Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia |
1 Hospital Universitario La Fe, Valencia, Spain
2 Hospital Clínico San Carlos, Madrid, Spain
3 Hospital Juan Canalejo, La Coruña, Spain
4 Instituto de Trasplante de Médula Ósea, Buenos Aires, Argentina
5 Hospital Clínico Universitario, Valencia, Spain
6 Hospital General, Jerez de la Frontera, Spain
7 Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Victoria, Málaga, Spain
8 Fundaleu, Buenos Aires, Argentina
9 Hospital de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain
10 Hospital Central de Asturias, Oviedo, Spain
11 Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío, Sevilla, Spain
12 Hospital 12 de Octubre, Madrid, Spain
13 Hospital Clinic, Barcelona, Spain
14 Hospital San Pedro de Alcántara, Cáceres, Spain
15 Hospital General, Alicante, Spain
16 Hospital Universitario, Salamanca, Spain
17 Hospital Insular, Las Palmas, Spain
18 Hospital Carlos Haya, Málaga, Spain
19 Hospital Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain
20 Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Correspondence: Miguel A. Sanz, MD, PhD, Hematology Department, Hospital Universitario La Fe, Avda. Campanar 21, CP 46009, Valencia, Spain. E-mail:msanz{at}uv.es
|
|
|---|
Design and Methods: Between 1996 and 2005, 739 patients with newly diagnosed acute promyelocytic leukemia enrolled in two consecutive trials (PETHEMA LPA96 and LPA99) received induction therapy with all-trans retinoic acid and idarubicin. Consolidation therapy comprised three courses of anthracycline monochemotherapy (LPA96), with all-trans retinoic acid and reinforced doses of idarubicin in patients with an intermediate or high risk of relapse (LPA99). Central nervous system prophylaxis was not given.
Results: Central nervous system relapse was documented in 11 patients. The 5-year cumulative incidence of central nervous system relapse was 1.7% (LPA96 3.2% and LPA99 1.2%; p=0.09). The cumulative incidence was 0%, 0.8%, and 5.5% in low-, intermediate-, and high-risk patients, respectively. Relapse risk score (p=0.0001) and the occurrence of central nervous system hemorrhage during induction (5-year cumulative incidence 18.7%, p=0.006) were independent risk factors for central nervous system relapse.
Conclusions: This study shows a low incidence of central nervous system relapse in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia following therapy with all-trans retinoic acid and anthracycline without specific central nervous system prophylaxis. Central nervous system relapse was significantly associated with high white blood cell counts and prior central nervous system hemorrhage, which emerged as independent prognostic factors.
Key words: acute promyelocytic leukemia, central nervous system relapse, all-trans retinoic acid, idarubicin, prognostic factors.
|
|
|---|
We analyzed the incidence of and prognostic risk factors for CNS involvement at first relapse in a large series of newly diagnosed patients with APL who were enrolled in two consecutive Programa Español de Tratamiento en Hematología (PETHEMA) trials (LPA96 and LPA99) and treated with ATRA and anthracycline monochemotherapy without CNS prophylaxis. We also evaluated the outcome of these patients.
|
|
|---|
Therapy of acute promyelocytic leukemia
Patients were included in two successive protocols (LPA96 and LPA99) that have been previously described.9 Briefly, treatment consisted of induction therapy with ATRA and idarubicin (AIDA regimen), three consolidation courses with idarubicin (two courses) and mitoxantrone (one course) with or without ATRA according to a risk-adapted strategy,9 followed by maintenance therapy with ATRA and low-dose chemotherapy with methotrexate and 6-mercaptopurine.
Prophylaxis and treatment of central nervous system relapse
Patients did not receive CNS prophylaxis. When CNS relapse occurred, treatment comprised weekly intrathecal triple therapy (ITT) with methotrexate, hydrocortisone, and cytarabine until complete clearance of blasts in the cerebrospinal fluid, followed by less frequent ITT treatments as consolidation. Some patients received further craniospinal irradiation at the physicians discretion. Systemic treatment with ATRA plus chemotherapy or arsenic trioxide was also given as induction or consolidation or both, even for patients with isolated CNS involvement. Autologous or allogeneic stem cell transplant was given, in some cases, as intensification therapy.
Study definitions and end-points
The remission-induction response was assessed according to the criteria revised recently by Cheson et al.10 Molecular remission was defined as the disappearance on an ethidium bromide gel of the PML–RARA-specific band visualized at diagnosis, using a previously described nested reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay for PML–RARA amplification11 with a sensitivity level of 10–4. Persistent molecular disease and molecular relapse were defined as PCR positivity in two consecutive bone marrow samples collected at the end of consolidation therapy and at any time after consolidation therapy, respectively. CNS relapse was confirmed by lumbar puncture and cytological examination of cerebrospinal fluid, which was performed only in patients with clinically suspected CNS relapse. Morphological and molecular status was assessed by examining bone marrow aspirates from all patients at the time of CNS relapse.
Prognostic factors
Twenty-seven characteristics of the patients and disease were analyzed to establish their relationship to CNS relapse. In addition to the characteristics listed in Table 1, the following variables were also considered: serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), peripheral blast count, fibrinogen level, relapse-risk score, cytogenetics, FLT3-internal tandem duplication (FLT3-ITD) mutation, and a number of surface antigen markers (CD2, CD7, CD11b, CD34, CD13, HLA-DR, and CD56). Occurrence of clinically and radiologically evident CNS hemorrhage at diagnosis or during induction, and development of differentiation syndrome were also included. Differentiation syndrome was diagnosed according to the presence of two or more of the symptoms and signs described by Frankel et al.12
|
View this table: [in a new window] [Download PPT slide] |
Table 1. Main demographic and baseline characteristics of 667 acute promyelocytic leukemia patients who achieved complete remission with the AIDA regimen (study population).
|
2 test, with Yates correction if necessary, was used to analyze differences in the distribution of variables between subsets of patients. The probability of CNS involvement at first relapse was estimated by the cumulative incidence method, and univariate comparison between the cumulative incidence curves was performed using the Gray test.14 Isolated bone marrow relapse (molecular or morphological), death in complete remission, and development of secondary acute leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome was each considered as a competing risk event. Multivariate analysis was performed using a logistic regression model.14 Overall survival after relapse was estimated by the Kaplan–Meier method, and comparisons were made by the log-rank test.15 The patients follow-up was updated in June 2008, and the median follow-up was 83 months (range, 32–136 months).
|
|
|---|
The main demographic and baseline characteristics of the 667 patients who achieved complete remission are shown in Table 1. Patients enrolled in the LPA96 and LPA99 trials were similar for all baseline characteristics except for sex (more females were included in the LPA99 trial, p=0.02).
Incidence and characteristics of central nervous system relapse
CNS involvement at first relapse was documented in 11 patients: in eight of these it was isolated (although three had positive PML–RARA in the bone marrow by RT-PCR) whereas in three it was simultaneous with overt involvement of the bone marrow. The median time to CNS relapse was 16 months (range, 6–49 months) compared with 16 months (range, 5–74 months) for isolated bone marrow relapse. The characteristics of the patients who experienced CNS relapse are summarized in Table 2. Seven patients were female, and four were male. At the time of the primary APL diagnosis, the median age was 33 years (range, 6–70 years) and WBC count was 34.5x109/L (range, 1.9–162x109/L). Eight of the 11 CNS relapses occurred in the 149 patients classified at diagnosis as being at high-risk (cumulative incidence at 5 years, 5.45%), and the other three were in the 381 patients classified as being at intermediate-risk (cumulative incidence at 5 years, 0.8%). No CNS relapses were observed in low-risk patients. Three patients experienced clinical CNS hemorrhage during induction therapy. One additional patient (9%) had differentiation syndrome compared with 22 of 73 relapsed patients (30%) without CNS involvement. The overall 5-year cumulative incidence of CNS relapse was 1.7%, with a trend toward a higher incidence in the LPA96 trial (3.2%) than in the LPA99 trial (1.2%) (p=0.09). The cumulative incidence of isolated bone marrow relapse was 14.7% in the LPA96 trial and 10.6% in the LPA99 trial (p=0.08). The relative frequency of CNS involvement among relapsed patients overall was 13%: five of 28 relapses (18%) in the LPA96 trial and six of 56 relapses (11%) in the LPA99 trial. No extramedullary sites of relapse other than CNS were observed in either PETHEMA trial.
|
View this table: [in a new window] [Download PPT slide] |
Table 2. Pretreatment characteristics of patients who had a central nervous system relapse and time of occurrence, treatment, and outcome the relapse.
|
Outcome of patients with central nervous system relapse
Of the eight patients with CNS involvement without morphological relapse in the bone marrow (3 PCR positive) one died during CNS treatment. The remaining seven patients achieved a complete clearance of blasts from the cerebrospinal fluid and relief of symptoms. The subsequent outcome of these patients was as follows: (i) two patients experienced a second relapse and died despite receiving consolidation therapy with liposomal ATRA or intensive chemotherapy; (ii) three patients are alive in complete remission after salvage therapy for a second CNS or bone marrow relapse; and (iii) two patients did not relapse after receiving ATRA plus intensive chemotherapy or arsenic trioxide followed by autologous stem cell transplantation.
The three patients with simultaneous CNS and bone marrow involvement died during systemic therapy with ATRA plus intensive chemotherapy (2 patients) or during aplasia following autologous stem cell transplantation.
The median survival was 13 months in patients who had a CNS relapse and 20 months in those who had isolated bone marrow relapse (p=0.61).
Prognostic factors for central nervous system relapse
The univariate analysis identified the following characteristics as being associated with CNS relapse: high WBC count in the peripheral blood at presentation (p<0.0001), high blast count in the peripheral blood (p=0.0009), both with a count of 10x109/L as the most significant cut-off; relapse-risk score (p=0.001); clinical CNS hemorrhage during induction chemotherapy (p<0.0001); elevated serum LDH concentration (p=0.005); FLT3-ITD mutations (p=0.015); and CD56 positivity (p=0.047) (Table 3). Multivariate analysis was also carried out: insufficient data were available for FLT3-ITD mutation status and CD56 expression. Multivariate analysis identified the following independent prognostic factors for CNS relapse: relapse-risk score (p=0.0001) (Figure 1A) and clinical CNS hemorrhage during induction chemotherapy (p=0.006) (Figure 1B). Because univariate analysis showed a trend for a lower cumulative incidence of CNS relapse among patients treated in the LPA99 trial (p=0.09), the LPA96 and LPA99 trials were compared according to the relapse-risk group. For high-risk patients, the 5-year cumulative incidences of CNS relapse were 10.8% in the LPA96 trial and 3.6% in the LPA99 trial (p=0.02; Figure 1C). For intermediate-risk patients, the 5-year cumulative incidences were 1.2% and 0.7% in the LPA96 and LPA99 trials, respectively (p=0.73).
|
View this table: [in a new window] [Download PPT slide] |
Table 3. Main comparisons of cumulative incidence of central nervous system relapse according to the characteristics of the patients and disease.
|
![]() View larger version (9K): [in a new window] [Download PPT slide] |
Figure 1. Cumulative incidence of central nervous system relapse according to (A) relapse-risk group: intermediate (white blood cell count 10x109/L and a platelet count 40x109/L) versus high (white blood cell count >10x109/L). No relapse occurred among low-risk patients (WBC count 10x109/L and a platelet count >40x109/L); (B) occurrence of central nervous system hemorrhage during induction; and (C) LPA trial and relapse-risk group: LPA96 versus LPA99.
|
|
|
|---|
Despite the sequential nature of the two trials, there was an apparent unbiased improvement in the 5-year cumulative incidence of CNS involvement from 3.2% in the LPA96 trial to 1.2% in the LPA99 trial. The difference was not significant for this crude comparison, which included all patients, but became significant when high-risk patients were analyzed separately. One explanation of the lower CNS relapse rate in the LPA99 study could be that the more dose-intensive chemotherapy in this trial reduced the systemic disease burden, decreasing the risk of seeding of APL cells in the CNS and, thereby, the incidence of CNS relapse. Another explanation is that the higher-dose intensity of anthracyclines of the LPA99 trial may offer a more effective treatment of the CNS sanctuary. Notably, in contrast to other anthracyclines, the active metabolite of idarubicin, idarubicinol, can penetrate the blood–brain barrier.19–21
The variable incidence of CNS involvement at first relapse observed in different series should be interpreted with caution. Variables with potential impact on the incidence of this complication may have been unbalanced and may bias the direct comparison between different series. Different proportions of patients with leukocytosis at presentation, a well-recognized risk factor for CNS relapse,3 is the most obvious potential cause of bias, but other more subtle factors should also be considered. In this respect, the sample size and the length of follow-up are particularly important and usually considered, but some other factors related to competing events, particularly bone marrow relapse, should also be considered. Theoretically, a high incidence of bone marrow relapse can lead to an apparent low incidence of CNS involvement at first relapse. This may explain, at least in part, the different incidence rates of CNS relapse reported for series with similar sample size and follow-up.2,3 The apparently lower incidence of CNS relapse reported by the European APL Group3 (4 cases among 582 patients) than in the GIMEMA Group2 (16 cases among 740 patients) was observed in the context of a higher incidence of hematologic relapses in the former (150/582 vs. 131/740). Interestingly, the European APL Group reported a 2-year cumulative incidence of CNS relapse of 0% in 340 patients treated with ATRA combined with chemotherapy, including high-dose cytarabine and intrathecal prophylaxis in patients with WBC counts greater than 10x109/L.8 However, full evaluation of these results requires both independent confirmation and a longer follow-up because a considerable proportion of CNS relapses may occur more than 2 years after the time of attainment of the first complete remission (e.g., 5 of 11 cases in our present study).3
As reported previously, our study confirms that APL patients with high WBC count at diagnosis (>10x109/L) have an increased risk of CNS relapse.3 However, the relapse-risk score18 remained as an independent risk factor in multivariate analysis after removing WBC count from the regression equation. An additional and novel finding is the association between the occurrence of clinical CNS hemorrhage before or during remission induction and subsequent CNS relapse. This has not been reported before and could have potential therapeutic implications. Regarding other potential risk factors, some authors have suggested previously that FLT3-ITD mutations, which correlate with leukocytosis,22 and an increased expression of adhesion molecules, such as CD56, can promote leukemic infiltration in the CNS.23–25 In this study, we were unable to assess CD56 expression and FLT3-ITD mutation as predictive factors for CNS relapse in multivariate analysis because of an insufficient number of patients with adequate data. Other factors previously related to extramedullary relapse, such as age (< 45 years),3 BCR3 isoform,3,4 and development of differentiation syndrome5 were not significant determinants of CNS relapse in our study.
The low incidence of CNS relapse does not argue in favor of systematic CNS prophylaxis even in patients with high-risk APL. The burden for these patients and the potential risks of additional medical complications (e.g., hemorrhage or neurological toxicity)26 following lumbar puncture would be unlikely to outweigh the possible benefits. Because there is no clear benefit of systematic CNS prophylaxis, its indication in APL is still a matter of debate. Based on our results, however, prophylaxis could be considered for those patients with clinical or radiological signs of CNS hemorrhage during induction.
In conclusion, we found a low incidence of CNS involvement at first relapse in newly diagnosed patients with APL following therapy with ATRA and anthracycline monochemotherapy without specific CNS prophylaxis. CNS relapse was significantly associated with WBC counts greater than 10x109/L and CNS hemorrhage during induction treatment, which emerged as independent prognostic factors.
|
|
|---|
PM and MAS, conceived the study, and analyzed and interpreted the data; PM, BL and MAS wrote the paper; PM performed the statistical analyses; JD-M, GD, VP, MT, VR, IP, IF, MV, CRi, JG, JdlS, JE, JMB, CRa, MG, JDG, SN and SB included data on patients treated in their institutions, reviewed the manuscript and contributed to the final draft.
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Funding: this study was supported in part by the Fundación para la Investigación Hospital Universitario La Fe-Ayudas Bancaja (grant 2006/0137), Red Temática de Investigación Cooperativa en Cáncer (RD06/0020/0031).
Received for publication February 24, 2009. Revision received March 26, 2009. Accepted for publication April 9, 2009.
|
|
|---|
detection in promyelocytic leukemia. Leukemia 1998;12:2024-8.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
S. Nagai, Y. Nannya, S. Arai, Y. Yoshiki, T. Takahashi, and M. Kurokawa Molecular or cytogenetic monitoring and preemptive therapy for central nervous system relapse of acute promyelocytic leukemia Haematologica, January 1, 2010; 95(1): 169 - 171. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
F. Stolzel, M. Wermke, C. Rollig, C. Thiede, U. Platzbecker, and M. Bornhauser Mobilization of PML/RAR{alpha} negative peripheral blood stem cells with a combination of G-CSF and CXCR4 blockade in relapsed acute promyelocytic leukemia pre-treated with arsenic trioxide Haematologica, January 1, 2010; 95(1): 171 - 172. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||