Reduced Intensity transplantation vs chemotherapy in CR1. A prospective, pseudorandomized study in 50-70 year old AML patients




Brune, Mats; Kiss, Thomas; Anderson, Harald; Nicklasson, Malin; Delage, Robert; Finke, Jürgen; Gedde-Dahl, Tobias; Hébert, Josée; Höglund, Martin; Kaare, Ain; Lazarevic, Vladimir; Möllgård, Lars; Remes, Kari; Ritchie, David; Spyridonidis, Alexandros; Sabloff, Mitchell; Spearing, Ruth; Wallhult, Elisabeth; Ljungman, Per

PublisherSPRINGERNATURE

LONDON

2024

Bone Marrow Transplantation

BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION

BONE MARROW TRANSPL

59

12

1676

1682

7

0268-3369

1476-5365

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41409-024-02408-x

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41409-024-02408-x

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/457857430



The aim of this prospective, international multicenter, pseudorandomized study comparing RICT HCT to standard-of-care chemotherapy in intermediate- or high-risk AML patients 50-70 years using the donor versus no-donor concept. Part 1 included only patients with potential family donors (RD) at the date of HLA-typing of the first potential sibling or CR-date, if later. Part 2 allowed the inclusion of patients without a possible sibling donor using the start of an unrelated donor (URD) search as inclusion date. 360 patients were registered and 309 analyzed. The median follow-up was 47 months (1-168). There was no difference in overall survival (OS) between the RD (n = 124) and the Control (n = 77) groups (p = 0.50, 3-year OS RD: 0.41(95% CI; 0.32-0.50); Controls: 0.49 (95% CI; 0.37-0.59)). The main cause of death was relapse (67% RD; 88% Controls). In Part 2, the 3-year OS was 0.60 (95% CI 0.50-0.70) for URD-HCT (n = 86) and 0.37 (95% CI 0.13-0.62) for Controls (n = 20), respectively (p = 0.10). When analyzing transplanted patients (Part 2), the OS at 3-years was higher for URD-HCT than RD-HCT (0.67 (0.55-0.76) vs. 0.42 (0.26-0.57; p = 0.005). This study doesn't support elderly HLA-identical siblings as donors for older AML patients undergoing a RICT allogeneic HCT in first CR.


Inger Andersson and Joanne Blais for their work for the study. Economic support was granted by the Swedish Research Council (2012-38102-91941-45), the Swedish Cancer Foundation, CA 2017/364, 2017/369, the Swedish State under the ALF agreement, Lion´s Cancer Research Fund of Western Sweden, and NordForsk Project No. 71306. The study was supported by Cell Therapy Transplant Canada (formerly named Canadian Blood and Marrow Transplant Group), and Otsuka pharmaceuticals (Canada).Open access funding provided by Karolinska Institute.


Last updated on 2025-27-02 at 11:16