Open-Label Phase II Prospective, Randomized, Controlled Study of Romyelocel-L Myeloid Progenitor Cells to Reduce Infection During Induction Chemotherapy for Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PURPOSE: Standard cytotoxic induction chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) results in prolonged neutropenia and risk of infection. Romyelocel-L is a universal, allogeneic myeloid progenitor cell product being studied to reduce infection during induction chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: One hundred sixty-three patients with de novo AML (age ≥ 55 years) receiving induction chemotherapy were randomly assigned on day 0 (d0), of whom 120 were evaluable. Subjects received either romyelocel-L infusion on d9 with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) starting daily d14 (treatment group) or G-CSF daily alone on d14 (control) until absolute neutrophil count recovery to 500/µL. End points included days in febrile episode, microbiologically defined infections, clinically diagnosed infection, and days in hospital. RESULTS: Mean days in febrile episode was shorter in the treatment arm from d15 through d28 (2.36 v 3.90; P = .02). Similarly, a trend toward decreased microbiologically defined infections and clinically diagnosed infection in the treatment arm was observed from d9 to d28 (35.6% v 47.5%; P = .09), reaching a statistically significant difference from d15 to d28 (6.8% v 27.9%; P = .002). Because of this, antibacterial or antifungal use for treatment of an infection was significantly less in the treatment group (d9-d28: 44.1% v 63.9%; P = .01). Significantly fewer patients in the treatment arm received empiric antifungals from d9 tod28 (42.4% v 63.9%; P = .02) and d15-d28 (42.4% v 62.3%; P = .02). Patients in the treatment arm also had 3.2 fewer hospital days compared with control (25.5 v 28.7; P = .001). Remission rates and days to absolute neutrophil count recovery were similar in the two groups. No patients in the romyelocel-L plus G-CSF group died because of infection compared with two patients in the control arm. No graft-versus-host disease was observed. CONCLUSION: Subjects receiving romyelocel-L showed a decreased incidence of infections, antimicrobial use, and hospitalization, suggesting that romyelocel-L may provide a new option to reduce infections in patients with AML undergoing induction therapy.

authors

  • Desai, Pinkal
  • Brown, Janice
  • Gill, Saar
  • Solh, Melham M
  • Akard, Luke P
  • Hsu, Jack W
  • Ustun, Celalettin
  • Andreadis, Charalambos
  • Frankfurt, Olga
  • Foran, James M
  • Lister, John
  • Schiller, Gary J
  • Wieduwilt, Matthew J
  • Pagel, John M
  • Stiff, Patrick J
  • Liu, Delong
  • Khan, Irum
  • Stock, Wendy
  • Kambhampati, Suman
  • Tallman, Martin S
  • Morris, Lawrence
  • Edwards, John
  • Pusic, Iskra
  • Kantarjian, Hagop M
  • Mamelok, Richard
  • Wong, Alicia
  • Van Syoc, Rodney
  • Kellerman, Lois
  • Panuganti, Swapna
  • Mandalam, Ramkumar
  • Abboud, Camille N
  • Ravandi, Farhad

publication date

  • June 22, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute
  • Myeloid Progenitor Cells

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1200/JCO.20.01739

PubMed ID

  • 34156898