1. Smart Conditioning with Venetoclax-Enhanced Sequential FLAMSA + RIC in Patients with High-Risk Myeloid Malignancies.
- Author
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Schulz, Felicitas, Jäger, Paul, Tischer, Johanna, Fraccaroli, Alessia, Bug, Gesine, Hausmann, Andreas, Baermann, Ben-Niklas, Tressin, Patrick, Hoelscher, Alexander, Kasprzak, Annika, Nachtkamp, Kathrin, Schetelig, Johannes, Hilgendorf, Inken, Germing, Ulrich, Dietrich, Sascha, and Kobbe, Guido
- Subjects
HOMOGRAFTS ,ANTINEOPLASTIC agents ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ACQUISITION of data ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDICAL records ,ACUTE erythroid leukemia ,HEMATOPOIETIC stem cell transplantation - Abstract
Simple Summary: Allogeneic stem cell transplantation (aHSCT) is the only potentially curative treatment option for patients with high-risk myeloid malignancies. Depending on the underlying genetic risk profile, up to 50% of patients die of relapse even after aHSCT in first remission. Therefore, further improvement of conditioning regimens is an urgent medical need. Current sequential conditioning regimens combine intensive AML-like induction therapy with total body irradiation or alkylators like treosulfan or melphalan. The first and currently widely accepted prototype of this treatment strategy is the fludarabine/amsacrine/ara-C (FLAMSA) protocol, which has been modified multiple times by changing parts or adding additional cytotoxic drugs to improve clinical results. Knowing that venetoclax, an inhibitor of B-cell lymphoma-2 protein (BCL2), has synergistic effects to chemotherapy without increasing the level of non-hematologic toxicity, several German transplant centers have added venetoclax to the FLAMSA protocol as an individualized treatment approach to improve long term outcome in patients with high-risk myeloid malignancies. Up to 50% of patients with high-risk myeloid malignancies die of relapse after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Current sequential conditioning regimens like the FLAMSA protocol combine intensive induction therapy with TBI or alkylators. Venetoclax has synergistic effects to chemotherapy. In a retrospective survey among German transplant centers, we identified 61 patients with myeloid malignancies that had received FLAMSA-based sequential conditioning with venetoclax between 2018 and 2022 as an individualized treatment approach. Sixty patients (98%) had active disease at transplant and 74% had genetic high-risk features. Patients received allografts from matched unrelated, matched related, or mismatched donors. Tumor lysis syndrome occurred in two patients but no significant non-hematologic toxicity related to venetoclax was observed. On day +30, 55 patients (90%) were in complete remission. Acute GvHD II°–IV° occurred in 17 (28%) and moderate/severe chronic GvHD in 7 patients (12%). Event-free survival and overall survival were 64% and 80% at 1 year as well as 57% and 75% at 2 years, respectively. The off-label combination of sequential FLAMSA-RIC with venetoclax appears to be safe and highly effective. To further validate these insights and enhance the idea of smart conditioning, a controlled prospective clinical trial was initiated in July 2023. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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