Consecutive day dosing of high-dose cytarabine consolidation over 3 days is resource-efficient and safe in older adult patients with acute myeloid leukemia
Details
Publication Year 2023-12,Volume 64,Issue #13,Page 2123-2132
Journal Title
Leukemia & Lymphoma
Publication Type
Research article
Abstract
High-dose cytarabine (HDAC) is conventionally delivered on days 1, 3 and 5 (HDAC-135) as acute myeloid leukemia (AML) post-remission therapy. Limited data is available on alternative HDAC schedules such as HDAC-123 (given consecutively for 3 days). We retrospectively compared the tolerability and efficacy of HDAC-135 and HDAC-123 delivered in sequential cohorts of adult AML patients. Seventy-three patients were included with 33% aged ≥60 years. HDAC-123 was associated with faster hematological recovery, reduced bacteremia and shorter hospitalization. No differences in safety profile or hematological recovery were seen between patients ≥60 years and <60 years receiving HDAC-123 except a shorter median time to neutrophil count recovery after cycle 1 in the latter group. Three patients (8%) receiving HDAC-123, all aged <60 years, required a change in schedule to HDAC-135 due to transient cytarabine-related side effects. HDAC-123 consolidation was well-tolerated by AML patients, including those ≥60 years, and associated with tangible reductions in resource utilization.
Keywords
Humans; Aged; *Cytarabine; Retrospective Studies; Disease-Free Survival; Remission Induction; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/adverse effects; *Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute/diagnosis/drug therapy/chemically induced; Acute myeloid leukemia; consolidation chemotherapy; high-dose cytarabine; older patients
Department(s)
Clinical Haematology
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2024-01-19 06:43:10
Last Modified: 2024-07-16 04:10:17

© 2024 The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research. Access to this website is subject to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use

An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙