Blood Cancer Journal (Jul 2022)

A scoring system for AML patients aged 70 years or older, eligible for intensive chemotherapy: a study based on a large European data set using the DATAML, SAL, and PETHEMA registries

  • Emilie Bérard,
  • Christoph Röllig,
  • Sarah Bertoli,
  • Arnaud Pigneux,
  • Suzanne Tavitian,
  • Michael Kramer,
  • Hubert Serve,
  • Martin Bornhäuser,
  • Uwe Platzbecker,
  • Carsten Müller-Tidow,
  • Claudia D. Baldus,
  • David Martínez-Cuadrón,
  • Josefina Serrano,
  • Pilar Martínez-Sánchez,
  • Eduardo Rodríguez Arbolí,
  • Cristina Gil,
  • Juan Bergua,
  • Teresa Bernal,
  • Adolfo de la Fuente Burguera,
  • Eric Delabesse,
  • Audrey Bidet,
  • Pierre-Yves Dumas,
  • Pau Montesinos,
  • Christian Récher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-022-00700-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract In a context of therapeutic revolution in older adults with AML, it is becoming increasingly important to select patients for the various treatment options by taking account of short-term efficacy and toxicity as well as long-term survival. Here, the data from three European registries for 1,199 AML patients aged 70 years or older treated with intensive chemotherapy were used to develop a prognostic scoring system. The median follow-up was 50.8 months. In the training set of 636 patients, age, performance status, secondary AML, leukocytosis, and cytogenetics, as well as NPM1 mutations (without FLT3-ITD), were all significantly associated with overall survival, albeit not to the same degree. These factors were used to develop a score that predicts long-term overall survival. Three risk-groups were identified: a lower, intermediate and higher-risk score with predicted 5-year overall survival (OS) probabilities of ≥12% (n = 283, 51%; median OS = 18 months), 3–12% (n = 226, 41%; median OS = 9 months) and <3% (n = 47, 8%; median OS = 3 months), respectively. This scoring system was also significantly associated with complete remission, early death and relapse-free survival; performed similarly in the external validation cohort (n = 563) and showed a lower false-positive rate than previously published scores. The European Scoring System ≥70, easy for routine calculation, predicts long-term survival in older AML patients considered for intensive chemotherapy.