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CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS, INTERVENTIONS, AND THERAPEUTIC TRIALS
From the Division of Oncology, Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA; Department of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology,
Children's Hospitals and Clinics, Minneapolis, MN; Department of
Radiation Oncology, Long Beach Memorial Medical Center, CA; Children's
Cancer Group Operations Office, Arcadia, CA; Ortho Biotech Oncology,
Weston, FL; Department of Genetics, Wayne Hughes Institute, St Paul,
MN; Department of Pediatrics, Albert Einstein Medical Center,
Philadelphia, PA; Division of Blood and Bone Marrow Transplantation,
Department of Pediatrics, DuPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE;
and Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine,
University of Southern California, Los Angeles.
Addition of a delayed-intensification (DI) phase after standard
induction/consolidation therapy was previously shown to improve outcome
for patients younger than 10 years of age with intermediate-risk acute
lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). The current trial randomized 1204 patients to regimens containing a single DI phase (405 patients), 2 DI
phases (DDI) (402 patients), or a single DI phase in conjunction with
increased vincristine and prednisone pulses during maintenance (DIVPI)
(397 patients). Estimates of event-free survival (EFS) and survival at
6 years are 79% ± 1% and 89% ± 1%, respectively. EFS was
improved on DDI compared with either DI (log-rank
P = .04; Kaplan-Meier [KM] P = .04;
relative risk [RR] = 1.38) or DIVPI (log-rank
P = .04; KM P = .01; RR = 1.39).There was
no difference in EFS for the DI and DIVPI regimens (log-rank
P = .96; KM P = .75). Survival estimates at
6 years were 87% (SD = 2%) for DI; 91% (SD = 2%) for DDI; and
90% (SD = 2%) for DIVPI (P = .17). Significant
univariate risk factors for the overall cohort included poor day-7
marrow response, black race, and age of at least 5 years. These data
demonstrate that DDI improves EFS of patients younger than 10 years of
age with intermediate-risk ALL.
(Blood. 2002;99:825-833) Current National Cancer Institute (NCI)
criteria1 for risk assignment in acute lymphoblastic
leukemia (ALL) define standard-risk disease as that occurring in
children older than 1 year of age and younger than 10 years of age who
have white blood cell (WBC) counts lower than 50 × 109L
(50 000/µL). Previous Children's Cancer Group (CCG) studies stratified such children with ALL into low- and intermediate-risk groups based on presenting age, WBC count, sex, and platelet count. These studies have shown that 60% to 70% of such children can be
cured with induction therapy consisting of vincristine, prednisone, L-asparaginase, central nervous system (CNS) prophylaxis consisting of
intrathecal methotrexate without cranial radiation therapy, and 2 to 3 years of maintenance therapy based on oral 6-mercaptopurine and
methotrexate.2 The CCG-161 trial for lower-risk patients found that addition of monthly vincristine and prednisone pulses during
maintenance increased the event-free survival (EFS) of lower-risk
patients from 64% to 77%.3 In relapsed patients, most of
whom had already received vincristine and prednisone pulses on
frontline therapy, addition of vincristine to sequential methotrexate and asparaginase doubled the duration of second remissions compared with standard therapy.4 This result raised the possibility that more frequent vincristine and prednisone pulses might be more
effective than the monthly pulses.
Subsequently, the CCG-105 study for intermediate-risk ALL found
that the addition of a delayed-intensification phase (DI) based on that
used in the Berlin-Frankfurt-Muenster (BFM) 76/79 study5
prior to maintenance with 6-mercaptopurine, methotrexate, and
vincristine/prednisone pulses was advantageous for the subset of
patients younger than 10 years of age who had WBC counts higher than
10 × 109L (10 000/µL) and lower than
50 × 109L (50 000/µL).6 The
5-year EFS in this study was 61% for patients who did not receive DI
and 77% for patients who received DI (P = .001). Adverse
risk factors for intermediate-risk patients treated on CCG-105 included
WBC count of at least 20 × 109L (20 000/µL), male
sex, and CD24 negativity. In addition, as has now been shown for all
risk groups, day-14 marrow response was a highly significant predictor
of EFS. An M2 marrow status (5% to 25% blasts) at day 14 conferred a
1.3-fold excess risk of an event, and M3 (more than 25% blasts), a
3.4-fold excess risk of an event.7
On the basis of these findings, the successor study for
intermediate-risk ALL, CCG-1891, was initiated with the primary
objective of further improving outcome by modifying the single DI-based regimen employed on CCG-105 with either a second DI phase (DDI) or with
an increased number of vincristine and prednisone pulses (DIVPI) given
during the maintenance phase. In this report, we show that DDI improves
outcome, particularly for subsets of patients with intermediate-risk
ALL who show delayed early responses to induction therapy.
Patients
Treatment protocol
Common therapy
Regimen-specific intensification/maintenance Treatment on the 3 regimens diverged following DI. The DI and DIVPI regimens proceeded to standard or intensified maintenance therapy, respectively (see below). The DDI regimen included a second interim maintenance phase and a second DI phase, each of which was identical to the interim maintenance and DI phases described above, before proceeding to standard maintenance. The standard 12-week maintenance courses for the DI regimen consisted of intravenous vincristine (1.5 mg/m2 on days 0, 28, and 56); oral prednisone (40 mg/m2 on days 0 through 4, 28 through 32, and 56 through 60); daily oral 6-mercaptopurine (75 mg/m2 per day); weekly oral methotrexate (20 mg/m2 per week); and age-adjusted intrathecal methotrexate (doses given as above on day 0 of each course). The DIVPI maintenance regimen was identical to standard maintenance except that vincristine (1.5 mg/m2) was given every 3 weeks (days 0, 21, 42, and 63) and oral prednisone (40 mg/m2) was given every 3 weeks (on days 0 through 4, 21 through 25, 42 through 46, and 63 through 67). The legend to Figure 1 lists the cumulative doses and numbers of doses of agents in the 3 regimens. On all regimens, therapy continued for 2 years for girls and 3 years for boys, timed from the beginning of interim maintenance.Statistical methods In the initial planning of this study, sample size and power calculations were based on a proportional hazards assumption for the treatment regimens, with few treatment failures assumed to occur after 5 years of follow-up. The planned accrual of 400 patients per randomized regimen yielded in excess of 80% power for a 2-sided log-rank test with a multiple comparison adjustment to detect a change in outcome from a baseline EFS of 80% to 88%. This change in EFS represents a reduction in the hazard rate by 43% (ie, relative hazard rate of 0.57 for the improved treatment). EFS is defined in this study as the time to the first occurrence of any one of the following events: induction death, nonresponse to induction therapy, relapse after initial remission at any site, death in remission, or second malignant neoplasm. The study protocol also emphasized the importance of directly comparing EFS estimates at later periods of follow-up, when the EFS estimates would be close to their plateau values.Randomization occurred at the time of study entry. Comparison of
treatment outcome used the intent-to-treat philosophy: all events that
occurred after randomization were attributed to the regimen initially
assigned. Since the treatment regimens did not diverge until the end of
the initial DI phase (which was planned to be 24 weeks from study
entry), there was some diminution of treatment effect estimates and
reduction of significance levels for the regimen comparisons. EFS
outcome was the primary end point used for life table comparisons of
treatment regimen outcomes and prognostic factor effects. Comparison of
overall survival was a secondary end point. Life table estimates used
the Kaplan-Meier (KM) method,11 and KM estimates were
provided at 6 years of follow-up, which represent a stable estimate of
long-term outcome, since very few events occurred subsequent to this
time point and almost all event-free patients had follow-up beyond 6 years. The SD of the KM estimate was calculated by means of Peto
variance formula.12 Relative hazard rates were estimated
by the log-rank ratio of observed-to-expected method.
Chi-square tests for homogeneity of distributions were used in some
comparisons (similarity of patient characteristics, patterns of outcome
events, etc). Multivariate analysis of prognostic factors used the Cox
proportional hazards model.13 For reporting purposes,
conventional significance for statistical comparisons was defined as
P
Patient characteristics A total of 1219 patients were entered in the study; of these patients, 1204 were deemed eligible. Nine patients were ineligible owing to inadequate Institutional Review Board approval; of the remaining 6 patients, 3 had incorrect diagnoses, 2 had low-risk ALL, and 1 had received systemic steroid therapy prior to study entry. In the study, 405 patients were randomized to DI; 397 patients were randomized to DIVPI; and 402 patients were randomized to DDI. Presenting characteristics of patients randomized to each of the 3 regimens are shown in Table 1. As expected, nearly all characteristics were distributed homogeneously among the 3 regimens, although hepatomegaly and splenomegaly were less frequent in patients who received the DDI regimen. Overall, the clinical criteria used to assign patients to the intermediate-risk classification resulted in twice as many boys as girls in the current cohort.
Treatment outcome On day 28, 1190 patients were eligible to proceed to phase 2: 12 had M2 marrows, and 38 lacked the blast percentage. Day-7 marrow response was analyzed among the overall cohort of patients who achieved M1 or M2 marrow status at the end of induction therapy. Among this cohort, 51% of all patients were M1, 24% were M2, and 24% were M3 at day 7 of induction. At the end of induction, 98% of all patients were in remission (M1 or M2 marrow status). Nine patients (2 on DI; 3 on DIVPI; 4 on DDI) were M3 at the end of induction and were taken off protocol. Five patients (1 on DI; 2 on DIVPI; 2 on DDI) died during induction. Similar day-7 marrow and end-of-induction results were observed for patients on each of the randomized regimens.The 6-year EFS and survival estimates for the overall cohort of
patients on CCG-1891 were 79% (SD = 1%) and 89% (SD = 1%), respectively. EFS estimates at 6 years were 76% (SD = 2%) for DI;
83% (SD = 2%) for DDI; and 77% (SD = 2%) for DIVPI
(P = .08; Figure 2). EFS was
improved on DDI compared with either DI (log-rank P = .04;
KM P = .04; relative risk [RR] = 1.38) or DIVPI
(log-rank P = .04; KM P = .01; RR = 1.39).
In addition, a comparison of outcome for patients on DDI versus
patients who did not receive DDI (DI and DIVPI regimens combined)
showed a significant difference favoring DDI (log-rank
P = .02; KM P = .02). These data indicate an
approximate 28% reduction in events for DDI compared with the other 2 regimens. There was no difference in EFS for the DI and DIVPI regimens
(log-rank P = .96; KM P = .75). Survival
estimates at 6 years were 87% (SD = 2%) for DI; 91% (SD = 2%)
for DDI; and 90% (SD = 2%) for DIVPI (P = .17). There
was no significant difference in EFS estimates or P value if
the 12 patients with M2 marrows or the 38 without a recorded blast
percentage are excluded from the analysis. Because Figure 2 shows a few
more early events in the DIVIP arm prior to week 24, the results were
examined from week 24. Overall outcomes and P value were
unchanged.
The number and type of events on each of the randomized regimens are
shown in Table 2. Both isolated bone
marrow and isolated CNS relapses were lower on the DDI regimen compared
with the DI and DIVPI regimens. Remission deaths, however, were more
frequent on the DIVPI and DDI regimens compared with the DI regimen.
There were 4 second malignancies: 2 on DDI and 2 on DIVPI.
Prognostic factors Univariate analysis of the overall cohort indicated that age of at least 5 years (P = .001), nonwhite race (P < .0001), marked splenomegaly (P = .002), and hemoglobin of at least 11 g/dL (P = .0003) were significant adverse risk factors and that the presence of a t(4;11) or t(9;22) translocation (occurring in 3 and 4 patients, respectively) was marginally significant (P = .09). In addition, normal chromosomes or high hyperdiploidy (greater than 50 chromosomes) conferred decreased risk of treatment failure (P = .001). With respect to race, white patients had the best outcome (6-year EFS = 82%, SD = 1%); Hispanic or "other" patients had intermediate outcome (6-year EFS = 71%, SD = 4%; and 72%, SD = 6%, respectively); and black patients had the worst outcome (6-year EFS = 54%, SD = 9%) (P < .0001) (Figure 3). Male children had worse outcome than females, although the log-rank P value did not reach conventional significance (P = .07): EFS probabilities were similar for males and females during the first 3 years from study entry and subsequently diverged owing to more posttherapy events among males (data not shown). Patients whose leukemic cells expressed markers for B-lineage ALL had the same outcomes as those for T-lineage ALL (P = .90), and patients whose cells coexpressed lymphoid and myeloid markers had similar outcomes to those with only lymphoid markers (P > .99).
Day-7 response was also a significant prognostic factor, with 6-year
EFS of 84% (SD = 2%) for patients with M1 marrow status, as compared
with 78% (SD = 3%) with M2 or 71% (SD = 3%) with M3 (P < .0001) (Figure 4).
Within the DI regimen, day-7 marrow status was also a significant
predictor of outcome (P = .0008), but within the DIVPI and
DDI regimens, day-7 marrow status reached only borderline prognostic
significance (P = .07 for both groups) (Table
3). Although there was no clear EFS
advantage for patients on the DDI regimen within the subset of patients
with a day-7 M1 marrow (RR, DI versus DDI = 1.16), DDI appeared
superior to DI for patients who were M2 (RR, DI versus DDI = 1.61) or
M3 (RR, DI versus DDI = 1.64) at day 7 of induction (Table 3).
An analysis of the multivariate effect of significant univariate prognostic factors on the treatment effect of the DDI regimen was conducted with a model that included day-7 marrow status (M1, M2, M3; restricted to those who achieved remission at the end of induction); race (white, Hispanic, black, other); hemoglobin (lower than 8 g/dL, 8 through 10.99 g/dL, at least 11 g/dL); splenomegaly (normal; moderately enlarged; significantly enlarged); platelet count (fewer than 50 × 109L [50 000/µL], 50 × 109L through 149 × 109L [50 000 through 149 000/µL], and at least 150 × 109L [150 000/µL]); sex; and age (1 through 4.99 years, 5 through 9.99 years). The significant difference in EFS observed for DI compared with DDI in the univariate analysis was similar in the multivariate analysis (P = .07; RR = 1.37, confidence interval, 0.979-1.92). Toxicities and resource use The first 4 phases of therapy were identical on the 3 treatment regimens, and incidence of grade 3 and 4 nonhematological toxicity was similar on each of the 3 regimens during this period.3,6 Morbidity and supportive-care interventions were tabulated from the point at which the 3 regimens diverged (Figure 1; Table 4). Episodes of pancreatic and other gastrointestinal dysfunction, coagulation abnormalities, and infection were more common in patients receiving DDI than in patients on DI or DIVPI. There was a 4-fold increase in the number of patients receiving red cell transfusions and a 6-fold increase in the number of patients receiving platelet transfusions on the DDI regimen compared with the DI regimen. Mean (± SD) number of days of hospitalization was significantly higher (Wilcoxon P = .0001) for the DDI regimen (mean, 15 ± 15 days; median, 11 days; 75th percentile, 21 days) compared with DI (mean, 8 ± 11 days; median, 5 days; 75th percentile, 11 days) or DIVPI (mean, 10 ± 13 days; median, 6 days; 75th percentile, 14 days). Thus, DDI involved a median of 6 more hospital days compared with DI. Four patients developed second malignant neoplasms: AML in marrow (1); chloroma (1); byphenotypic leukemia (1); and B-cell lymphoproliferative disease in a patient with t(9;22) ALL who discontinued protocol therapy for a marrow transplant (1).
Children with intermediate-risk ALL represent approximately two thirds of NCI-defined standard-risk patients. The CCG-1891 study for this subset of patients has suggested that the addition of a second DI phase given 16 weeks after the first DI phase results in improved EFS. Treatment-related toxicities, attributable primarily to the myelosuppressive effects of daunorubicin, cytosine arabinoside, and cyclophosphamide, or effects of L-asparaginase on coagulation were more frequent for patients on DDI than on DI. These complications did not result in significantly increased treatment-related mortality or major late effects that might compromise the life or functioning of these patients. For example, among patients treated with DDI, there was no occurrence of aseptic necrosis, a debilitating complication that occurred at 3-year cumulative rates of 14% (SD = 4%) and 26% (SD = 5%)15 among patients 10 to 20 years of age who received 1 or 2 DI phases, respectively, as part of an overall augmented treatment strategy on the CCG-1882 higher-risk ALL study.16 It is possible that older age and use of higher steroid doses during induction, as well as the second DI phase itself, mediated aseptic necrosis on the higher-risk study. Also, although 2 patients on DDI developed a second malignant neoplasm, one neoplasm occurred following unrelated donor stem cell transplantation in a patient with t(9;22) who was removed from protocol therapy. The total doses of cyclophosphamide (2 g/m2 on DDI and 1 g/m2 on DI) used on this study are not likely to be associated with a further increase in second malignant neoplasms as the study matures.17 Few cardiac abnormalities were observed on this study; this is consistent with the relatively low cumulative dose of anthracycline (150 mg/m2 on DDI; 75 mg/m2 on DI or DIVPI) used. The number of days of hospitalization was significantly higher in the DDI regimen than in either DI or DIVPI, indicating that resource use is increased by the more intensive regimen. The CCG has calculated a relapse-adjusted marginal cost-effectiveness, based on duration of hospitalization on frontline and relapsed ALL studies. Each relapse that is prevented by DDI saves the cost of 52 additional hospital days per 100 patients given DDI or about one-half day of hospitalization per patient.18 This suggests that the increase in EFS afforded by DDI offsets its cost in hospital days. The difference in outcome according to race is striking. Previous studies have reported poorer outcome for black children with ALL compared with white children, with an approximate 10% to 15% difference in EFS at late periods of follow-up.19-21 An analysis of more recent studies by the St Jude Children's Research Hospital (SJCRH) (Memphis, TN) indicated that differences in outcome between race groups, like those between males and females, may have been canceled out by more intensive therapy.22 In contrast, a recent CCG analysis of the entire cohort of patients treated between 1989 and 1995 revealed highly significant differences in EFS among all ethnic groups (P < .0001), with worse outcome for both Hispanic and African-American children.23 This analysis suggested that differences in outcome among race groups have persisted even in the face of intensive contemporary treatment strategies. The underlying causes for these differences may be multifactorial and include issues related to socioeconomic status, access to health-care systems, compliance with or adherence to therapy, or genetic differences in the ability to metabolize different chemotherapeutic agents.23 In contrast to earlier studies,24-26 male sex, age between 1 and 2 years, coexpression of myeloid and lymphoid antigens, or T-lineage immunophenotype were not unfavorable characteristics for the current group of intermediate-risk ALL patients. Similar findings on the prognostic significance of immunophenotype9,27 have been observed for concurrently enrolled patients with low-risk, higher-risk, infant, or lymphomatous syndrome ALL. As has been reported for other CCG-defined risk groups, day-7 marrow status was an important predictor of outcome for the overall cohort of intermediate-risk patients.7 Although the subset of patients with fewer than 5% marrow blasts on day 7 had relatively similar outcome regardless of regimen, patients with at least 5% blasts treated with DDI had an approximate 40% reduction in relative risk compared with their counterparts on the DI regimen. This finding suggests that patients with a modest residual tumor burden are most likely to benefit from DDI. However, these results must be interpreted with caution since they are based on subset analyses that were not part of the overall design of the study. Since half of all patients achieved a favorable day-7 response, these data also suggest that improved methods are needed to identify the subset of patients with a favorable day-7 M1 response who will nevertheless experience events with current intensive therapies. Timing of DI therapy may be a critical determinant of outcome. On CCG-105, the predecessor CCG intermediate-risk ALL study, randomized comparisons of both induction/consolidation intensification (weeks 1 through 8) and DI (weeks 16 through 24) were employed. EFS was similar for patients treated with standard or intensive induction/consolidation, but was significantly improved for patients treated with DI compared with patients who did not receive DI.6 Interestingly, the effect of DI was reduced when it was given in the context of intensive induction/consolidation. The 6-year EFS of 83% achieved by patients treated with DDI is comparable to that of the other major cooperative groups or single institutions using different strategies and different definitions of standard-, moderate-, and intermediate-risk patients.28-31 For example, among the lowest-risk patients, 6-year EFS was 87% on BFM-86, and 2-year EFS was 86% on BFM-90. Strategy on the BFM-86 and BFM-90 protocols was based on stratification according to response to 7 days of prednisone. Therapy involved intensive 8-drug induction, consolidation with 6-mercaptopurine and high-dose MTX; reinduction (with substitution of dexamethasone for prednisone and oral 6-thioguanine for oral 6-mercaptopurine); late intensification (prednisone, vindesine, teniposide, ifosfamide, and high dose-cytarabine) for all but the lowest-risk patients; and maintenance.32 Antimetabolite-based therapy favored by the Pediatric Oncology Group30 and SJCRH has resulted in 5-year EFS rates of 78% and 81%, respectively, for lower- or standard-risk patients, and the intensified L-asparaginase and anthracycline therapy employed by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute investigators has yielded an EFS of 89% at 4 years for the standard-risk subset.28,29 Pui et al33 reported better outcome for patients with B-lineage leukemia who received individualized dosing of methotrexate, cytarabine, and teniposide. In a CCG study following CCG-1891, Bostrom et al34 observed a 3-year EFS of 91% for standard-risk patients treated on a regimen that included a single DI phase and employed dexamethasone as the only steroid. The different strategies have different serious toxicities, but it is not clear that one strategy is better than another. Advantages of the CCG-1891 study and the BFM-derived studies are that they are relatively simple in structure, do not demand patient-specific protocols, and are highly reproducible and adaptable around the world. On the currently open CCG-1991 trial for standard-risk ALL, the CCG is comparing DI and DDI in the context of a dexamethasone-based regimen. Results from this study will determine whether DDI provides a clinically and statistically important benefit for the full group of patients with NCI-defined standard-risk ALL. Further improvements in outcome among children with standard-risk ALL are likely to require the continued manipulation of dose, route, and schedule of conventional chemotherapeutic agents; patient-specific adjustments of therapy based on pharmacogenetic profiling; and the addition of novel biologically based methods.
We are indebted to Diane Arthur, MD, for her extensive contribution to the cytogenetics database, Ms Lucia Noll for expert editing, and Ms Christine Curran for typing and revising.
Submitted December 8, 2000; accepted September 26, 2001.
Supported in part by the Children's Cancer Group Chairman's grant CA-13539 from the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health. The contribution of B.J.L. is supported in part by the Yetta Deitch Novotny Chair in Pediatric Oncology.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
Reprints: Beverly J. Lange, Children's Cancer Group, Attn: Lucia Noll, PO Box 60012, Arcadia, CA 91066-6012; e-mail: lange{at}emailchop.edu.
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The following are contributing Children's Cancer Group institutions, investigators, and grant numbers: Group Operations Center, Arcadia, California, (W. Archie Bleyer, MD, Anita Khayat, PhD, Harland Sather, PhD, Mark Krailo, PhD, Jonathan Buckley, MBBS, PhD, Daniel Stram, PhD, Richard Sposto, PhD) CA 13539; University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan, (Raymond Hutchinson, MD) CA 02971; University of California Medical Center, San Francisco, California, (Katherine Matthay, MD) CA 17829; University of Wisconsin Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin, (Diane Puccetti, MD) CA 05436; Children's Hospital and Medical Center, Seattle, Washington (J. Russell Geyer, MD) CA 10382; Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio (Susan Shurin, MD) CA 20320; Children's National Medical Center, Washington, D.C. (Gregory Reaman, MD) CA 03888; Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, California (Paul Gaynon, MD) CA 02649; Children's Hospital of Columbus, Ohio (Frederick Ruymann, MD) CA 03750; Columbia Presbyterian College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York (Leonard Wexler, MD) CA 03526; Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (A. Kim Ritchey, MD) CA 36015; Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee (John Lukens, MD) CA 26270; Doernbecher Memorial Hospital for Children, Portland, Oregon (H. Stacy Nicholson, MD) CA 26044; University of Minnesota Health Sciences Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota (Joseph Neglia, MD) CA 07306; Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Beverly Lange, MD) CA 11796; Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York (Peter Steinherz, MD) CA 42764; James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana (Philip Breitfeld, MD) CA 13809; University of Utah Medical Center, Salt Lake City (William L. Carroll, MD) CA 10198; University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada (Christopher Fryer, MD) CA 29013; Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio (Robert Wells, MD) CA 26126; Harbor/UCLA and Miller Children's Medical Center, Torrance/Long Beach, California (Jerry Finklestein, MD) CA 14560; University of California Medical Center (UCLA), Los Angeles, California (Stephen Feig, MD) CA 27678; University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, (Raymond Tannous, MD) CA 29314; Children's Hospital of Denver, Colorado (Lorrie Odom, MD) CA 28851; Mayo Clinic and Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota (Gerald Gilchrist, MD) CA 28882; Izaak Walton Killam Hospital for Children, Halifax, NS, Canada (Dorothy Barnard, MD); University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (Stuart Gold, MD); University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Camden; (Richard Drachtman, MD); Children's Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, Missouri (Maxine Hetherington, MD); University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha (Peter Coccia, MD); Wyler Children's Hospital, Chicago, Illinois (James Nachman, MD); M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas (Beverly Raney, MD); Princess Margaret Hospital, Perth, Western Australia (David Baker, MD); New York University Medical Center, New York (Aaron Rausen, MD); and Children's Hospital of Orange County, California (Violet Shen, MD).
© 2002 by The American Society of Hematology.
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C.-H. Pui, D. Campana, D. Pei, W. P. Bowman, J. T. Sandlund, S. C. Kaste, R. C. Ribeiro, J. E. Rubnitz, S. C. Raimondi, M. Onciu, et al. Treating Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia without Cranial Irradiation N. Engl. J. Med., June 25, 2009; 360(26): 2730 - 2741. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. B. Dennison, M. A. Mohutsky, R. J. Barbuch, S. A. Wrighton, and S. D. Hall Apparent High CYP3A5 Expression Is Required for Significant Metabolism of Vincristine by Human Cryopreserved Hepatocytes J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., October 1, 2008; 327(1): 248 - 257. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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F. Tucci and M. Arico Treatment of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia Haematologica, August 1, 2008; 93(8): 1124 - 1128. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Moricke, A. Reiter, M. Zimmermann, H. Gadner, M. Stanulla, M. Dordelmann, L. Loning, R. Beier, W.-D. Ludwig, R. Ratei, et al. Risk-adjusted therapy of acute lymphoblastic leukemia can decrease treatment burden and improve survival: treatment results of 2169 unselected pediatric and adolescent patients enrolled in the trial ALL-BFM 95 Blood, May 1, 2008; 111(9): 4477 - 4489. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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N. L. Seibel, P. G. Steinherz, H. N. Sather, J. B. Nachman, C. DeLaat, L. J. Ettinger, D. R. Freyer, L. A. Mattano Jr, C. A. Hastings, C. M. Rubin, et al. Early postinduction intensification therapy improves survival for children and adolescents with high-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a report from the Children's Oncology Group Blood, March 1, 2008; 111(5): 2548 - 2555. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. M. Butturini, F. J. Dorey, B. J. Lange, D. W. Henry, P. S. Gaynon, C. Fu, J. Franklin, S. E. Siegel, N. L. Seibel, P. C. Rogers, et al. Obesity and Outcome in Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia J. Clin. Oncol., May 20, 2007; 25(15): 2063 - 2069. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. B. Dennison, D. R. Jones, J. L. Renbarger, and S. D. Hall Effect of CYP3A5 Expression on Vincristine Metabolism with Human Liver Microsomes J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., May 1, 2007; 321(2): 553 - 563. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Choi, Y. K. Hwang, K. W. Sung, S. H. Lee, K. H. Yoo, H. L. Jung, H. H. Koo, H.-J. Kim, H. J. Kang, H. Y. Shin, et al. Expression of Livin, an antiapoptotic protein, is an independent favorable prognostic factor in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia Blood, January 15, 2007; 109(2): 471 - 477. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Y. Matloub, S. Lindemulder, P. S. Gaynon, H. Sather, M. La, E. Broxson, R. Yanofsky, R. Hutchinson, N. A. Heerema, J. Nachman, et al. Intrathecal triple therapy decreases central nervous system relapse but fails to improve event-free survival when compared with intrathecal methotrexate: results of the Children's Cancer Group (CCG) 1952 study for standard-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia, reported by the Children's Oncology Group Blood, August 15, 2006; 108(4): 1165 - 1173. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. B. Dennison, P. Kulanthaivel, R. J. Barbuch, J. L. Renbarger, W. J. Ehlhardt, and S. D. Hall SELECTIVE METABOLISM OF VINCRISTINE IN VITRO BY CYP3A5 Drug Metab. Dispos., August 1, 2006; 34(8): 1317 - 1327. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C.-H. Pui and W. E. Evans Treatment of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia N. Engl. J. Med., January 12, 2006; 354(2): 166 - 178. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C.-H. Pui Central Nervous System Disease in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Prophylaxis and Treatment Hematology, January 1, 2006; 2006(1): 142 - 146. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. A. Whitlock, H. N. Sather, P. Gaynon, L. L. Robison, R. J. Wells, M. Trigg, N. A. Heerema, and S. Bhatia Clinical characteristics and outcome of children with Down syndrome and acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a Children's Cancer Group study Blood, December 15, 2005; 106(13): 4043 - 4049. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Igarashi, A. Manabe, A. Ohara, M. Kumagai, T. Saito, Y. Okimoto, T. Kamijo, K. Isoyama, M. Kajiwara, M. Sotomatsu, et al. No Advantage of Dexamethasone Over Prednisolone for the Outcome of Standard- and Intermediate-Risk Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia in the Tokyo Children's Cancer Study Group L95-14 Protocol J. Clin. Oncol., September 20, 2005; 23(27): 6489 - 6498. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. Aplenc, J. Thompson, P. Han, M. La, H. Zhao, B. Lange, and T. Rebbeck Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase Polymorphisms and Therapy Response in Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Cancer Res., March 15, 2005; 65(6): 2482 - 2487. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. C. Bostrom, M. R. Sensel, H. N. Sather, P. S. Gaynon, M. K. La, K. Johnston, G. R. Erdmann, S. Gold, N. A. Heerema, R. J. Hutchinson, et al. Dexamethasone versus prednisone and daily oral versus weekly intravenous mercaptopurine for patients with standard-risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a report from the Children's Cancer Group Blood, May 15, 2003; 101(10): 3809 - 3817. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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R. J. Hutchinson, P. S. Gaynon, H. Sather, S. J. Bertolone, H. A. Cooper, R. Tannous, L. M. Wells, N. A. Heerema, S. Sailer, and M. E. Trigg Intensification of Therapy for Children With Lower-Risk Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Long-Term Follow-Up of Patients Treated on Children's Cancer Group Trial 1881 J. Clin. Oncol., May 1, 2003; 21(9): 1790 - 1797. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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