Shorter maintenance therapy in childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. The experience of the prospective, randomized Brazilian GBTLI ALL-93 protocol.

Maintenance therapy is an important phase of the childhood ALL treatment, requiring 2-year long therapy adherence of the patients and families. Weekly methotrexate (MTX) with daily 6-mercaptopurine (6MP) constitutes the backbone of maintenance therapy. Reduction in the maintenance therapy could over...

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Main Authors: Silvia Regina Brandalise (Author), Marcos Borato Viana (Author), Vitória Régia Pereira Pinheiro (Author), Núbia Mendonça (Author), Luiz Fernando Lopes (Author), Waldir Veiga Pereira (Author), Maria Lúcia de Martino Lee (Author), Elitânia Marinho Pontes (Author), Gláucia Perini Zouain-Figueiredo (Author), Alita da Cunha Andrade Cirne Azevedo (Author), Maria Zélia Fernandes (Author), Nilma Pimentel (Author), Hilda Maria Oliveira (Author), Sônia Rossi Vianna (Author), Fernando de Almeida Werneck (Author), Carlos Alberto Scrideli (Author), Maria Nunes Álvares (Author), Érica Boldrini (Author), Sandra Regina Loggetto (Author), Paula Bruniera (Author), Maria José Mastellaro (Author), Eni Souza (Author), Rogério Agenor Araújo (Author), Flávia Bandeira (Author), Doralice Marvulle Tan (Author), Nelson Aquino de Carvalho (Author), Maria Alessandra Silva Salgado (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Frontiers Media S.A., 2016-10-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:Maintenance therapy is an important phase of the childhood ALL treatment, requiring 2-year long therapy adherence of the patients and families. Weekly methotrexate (MTX) with daily 6-mercaptopurine (6MP) constitutes the backbone of maintenance therapy. Reduction in the maintenance therapy could overweight problems related with poverty of children with ALL living in Limited-Income countries (LIC). Objective: To compare, prospectively, the EFS rates of children with ALL treated according to two maintenance regimens: 18 vs 24 months duration. Materials and Methods: From October 1993 to September 1999, 867 consecutive untreated ALL patients < 18 years of age, were treated according to the Brazilian Cooperative Group for Childhood ALL Treatment (GBTLI) ALL-93 protocol. Risk classification was based exclusively on patient's age and leucocyte count (NCI Risk Group) and clinical extra medullary involvement of the disease. Data was analyzed by the intention-to-treat approach. Results: Fourteen patients (1.6%) were excluded: wrong diagnosis (n=7) and previous corticosteroid (n=7). Of the 853 eligible patients, 421 were randomly allocated, at study enrollment, to receive 18-month (group 1) and 432 to receive 24-month (group 2) maintenance therapy. Complete remission rate was achieved in 96% of the patients (817/853). Twenty-eight patients (3.4%) died during the induction phase. Thirty-four patients (4.0%) were lost to follow-up. The overall EFS was 66.1% ± 1.7% at 15 years. No difference was seen according to maintenance: EFS15y was 65.8% ± 2.3% (group 1) and 66.3% ± 2.3% (group 2; p=0.79). No difference between regimens was detected after stratifying the analyses according to factors associated with adverse prognosis in this study (age group <1 year or >10 years and high WBC at diagnosis). Overall death in remission rate was 6.85% (56 patients). Deaths during maintenance were 13 in group 1 and 12 in group 2, all due to infection. Over 15 years of follow-up, two patients both from Group 2 presented a second malignancy (Hodgkin's disease and thyroid carcinoma) after 8.3 and 11 years off therapy, respectively. Conclusion: Six-month reduction of maintenance therapy in ALL children treated according to the GBTLI ALL-93 protocol, provided the same overall outcome as 2-year duration regimen.
Item Description:2296-2360
10.3389/fped.2016.00110