Pediatric-inspired chemotherapy incorporating pegaspargase is safe and results in high rates of minimal residual disease negativity in adults up to age 60 with Philadelphia chromosome-negative acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Administration of pediatric-inspired chemotherapy to adults up to age 60 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is challenging in part due to toxicities of asparaginase as well as myelosuppression. We conducted a multicenter phase II clinical trial (NCT01920737) investigating a pediatric-inspired regimen, based on the augmented arm of the Children's Cancer Group 1882 protocol, incorporating 6 doses of pegaspargase 2000 IU/m2, rationally synchronized to avoid overlapping toxicity with other agents. We treated 39 adults ages 20-60 years (median, 38 years) with newly-diagnosed ALL (n=31) or lymphoblastic lymphoma (n=8). Grade 3-4 hyperbilirubinemia occurred frequently and at higher rates in patients 40-60 (n=18) vs 18-39 (n=21) years (44 vs 10%, p=0.025). However, 8/9 patients re-challenged with pegaspargase did not experience recurrent grade 3-4 hyperbilirubinemia. Grade 3-4 hypertriglyceridemia and hypofibrinogenemia were common (each 59%). Asparaginase activity at 7-days post-infusion reflected levels associated with adequate asparagine depletion, even among those with antibodies to pegaspargase. Complete response (CR)/CR with incomplete hematologic recovery was observed post-induction in 38/39 (97%) patients. Among patients with ALL, rates of MRD negativity by multiparameter flow cytometry were 33% and 83% following Induction Phase I and Phase II, respectively. Event-free and overall survival at 3 years (67.8 and 76.4%) compare favorably to outcomes observed in other series. These results demonstrate pegaspargase can be administered in the context of intensive multi-agent chemotherapy to adults age ≤60 with manageable toxicity. This regimen may serve as an effective backbone into which novel agents may be incorporated in future frontline studies.

authors

  • Geyer, Mark B
  • Ritchie, Ellen K.
  • Rao, Arati V
  • Vemuri, Shreya
  • Flynn, Jessica
  • Hsu, Meier
  • Devlin, Sean M
  • Roshal, Mikhail
  • Gao, Qi
  • Shukla, Madhulika
  • Salcedo, Jose M
  • Maslak, Peter
  • Tallman, Martin S
  • Douer, Dan
  • Park, Jae H

publication date

  • August 1, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Asparaginase
  • Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC8327717

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85093538535

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.3324/haematol.2020.251686

PubMed ID

  • 33054114

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 106

issue

  • 8