Blood Cancer Journal (Jul 2022)

Long-term follow-up of cladribine treatment in hairy cell leukemia: 30-year experience in a multicentric Italian study

  • Livio Pagano,
  • Marianna Criscuolo,
  • Alessandro Broccoli,
  • Alfonso Piciocchi,
  • Marzia Varettoni,
  • Eugenio Galli,
  • Antonella Anastasia,
  • Maria Cantonetti,
  • Livio Trentin,
  • Sofia Kovalchuk,
  • Lorella Orsucci,
  • Annamaria Frustaci,
  • Angelica Spolzino,
  • Stefano Volpetti,
  • Ombretta Annibali,
  • Sergio Storti,
  • Caterina Stelitano,
  • Francesco Marchesi,
  • Massimo Offidani,
  • Beatrice Casadei,
  • Maria Elena Nizzoli,
  • Maria Lucia De Luca,
  • Luana Fianchi,
  • Marina Motta,
  • Luca Guarnera,
  • Edoardo Simonetti,
  • Andrea Visentin,
  • Francesco Vassallo,
  • Marina Deodato,
  • Chiara Sarlo,
  • Attilio Olivieri,
  • Brunangelo Falini,
  • Alessandro Pulsoni,
  • Enrico Tiacci,
  • Pier Luigi Zinzani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-022-00702-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is a rare lymphoproliferative disease with an excellent prognosis after treatment with cladribine (2CDA), although relapse may occur during follow-up. The aim of the study is to review the efficacy, safety, long-term remission rate, and overall survival (OS) in those patients who received 2CDA as first-line treatment. We retrospectively reviewed data of HCL patients treated with 2CDA between March 1991 and May 2019 at 18 Italian Hematological centers: 513 patients were evaluable for study purpose. The median age was 54 years (range 24–88) and ECOG was 0 in 84.9% of cases. A total of 330 (64.3%) patients received 2CDA intravenously and 183 (35.7%) subcutaneously. ORR was 91.8%: CR was obtained in 335 patients (65.3%), PR in 96 (18.7%), and hematological response in 40 (7.8%) patients; in 42 (8.2%) no response was observed. Hemoglobin value (p = 0.044), frequency of circulating hairy cells (p = 0.039), recovery of absolute neutrophil count (p = 0.006), and normalization of spleen (p ≤ 0.001) were associated with CR compared to PR in univariable analysis. At a median follow-up of 6.83 years (range 0.04–28.52), the median time to relapse was 12.2 years. A significant difference in duration of response was identified between patients that obtained a CR and PR (19.4 years versus 4.8 years, p < 0.0001). Non-hematological grade 3 or higher early toxicity was reported in 103 (20.1%) patients. Median OS was not reached: 95.3%, 92.4%, and 81.8% of patients were estimated to be alive at 5, 10, and 15 years, respectively. Forty-nine patients died (9.5%), following an infection in 14 cases (2.7%), natural causes in 14 (2.7%), cardiovascular events in 13 (2.5%), a second neoplasm in 6 (1.2%), and progression of HCL in 2 cases (0.4%). Following treatment of HCL with 2CDA, 80% of patients are estimated to be alive 15 years after diagnosis.