4.6 Article

Measurable residual disease in elderly acute myeloid leukemia: results from the PETHEMA-FLUGAZA phase 3 clinical trial

Journal

BLOOD ADVANCES
Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 760-770

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2020003195

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Funding

  1. CIBERONC [CB16/12/00369, CB16/12/00233, CB16/12/00489, CB16/12/00284]
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III/Subdireccion General de Investigacion Sanitaria Fondo de Investigacion en Salud (FIS) [PI16/01661, PI16/00517]
  3. Plan de Investigacion de la Universidad de Navarra (PIUNA) [2014-18]
  4. Cancer Research UK
  5. Fundacion Cientifica de la Asociacion Espanola Contra el Cancer (FCAECC)
  6. Fondazione AIRC per la Ricerca sul Cancro under the Accelerator Award Program (EDITOR [Early Detection and Intervention])

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The study found that in elderly patients with AML, MRD status is an independent factor in predicting relapse-free survival, and achieving undetectable MRD can significantly improve survival in patients with adverse genetics. Interestingly, there was a significant difference in the number of genetic alterations at the MRD stage between patients treated with FLUGA and 5-azacitidine.
The value of measurable residual disease (MRD) in elderly patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is inconsistent between those treated with intensive vs hypomethylating drugs, and unknown after semi-intensive therapy. We investigated the role of MRD in refining complete remission (CR) and treatment duration in the phase 3 FLUGAZA clinical trial, which randomized 283 elderly AML patients to induction and consolidation with fludarabine plus cytarabine (FLUGA) vs 5-azacitidine. After consolidation, patients continued treatment if MRD was >= 0.01% or stopped if MRD was <0.01%, as assessed by multidimensional flow cytometry (MFC). On multivariate analysis including genetic risk and treatment arm, MRD status in patients achieving CR (N - 72) was the only independent prognostic factor for relapse-free survival (RFS) (HR, 3.45; P = .002). Achieving undetectable MRD significantly improved RFS of patients with adverse genetics (HR, 0.32; P = .013). Longer overall survival was observed in patients with undetectable MRD after induction though not after consolidation. Although leukemic cells from most patients displayed phenotypic aberrancies vs their normal counterpart (N = 259 of 265), CD34 progenitors from cases with undetectable MRD by MFC carried extensive genetic abnormalities identified by whole-exome sequencing. Interestingly, the number of genetic alterations significantly increased from diagnosis to MRD stages in patients treated with FLUGA vs 5-azacitidine (2.2-fold vs 1.1-fold; P = .001). This study supports MRD assessment to refine CR after semi-intensive therapy or hypomethylating agents, but unveils that improved sensitivity is warranted to individualize treatment and prolong survival of elderly AML patients achieving undetectable MRD.

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