BMC Cancer (Jan 2009)

Impact of age, leukocyte count and day 21-bone marrow response to chemotherapy on the long-term outcome of children with philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia in the pre-imatinib era: results of the FRALLE 93 study

  • Debre Marianne,
  • Lejars Odile,
  • Stephan Jean-Louis,
  • Piguet Christophe,
  • Schmitt Claudine,
  • Demeocq Francois,
  • Le Gall Edouard,
  • Vannier Jean-Pierre,
  • Perel Yves,
  • Auclerc Marie-Francoise,
  • Gandemer Virginie,
  • Jonveaux Philippe,
  • Cayuela Jean-Michel,
  • Chevret Sylvie,
  • Leverger Guy,
  • Baruchel Andre

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-9-14
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background We explored the heterogeneity of philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph1-ALL) in a study of the effect of early features on prognosis in children. Here we report the long-term results of the FRALLE 93 study conducted in the era before the use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Methods Between 1993 and 1999, 36 children with Ph1-ALL were enrolled into the FRALLE 93 protocol. After conventional four-drug induction, children were stratified by availability of an HLA-matched sibling. Results Complete remission (CR) was observed in 26 children (72%), of which 13 underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). Thirty-one children were good responders to prednisone, defined on day 8, and 21 were good responders to chemotherapy, defined by day-21 bone marrow (M1). Overall five-year disease-free survival (DFS) was 42 ± 9.7%. Based on multivariate analysis, two groups showed marked differences in five-year outcome: children with age3 and day-21 M1 marrow had a more favorable prognosis (14 pts: 100% CR, event free survival [EFS]: 57%, overall survival [OS]: 79%), than the high-risk group (22 patients: 55% CR, EFS: 18%, OS: 27%) (p Conclusion Age, leukocyte count and early response to treatment defined by the D21 bone marrow response provide an accurate model for outcome prediction. The combination of available tools such as minimal residual disease assessment with determination of these simple factors could be useful for refining indications for BMT in the current era of tyrosine-kinase inhibitor-based therapy.