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A randomized comparison of 4 courses of standard-dose multiagent chemotherapy versus 3 courses of high-dose cytarabine alone in postremission therapy for acute myeloid leukemia in adults: the JALSG AML201 Study
- Source :
- Blood. 117:2366-2372
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- American Society of Hematology, 2011.
-
Abstract
- We conducted a prospective randomized study to assess the optimal postremission therapy for adult acute myeloid leukemia in patients younger than 65 years in the first complete remission. A total of 781 patients in complete remission were randomly assigned to receive consolidation chemotherapy of either 3 courses of high-dose cytarabine (HiDAC, 2 g/m2 twice daily for 5 days) alone or 4 courses of conventional standard-dose multiagent chemotherapy (CT) established in the previous JALSG AML97 study. Five-year disease-free survival was 43% for the HiDAC group and 39% for the multiagent CT group (P = .724), and 5-year overall survival was 58% and 56%, respectively (P = .954). Among the favorable cytogenetic risk group (n = 218), 5-year disease-free survival was 57% for HiDAC and 39% for multiagent CT (P = .050), and 5-year overall survival was 75% and 66%, respectively (P = .174). In the HiDAC group, the nadir of leukocyte counts was lower, and the duration of leukocyte less than 1.0 × 109/L longer, and the frequency of documented infections higher. The present study demonstrated that the multiagent CT regimen is as effective as our HiDAC regimen for consolidation. Our HiDAC regimen resulted in a beneficial effect on disease-free survival only in the favorable cytogenetic leukemia group. This trial was registered at www.umin.ac.jp/ctr/ as #C000000157.
- Subjects :
- Chemotherapy
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry
medicine.medical_treatment
Immunology
Myeloid leukemia
Consolidation Chemotherapy
Adult Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Cell Biology
Hematology
medicine.disease
Biochemistry
Surgery
Regimen
Leukemia
Internal medicine
Cytarabine
medicine
business
Survival analysis
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15280020 and 00064971
- Volume :
- 117
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Blood
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........a9c78ef0badf8065bd862d7f0af3cb1e
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2010-07-295279