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To assess the role of Arsenic trioxide and/or ATRA during consolidation course in APL. It is hoped that the investigational arms will further increase the event-free survival at 2 years, with reduced toxicity and without increasing the relapse rate by comparison with a classical anthracycline-AraC consolidation regimen.
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Definition: Extended description of the protocol, including information not already contained in other fields, such as comparison(s) studied.
APL is a specific type of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) characterized by its morphology (M3 or M3v in the FAB classification), t(15;17) translocation leading to PML-RARa fusion gene, and by a specific coagulopathy combining D.I.C., fibrinolysis and non specific proteolysis. ATRA can differentiate APL blasts in VITRO and in vivo. The combination of ATRA and anthracycline based chemotherapy yields CR rates greater than 90% in newly diagnosed APL. With early introduction of anthracycline AraC chemotherapy during induction treatment, and maintenance combining continuous 6MP and MTX to intermittent ATRA, the relapse risk in APL therefore now appears to be in the range of 10 to 15%.
Nevertheless, 5 to 10% of the patients do not achieve CR and 10% to 15% still relapse. Another subset of patients (5 to 7% in APL 93 trial including 17% of patients aged greater than 65 years) die in CR, from complications of the consolidation treatment phase, mainly from infection during chemotherapy induced aplasia. Failure to achieve CR with current treatment approaches is almost exclusively due to early death during induction treatment. Causes of death are predominantly bleeding, ATRA syndrome and less often infection. Early deaths predominate in elderly patients and patients with high WBC counts. Reducing the amount of chemotherapy administered to newly diagnosed APL patients diminishes this toxicity. The Spanish PETHEMA group reported results of two successive phase II trials in newly diagnosed APL with ATRA and chemotherapy with intercalating agents (idarubicin and mitoxantrone) without AraC followed by maintenance combining ATRA and low dose chemotherapy (LPA96 and LPA99 trials). Results appeared similar to those of the best arm of APL 93 trial, but with less toxicity and only 2 to 3 % death in CR were seen, including in elderly patients.
Arsenic trioxide (As2O3 or ATO) is an effective agent in relapsing or refractory APL, which induced 85% hematological and 79% molecular CR rates in a pivotal US study. The interest of ATO in the front-line therapy of newly-diagnosed APL has been strongly suggested in three studies which showed high complete remission rate, low incidence of relapse and limited toxicity.
In this study, patients will be stratified based on age (≤ 70 years and > 70 years) and WBC count at diagnosis (WBC<10.000/mm3 and >10.000 /mm3).
-Patients aged 70 years or less with WBC<10.000/mm3.
In this population (about 70 % of APL) the best treatment group of APL2000 trial (ATRA with early introduction of anthracycline-AraC chemotherapy but where Idarubicin will be substituted for Daunorubicin, followed by 2 anthracycline-AraC consolidation courses and maintenance combining continuous chemotherapy and intermittent ATRA) will be compared to the same regimen, but without AraC during consolidation courses which will be replaced by:
either ATO
or ATRA It is hoped that the investigational arms will further increase the event-free survival at 2 years, with reduced toxicity and without increasing the relapse rate by comparison with a classical anthracycline-AraC consolidation regimen.
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800 participants in 1 patient group
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Lionel ADES, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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