Cancer Medicine (Mar 2021)

Molecular response and quality of life in chronic myeloid leukemia patients treated with intermittent TKIs: First interim analysis of OPTkIMA study

  • Michele Malagola,
  • Alessandra Iurlo,
  • Elisabetta Abruzzese,
  • Massimiliano Bonifacio,
  • Fabio Stagno,
  • Gianni Binotto,
  • Mariella D’Adda,
  • Monia Lunghi,
  • Monica Crugnola,
  • Maria Luisa Ferrari,
  • Francesca Lunghi,
  • Fausto Castagnetti,
  • Gianantonio Rosti,
  • Roberto M. Lemoli,
  • Rosaria Sancetta,
  • Maria Rosaria Coppi,
  • Maria Teresa Corsetti,
  • Giovanna Rege Cambrin,
  • Atelda Romano,
  • Mario Tiribelli,
  • Antonella Russo Rossi,
  • Sabina Russo,
  • Lara Aprile,
  • Monica Bocchia,
  • Lisa Gandolfi,
  • Mirko Farina,
  • Simona Bernardi,
  • Nicola Polverelli,
  • Aldo M. Roccaro,
  • Antonio De Vivo,
  • Michele Baccarani,
  • Domenico Russo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.3778
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
pp. 1726 – 1737

Abstract

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Abstract Background Intermittent treatment with TKIs is an option for the great majority (70%–80%) of CML patients who do not achieve a stable deep molecular response and are not eligible for treatment discontinuation. For these patients, the only alternative is to assume TKI continuously, lifelong. Methods The Italian phase III multicentric randomized OPTkIMA study started in 2015, with the aim to evaluate if a progressive de‐escalation of TKIs (imatinib, nilotinib, and dasatinib) is able to maintain the molecular response (MR3.0) and to improve Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL). Results Up to December 2018, 166/185 (90%) elderly CML patients in stable MR3.0/MR4.0 completed the first year of any TKI intermittent schedule 1 month ON and 1 month OFF. The first year probability of maintaining the MR3.0 was 81% and 23.5% of the patients who lost the molecular response regained the MR3.0 after resuming TKI continuously. Patients’ HRQoL at baseline was better than that of matched peers from healthy population. Women was the only factor independently associated with worse baseline HRQoL (p > 0.0001). Overall, global HRQoL worsened at 6 (p < 0.001) but returned to the baseline value at 12 months and it was statistically significantly worse in women (p = 0.001). Conclusions De‐escalation of any TKI by 1 month ON/OFF schedule maintains the MR3.0/MR4.0 in 81% of the patients during the first 12–24 months. No patients progressed to accelerated/blastic phase, all the patients (23.5%) losing MR3.0 regained the MR3.0 and none suffered from TKI withdrawn syndrome. The study firstly report on HRQoL in elderly CML patients moving from a continuous daily therapy to a de‐escalated intermittent treatment.

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