PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Protracted Administration of L-Asparaginase in Maintenance Phase Is the Risk Factor for Hyperglycemia in Older Patients with Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

  • Hideki Yoshida,
  • Toshihiko Imamura,
  • Akiko M Saito,
  • Yoshihiro Takahashi,
  • So-ichi Suenobu,
  • Daiichiro Hasegawa,
  • Takao Deguchi,
  • Yoshiko Hashii,
  • Hirohide Kawasaki,
  • Mikiya Endo,
  • Hiroki Hori,
  • Nobuhiro Suzuki,
  • Yoshiyuki Kosaka,
  • Koji Kato,
  • Keiko Yumura-Yagi,
  • Junichi Hara,
  • Megumi Oda,
  • Atsushi Sato,
  • Keizo Horibe,
  • Japan Association of Childhood Leukemia Study

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136428
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. e0136428

Abstract

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Although L-asparaginase related hyperglycemia is well known adverse event, it is not studied whether the profile of this adverse event is affected by intensification of L-asparaginase administration. Here, we analyzed the profile of L-asparaginase related hyperglycemia in a 1,176 patients with pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated according to the Japan Association of Childhood Leukemia Study ALL-02 protocol using protracted L-asparaginase administration in maintenance phase. We determined that a total of 75 L-asparaginase related hyperglycemia events occurred in 69 patients. Although 17 events (17/1176, 1.4%) developed in induction phase, which was lower incidence than those (10-15%) in previous reports, 45 events developed during the maintenance phase with protracted L-asparaginase administration. Multivariate analysis showed that older age at onset (≥ 10 years) was a sole independent risk factor for L-asparaginase-related hyperglycemia (P<0.01), especially in maintenance phase. Contrary to the previous reports, obesity was not associated with L-asparaginase-related hyperglycemia. These findings suggest that protracted administration of L-asparaginase is the risk factor for hyperglycemia when treating adolescent and young adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients.