Cancer Medicine (May 2023)

The baseline comorbidity burden affects survival in elderly patients with acute myeloid leukemia receiving hypomethylating agents: Results from a multicentric clinical study

  • Giovanni Marconi,
  • Anna Candoni,
  • Roberta Di Nicola,
  • Chiara Sartor,
  • Sarah Parisi,
  • Mariachiara Abbenante,
  • Jacopo Nanni,
  • Gianluca Cristiano,
  • Letizia Zannoni,
  • Davide Lazzarotto,
  • Benedetta Giannini,
  • Carmen Baldazzi,
  • Lorenza Bandini,
  • Emanuela Ottaviani,
  • Nicoletta Testoni,
  • Chiara Di Giovanni Bezzi,
  • Rania Abd‐alatif,
  • Giulia Ciotti,
  • Renato Fanin,
  • Giovanni Martinelli,
  • Stefania Paolini,
  • Paolo Ricci,
  • Michele Cavo,
  • Cristina Papayannidis,
  • Antonio Curti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5858
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
pp. 11838 – 11848

Abstract

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Abstract Background In older patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the definition of fitness, prognosis, and risk of death represents an open question. Methods In the present study, we tested the impact on survival of disease‐ and patient‐related parameters in a large cohort of elderly AML patients homogeneously assigned to treatment with hypomethylating agents (HMAs). Results In 131 patients with a median age of 76 years, we confirmed that early response (<0.001) and biology‐based risk classification (p = 0.003) can select patients with better‐predicted survival. However, a full disease‐oriented model had limitations in stratifying our patients, prompting us to investigate the impact of baseline comorbidities on overall survival basing on a comorbidity score. The albumin level (p = 0.001) and the presence of lung disease (p = 0.013) had a single‐variable impact on prognosis. The baseline comorbidity burden was a powerful predictor of patients' frailty, correlating with increased incidence of adverse events, especially infections, and predicted overall survival (p < 0.001). Conclusion The comorbidity burden may contribute to impact prognosis in addition to disease biology. While the therapeutic armamentarium of elderly AML is improving, a comprehensive approach that combines AML biology with tailored interventions to patients' frailty is likely to fully exploit the anti‐leukemia potential of novel drugs.

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