Oral azacitidine maintenance after intensive chemotherapy versus venetoclax and azacitidine: real world outcomes in newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia.
Alice Mims, Zhuoer Xie, Ravi Potluri, David Rotter, Manoj Chevli, Thomas Prebet, Lona Gaugler, Maria Strocchia, Alberto Vasconcelos, Jan Sieluk
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Oral azacitidine (Oral-AZA) is recommended as maintenance therapy for patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (ND AML) achieving remission with intensive chemotherapy (IC) but not transplant candidates; venetoclax plus injectable azacitidine (VEN-AZA) is recommended for patients ineligible for IC. Some patients may be considered candidates for either regimen. This retrospective study used Flatiron Health's database to compare treatment patterns and clinical outcomes with Oral-AZA maintenance after IC (IC🡪Oral-AZA) versus frontline VEN-AZA. Relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS) were analyzed at 4 different time points, including from Oral-AZA initiation (IC🡪Oral-AZA cohort) or from remission (VEN-AZA cohort) in the Core Analysis. Median RFS was 14.9 and 8.1 months for IC🡪Oral-AZA and VEN-AZA propensity score-matched cohorts, in the Core Analysis (n = 32 in each; p = 0.027); median OS was 18.7 and 15.2 months (p = 0.034). In patients with AML, IC🡪Oral-AZA significantly improved RFS and OS compared with VEN-AZA.
期刊介绍:
Leukemia & Lymphoma in its fourth decade continues to provide an international forum for publication of high quality clinical, translational, and basic science research, and original observations relating to all aspects of hematological malignancies. The scope ranges from clinical and clinico-pathological investigations to fundamental research in disease biology, mechanisms of action of novel agents, development of combination chemotherapy, pharmacology and pharmacogenomics as well as ethics and epidemiology. Submissions of unique clinical observations or confirmatory studies are considered and published as Letters to the Editor