High single-drug activity of nelarabine in relapsed T-lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma offers curative option with subsequent stem cell transplantation.

  • Nicola Gökbuget
  • Nadezda Basara
  • Herrad Baurmann
  • Joachim Beck
  • Monika Brüggemann
  • Helmut Diedrich
  • Björn Güldenzoph
  • Gernot Hartung
  • Heinz-August Horst
  • Andreas Hüttmann
  • Guido Kobbe
  • Ralph Naumann
  • Richard Ratei
  • Albrecht Reichle
  • Hubert Serve
  • Matthias Stelljes
  • Andreas Viardot
  • Mohammed Wattad
  • Dieter Hoelzer

Related Research units

Abstract

Nelarabine, a purine analog with T-cell specific action, has been approved for relapsed/refractory T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma (ALL/LBL). This is a report of a single-arm phase 2 study conducted in adults (18-81 years of age) with relapsed/refractory T-ALL/LBL. After 1 or 2 cycles, 45 of 126 evaluable patients (36%) achieved complete remission (CR), 12 partial remission (10%), and 66 (52%) were refractory. One treatment-related death was observed, and 2 patients were withdrawn before evaluation. A total of 80% of the CR patients were transferred to stem cell transplantation (SCT). Overall survival was 24% at 1 year (11% at 6 years). After subsequent SCT in CR, survival was 31% and relapse-free survival 37% at 3 years. Transplantation-related mortality was 11%. Neurologic toxicities of grade I-IV/grade III-IV were observed in 13%/4% of the cycles and 16%/7% of the patients. This largest study so far with nelarabine in adults showed impressive single-drug activity in relapsed T-ALL/T-LBL. The drug was well tolerated, even in heavily pretreated patients. A high proportion of CR patients were transferred to SCT with low mortality but a high relapse rate. Exploration of nelarabine in earlier stages of relapse (eg, increasing minimal residual disease), in front-line therapy, and in combination is warranted.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number13
ISSN0006-4971
Publication statusPublished - 2011
pubmed 21715318