Studies of therapy-related AML (t-AML) are usually performed in selected cohorts and reliable incidence rates are lacking. In this study, we characterized, defined the incidence over time and studied ...prognostic implications in all t-AML patients diagnosed in Sweden between 1997 and 2015. Data were retrieved from nationwide population-based registries. In total, 6,779 AML patients were included in the study, of whom 686 (10%) had t-AML. The median age for t-AML was 71 years and 392 (57%) patients were females. During the study period, the incidence of t-AML almost doubled with a yearly increase in t-AML of 4.5% (95% confidence interval: 2.8%-6.2%), which contributed significantly to the general increase in AML incidence over the study period. t-AML solidly constituted over 10% of all AML cases during the later period of the study. Primary diagnoses with the largest increase in incidence and decrease in mortality rate during the study period (i.e., breast and prostate cancer) contributed significantly to the increased incidence of t-AML. In multivariable analysis, t-AML was associated with poorer outcome in cytogenetically intermediate- and adverse-risk cases but t-AML had no significant impact on outcome in favorable-risk AML, including core binding leukemias, acute promyelocytic leukemia and AML with mutated NPM1 without FLT3-ITD. We conclude that there is a strong increase in incidence in t-AML over time and that t-AML constitutes a successively larger proportion of the AML cases. Furthermore, we conclude that t-AML confers a poor prognosis in cytogenetically intermediate- and adverse-risk, but not in favorable-risk AML.
Hydroxyurea (HU) is frequently used in the early phase of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) to achieve cytoreduction prior to tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy. However, its impact on CML stem and ...progenitor cells (SPC) remains largely unknown. This study utilized targeted proteo-transcriptomic expression data on 596 genes and 51 surface proteins in 60,000 CD14-CD34+ cells from chronic phase CML patients to determine effects of shortterm HU treatment (4-19 days) on CML SPC. Peripheral blood and bone marrow samples were obtained from 17 CML patients eligible for short-term HU treatment (three patients before and after HU; seven patients before HU; and seven patients after HU) and subjected to single-cell CITE-seq and/or flow cytometry analysis. The analysis revealed enhanced frequencies of hemoglobin-expressing (HBA1, HBA2, HBB) erythroid progenitor cells in blood and bone marrow following HU treatment. In addition, there was an accumulation of cell subsets with S/G2/M phase-related gene and protein expression, likely representing cells arrested in, or progressing slowly through, the cell cycle. The increased frequency of cells in S/G2/M phase after HU was observed already among the most immature leukemic stem cells (LSC), and patients with a high fraction of LSC in the S/G2/M phase showed poor responsiveness to TKI treatment. We conclude that short-term HU treatment entails differentiation of erythroid progenitor cells and alters the characteristics of LSC in CML. The results imply that studies of LSC and progenitor populations in CML should take effects of initial HU therapy into account.Hydroxyurea (HU) is frequently used in the early phase of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) to achieve cytoreduction prior to tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy. However, its impact on CML stem and progenitor cells (SPC) remains largely unknown. This study utilized targeted proteo-transcriptomic expression data on 596 genes and 51 surface proteins in 60,000 CD14-CD34+ cells from chronic phase CML patients to determine effects of shortterm HU treatment (4-19 days) on CML SPC. Peripheral blood and bone marrow samples were obtained from 17 CML patients eligible for short-term HU treatment (three patients before and after HU; seven patients before HU; and seven patients after HU) and subjected to single-cell CITE-seq and/or flow cytometry analysis. The analysis revealed enhanced frequencies of hemoglobin-expressing (HBA1, HBA2, HBB) erythroid progenitor cells in blood and bone marrow following HU treatment. In addition, there was an accumulation of cell subsets with S/G2/M phase-related gene and protein expression, likely representing cells arrested in, or progressing slowly through, the cell cycle. The increased frequency of cells in S/G2/M phase after HU was observed already among the most immature leukemic stem cells (LSC), and patients with a high fraction of LSC in the S/G2/M phase showed poor responsiveness to TKI treatment. We conclude that short-term HU treatment entails differentiation of erythroid progenitor cells and alters the characteristics of LSC in CML. The results imply that studies of LSC and progenitor populations in CML should take effects of initial HU therapy into account.
With increasingly effective treatments, early death (ED) has become the predominant reason for therapeutic failure in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). To better prevent ED, patients ...with high-risk of ED must be identified. Our aim was to develop a score that predicts the risk of ED in a real-life setting. We used APL patients in the populationbased Swedish AML Registry (n=301) and a Portuguese hospital-based registry (n=129) as training and validation cohorts, respectively. The cohorts were comparable with respect to age (median, 54 and 53 years) and ED rate (19.6% and 18.6%). The score was developed by logistic regression analyses, risk-per-quantile assessment and scoring based on ridge regression coefficients from multivariable penalized logistic regression analysis. White blood cell count, platelet count and age were selected by this approach as the most significant variables for predicting ED. The score identified low-, high- and very high-risk patients with ED risks of 4.8%, 20.2% and 50.9% respectively in the training cohort and with 6.7%, 25.0% and 36.0% as corresponding values for the validation cohort. The score identified an increased risk of ED already at sub-normal and normal white blood cell counts and, consequently, it was better at predicting ED risk than the Sanz score (AUROC 0.77 vs. 0.64). In summary, we here present an externally validated and population-based risk score to predict ED risk in a real-world setting, identifying patients with the most urgent need of aggressive ED prevention. The results also suggest that increased vigilance for ED is already necessary at sub-normal/normal white blood cell counts.
Natural killer cells are important effector cells in the immune response against myeloid malignancies. Previous studies show that the expression of activating NK cell receptors is pivotal for ...efficient recognition of blasts from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and that high expression levels impact favorably on patient survival. This study investigated the potential impact of activating receptor gene variants on NK cell receptor expression and survival in a cohort of AML patients receiving relapse-preventive immunotherapy with histamine dihydrochloride and low-dose IL-2 (HDC/IL-2). Patients harboring the G allele of rs1049174 in the
gene encoding NKG2D showed high expression of NKG2D by CD56
NK cells and a favorable clinical outcome in terms of overall survival. For DNAM-1, high therapy-induced receptor expression entailed improved survival, while patients with high DNAM-1 expression before immunotherapy associated with unfavorable clinical outcome. The previously reported SNPs in
encoding NKp30, which purportedly influence mRNA splicing into isoforms with discrete functions, did not affect outcome in this study. Our results imply that variations in genes encoding activating NK cell receptors determine receptor expression and clinical outcome in AML immunotherapy.
Acute myeloid leukemia in very old patients Lazarevic, Vladimir Lj; Bredberg, Anders; Lorenz, Fryderyk ...
Haematologica,
12/2018, Letnik:
103, Številka:
12
Journal Article
Summary
Clinical trials show that tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) treatment can be discontinued in selected patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML). Although updated CML guidelines support such ...procedure in clinical routine, data on TKI stopping outside clinical trials are limited. In this retrospective study utilising the Swedish CML registry, we examined TKI discontinuation in a population‐based setting. Out of 584 patients diagnosed with chronic‐phase CML (CML‐CP) in 2007–2012, 548 had evaluable information on TKI discontinuation. With a median follow‐up of nine years from diagnosis, 128 (23%) discontinued TKI therapy (≥1 month) due to achieving a DMR (deep molecular response) and 107 (20%) due to other causes (adverse events, allogeneic stem cell transplant, pregnancy, etc). Among those stopping in DMR, 49% re‐initiated TKI treatment (median time to restart 4·8 months). In all, 38 patients stopped TKI within a clinical study and 90 outside a study. After 24 months 41·1% of patients discontinuing outside a study had re‐initiated TKI treatment. TKI treatment duration pre‐stop was longer and proportion treated with second‐generation TKI slightly higher outside studies, conceivably affecting the clinical outcome. In summary we show that TKI discontinuation in CML in clinical practice is common and feasible and may be just as successful as when performed within a clinical trial.