Long-term disease-free survivors with cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia and MLL partial tandem duplication: a Cancer and Leukemia Group B study

Susan P Whitman, Amy S Ruppert, Guido Marcucci, Krzysztof Mrózek, Peter Paschka, Christian Langer, Claudia D Baldus, Jing Wen, Tamara Vukosavljevic, Bayard L Powell, Andrew J Carroll, Jonathan E Kolitz, Richard A Larson, Michael A Caligiuri, Clara D Bloomfield, Susan P Whitman, Amy S Ruppert, Guido Marcucci, Krzysztof Mrózek, Peter Paschka, Christian Langer, Claudia D Baldus, Jing Wen, Tamara Vukosavljevic, Bayard L Powell, Andrew J Carroll, Jonathan E Kolitz, Richard A Larson, Michael A Caligiuri, Clara D Bloomfield

Abstract

The clinical impact of MLL partial tandem duplication (MLL-PTD) was evaluated in 238 adults aged 18 to 59 years with cytogenetically normal (CN) de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who were treated intensively on similar Cancer and Leukemia Group B protocols 9621 and 19808. Twenty-four (10.1%) patients harbored an MLL-PTD. Of those, 92% achieved complete remission (CR) compared with 83% of patients without MLL-PTD (P=.39). Neither overall survival nor disease-free survival significantly differed between the 2 groups (P=.67 and P=.55, respectively). Thirteen MLL-PTD(+) patients relapsed within 1.4 years of achieving CR. MLL-PTD(+) patients who relapsed more often had other adverse CN-AML-associated molecular markers. In contrast with previously reported studies, 9 (41%) MLL-PTD(+) patients continue in long-term first remission (CR1; range, 2.5-7.7 years). Intensive consolidation therapy that included autologous peripheral stem-cell transplantation during CR1 may have contributed to the better outcome of this historically poor-prognosis group of CN-AML patients with MLL-PTD.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Overall survival and disease-free survival of CN-AML patients with MLL-PTD evaluated in this study. Fifty percent of the patients are alive and 41% remain disease-free in CR1 beyond 2.5 years.

Source: PubMed

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