[Initial response to therapy as an important prognostic factor in acute lymphoblastic leukemia in childhood. COALL study group]

  • Gritta Janka-Schaub
  • H Stührk
  • B Kortüm
  • U Graubner
  • H Jürgens
  • H J Spaar
  • V Schöck
  • B Dohrn
  • R Bahr
  • K Winkler

Abstract

Prognostic factors to estimate the risk of relapse are crucial for risk-adapted therapy in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In a cooperative multicenter treatment study for childhood ALL (COALL-03-85) the prognostic relevance of the bone marrow (BM) blast count at day 28 was evaluated. Treatment was adjusted to the initial risk factors; patients with high risk (white blood count (WBC) greater than or equal to 25/nl, age greater than or equal to 10 years, T- or NULL-ALL) received intensified therapy consisting of rotation of 6 non cross-resistant drug combinations with 12 different agents. After 4 weeks 289/305 (94.8%) children were in complete remission (CR); one child died of infection, and 15 (14 high-risk patients) still had more than 5% blasts in the BM. Twelve of these 15 patients were in remission after 2 to 4 weeks additional treatment. Poor responders often had a high initial WBC, age above 10 years of T- or NULL-ALL. In spite of continuation of intensive therapy all children with more than 10% blasts in the BM on day 28 suffered an early relapse except 2 who were transplanted in first remission. Event-free survival for the poor responders is 0.15 compared to 0.71 (p = 0.0001) for the good responders (median observation time 48 months). In multivariate analysis remission status on day 28 was the only significant prognostic factor in high-risk patients above one year of age; traditional risk factors as initial WBC, age above 10 years, hepatosplenomegaly, and immunological subtype were of no prognostic significance in this study. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number4
ISSN0300-8630
Publication statusPublished - 1991
pubmed 1942930