediates both the activation of a co-stimulatory pathway during the G0 and G1 transition and signal transduction cascades following cytokine reception during the G1 phase of T-cell activation.13 The synergism of the combination of CsA/sirolimus has been established in vitro, experimentally and in the clinical setting, mainly in solid organ transplantation.14–17 Sirolimus received FDA approval in 1999 as an adjunct to prevent acute renal allograft rejection. Although CsA blocks T-cell activation by binding to calcineurin and inhibiting calcium-stimulated serine/threonine phosphatase activity, auto-reactive T cells may escape inhibition through calcium-independent (or CsA-resistant) pathways.18 Sirolimus has been shown to block CsA-resistant18 and calcium-independent pathways late in the progression of the T-cell cycle, in contrast to the calcineurin inhibitors (CsA and FK506) which act earlier and only on calcium-dependent pathways.19
We, therefore, postulated that the distinct complementary and synergistic mechanisms of action of sirolimus and CsA would result in further block of activated autoreactive T cells in SAA and lead to improved response rates (and survival) and less relapse. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a prospective randomized study investigating the two different immunosuppressive regimens in patients with SAA who were treatment-naïve. One group received h-ATG/CsA in addition to sirolimus for 6 months (h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus), and the second group received standard h-ATG/CsA for 6 months, followed by a slow taper of CsA with a 25% dose reduction every 3 months, for the subsequent 18 months. The goals of this trial were to determine the effectiveness of sirolimus in patients with SAA as well as the role of a cyclosporine taper in preventing relapses in patients treated with standard h-ATG/CsA.
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Eligibility criteria
All patients older than 2 years of age with SAA were eligible for the study. For protocol entry purposes, SAA was defined as bone marrow cellularity of less than 30% and severe pancytopenia with at least two of the following peripheral blood count criteria: (i) absolute neutrophil count less than 0.5x109/L; (ii) absolute reticulocyte count less than 60x109/L; and (iii) platelet count less than 20x109/L.20 Exclusion criteria were: creatinine greater than 2.5 mg/dL, underlying carcinoma, a diagnosis of Fanconi anemia, prior history of immunosuppressive therapy with ATG, seropositivity for human immunodeficiency virus, evidence of a clonal disorder on bone marrow cytogenetics, pregnancy, significant comorbidities such that imminent death was likely, and inability to understand the investigational nature of the study. Bone marrow biopsy and aspiration, including cytogenetics, were performed before enrollment. For children and young adults (under 40 years of age), chromosomes were assayed after in vitro exposure of lymphocytes to diepoxybutane and to mitomycin C to exclude Fanconi anemia. All patients were tested for paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria by a flow cytometric assay. The presence of a paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria clone was defined as the absence of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins on more than 1% of neutrophils or red cells and the size of the clone was defined by the highest level of GPI-negative red blood cells or GPI-negative neutrophils.
Immunosuppressive regimens
An ATG skin test was performed to assess allergic hypersensitivity. Intravenous h-ATG (ATGAM, Pharmacia & Upjohn Company, Kalamazoo, Mich, USA) was administered at a dose of 40 mg/kg/day for 4 days. Serum sickness prophylaxis with oral prednisone 1 mg/kg/day was given prior to the first dose of h-ATG and continued for 10 days and then tapered over the subsequent 7 days. CsA at 10 mg/kg/day by mouth (15 mg/kg/day for children under 12 years old) in divided doses every 12 h was started on day 1 and continued for at least 6 months. Dosing was adjusted to maintain CsA levels between 200–400 ng/mL. Oral sirolimus 2 mg/day in adults and 1 mg/m2/day in children (< 40 kg) was given on day 1 of ATG and continued for 6 months; the dose was adjusted to maintain sirolimus levels between 5–15 ng/mL. Among responders in the standard h-ATG/CsA arm, CsA was tapered after 6 months with a 25% reduction in dose every 3 months for 18 more months, totaling 2 years of oral CsA. In the h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus arm, both the CsA and the sirolimus were discontinued at 6 months.
As prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, all patients received aerosolized pentamidine for at least 6 months. In the h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus arm, valacyclovir at a daily dose of 500 mg for at least 8 weeks was added for Herpes simplex virus prophylaxis after 12 patients had been randomized to this regimen. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and prophylactic antimicrobials were not administered routinely with any of the immunosuppressive regimens.
End-points
The primary end-point was hematologic response rate at 3 months, with response being defined as no longer meeting criteria for SAA.20 Secondary end-points included relapse, 6-month response rate, clonal evolution to myelodysplasia or acute leukemia, and overall survival. A complete response was defined as satisfaction of all three peripheral blood count criteria: (i) absolute neutrophil count greater than 1x109/L; (ii) hemoglobin greater than 10 g/dL; and (iii) platelet count greater than 100x109/L. A partial response was defined as blood counts no longer satisfying criteria for SAA but insufficient for a complete response. Patients who relapsed by definition required reinstitution or augmentation of the dose of CsA or administration of another course of ATG.2 Patients underwent bone marrow biopsy at 3, 6, and 12 months, and then yearly. Evolution to myelodysplasia was defined as the appearance of a new clonal disorder on cytogenetics or characteristic morphological changes on bone marrow.
Statistical methods
The study was designed to accrue 60 patients per arm for a total of 120 patients. This sample size was calculated based on the primary end-point, the 3-month response rate, and the assumption that this rate for the h-ATG/CSA arm was 60%.20 At a 5% significance level and with 80% power in a two-sided test, 60 patients per treatment arm were required to detect a 25% difference (60% for the ATG/CsA arm and 85% for the ATG/CsA/sirolimus arm) for the 3-month response rate. The response rates between the two treatment arms were calculated and compared using the two-sample t test. Patients characteristics were described using summary statistics including means, proportions, standard errors and 95% confidence intervals. p values for comparing these patients characteristics between the two treatment groups were calculated using t tests. Survival analyses based on the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazard models were used to draw inferences about the distributions of the overall survival of patients in the two treatment groups. Cumulative event distributions were analyzed using the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazard models for time-to-relapse among patients who responded to the first immunosuppressive treatments and time-to-evolution for all the patients. Log-rank p values based on the Cox proportional hazard models were used to compare the survival and cumulative event curves between patients in the two treatment groups. For analyses of time-to-relapse and time-to-evolution distributions, patients who died or underwent stem cell transplantation before relapse or evolution were counted as censored. One patient in the h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus arm died in a traffic accident and was counted as censored for the purpose of statistical analyses. One interim analysis was planned when 30 patients per treatment arm (half of the overall sample size) were evaluable for 3-month responses. The study was monitored to ensure that treatment-related mortality did not substantially exceed an anticipated rate.
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Table 1. Patients characteristics.
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Table 2. Adverse events.
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Table 3. Response to the immunosuppressive regimens.
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Figure 1. Cumulative incidence of relapse in the groups treated with different immunosuppressive regimens. The h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus group (solid line) had a relapse rate of 28% by 3 years and the h-ATG/CsA taper group 25% (dotted line).
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Figure 2. Cumulative incidence of disease evolution among the patients treated with each of the two immunosuppressive regimens. The evolution rate for the h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus arm (dotted line) was not different from that in the h-ATG/CsA taper arm (solid line).
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Figure 3. Overall survival for patients in the h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus (solid line) and h-ATG/CsA taper arm (dotted line). Patients who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation were censored at the time of transplantation.
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It is unclear why sirolimus did not yield an improvement in outcomes in SAA compared to those achieved by standard h-ATG/CsA in our study. CsA-resistant pathways have been reported in T cells (which are sensitive to sirolimus),18 but we infer from our negative clinical results that they do not appear to have a significant role in the pathogenesis of SAA. Sirolimus may have had a myelosuppressive effect that was difficult to discern in our population of patients, but no greater risk of infectious complications (other than Herpes simplex) was observed in this group compared to in the group given only h-ATG/CsA. It is possible that further immunomodulation beyond h-ATG/CsA cannot result in better response rates, if success in a minority of patients is limited by their stem cell number or a non-immune pathophysiology. Such a distinction cannot be readily determined in either the research laboratory or in clinical practice. However, hematologic responses in 30–70%30,31 of cases following second treatment with ATG make plausible the inference that some patients who initially failed to benefit from ATG treatment have been inadequately immunosuppressed.
Our study was not able to define the effect of sirolimus on relapse due to the small number of responders in this group, but the relapse rate did not seem to differ from that observed in h-ATG/CsA-treated patients. In addition, the effect of CsA-tapering could not be determined in this study among those who received standard immunosuppressive therapy, since accrual was halted after 42 patients had been treated. However, CsA-tapering is a component of our subsequent prospective studies, which will provide insight into its effect in preventing relapse. Despite a lower response rate in the h-ATG/CsA/sirolimus arm, no difference in survival between the two groups was observed, consequent to the improved outcomes among non-responders to immunosuppressive treatment in recent years due to better supportive care and more effective salvage therapies.32
Achieving a robust response to immunosuppressive therapy remains a primary goal in the management of SAA, as it correlates to better long-term survival and transfusion-independence.2 Unfortunately, the results of recent efforts, adding mycophenolate mofetil8 and in the current study sirolimus to standard h-ATG/CsA have been disappointing, as response rates have remained at about 60% since the addition of CsA to h-ATG about 20 years ago.7 Whether intensification by adding immunosuppressive agents to standard h-ATG and CsA will result in higher response rates remains uncertain but increasingly unlikely. Future investigational regimens that focus on increasing initial lymphocytotoxicity may prove better alternatives.
PS is the principal investigator and participated in the primary conception of the study, writing the protocol, performing the research, data collection and analysis, and drafted the manuscript; COW did all the statistical analyses and participated in interim discussions; ON participated in the data collection; PS and CB collected all information on adverse events; EMS was involved in the patients care and execution of the study; NSY participated in the primary conception of the study, protocol development, data analysis, interim analysis and discussions, and writing of the manuscript.
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Received for publication August 21, 2008. Revision received September 18, 2008. Accepted for publication October 2, 2008.
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