Incidence, treatment and outcome of central nervous system relapse in adult acute lymphoblastic leukaemia patients treated front-line with paediatric-inspired regimens: A retrospective multicentre Campus ALL study
- Creators
- Dargenio M.
- Bonifacio M.
- Chiaretti S.
- Vitale A.
- Fracchiolla N. S.
- Papayannidis C.
- Giglio F.
- Salutari P.
- Audisio E.
- Scappini B.
- Zappasodi P.
- Defina M.
- Forghieri F.
- Scattolin A. M.
- Todisco E.
- Lunghi M.
- Guolo F.
- Del Principe M. I.
- Annunziata M.
- Lazzarotto D.
- Cedrone M.
- Pasciolla C.
- Imovilli A.
- Tanasi I.
- Trappolini S.
- Cerrano M.
- La Starza R.
- Krampera M.
- Di Renzo N.
- Candoni A.
- Pizzolo G.
- Ferrara F.
- Foà R.
- Others:
- Dargenio, M.
- Bonifacio, M.
- Chiaretti, S.
- Vitale, A.
- Fracchiolla, N. S.
- Papayannidis, C.
- Giglio, F.
- Salutari, P.
- Audisio, E.
- Scappini, B.
- Zappasodi, P.
- Defina, M.
- Forghieri, F.
- Scattolin, A. M.
- Todisco, E.
- Lunghi, M.
- Guolo, F.
- Del Principe, M. I.
- Annunziata, M.
- Lazzarotto, D.
- Cedrone, M.
- Pasciolla, C.
- Imovilli, A.
- Tanasi, I.
- Trappolini, S.
- Cerrano, M.
- La Starza, R.
- Krampera, M.
- Di Renzo, N.
- Candoni, A.
- Pizzolo, G.
- Ferrara, F.
- Foà, R.
Description
Within the Campus ALL network we analyzed the incidence, characteristics, treatment and outcome of a central nervous system (CNS) relapse in 1035 consecutive adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients treated frontline with pediatric-inspired protocols between 2009 and 2020. Seventy-one patients (6.8%) experienced a CNS recurrence, more frequently in T- (28/278; 10%) than in B-ALL (43/757; 5.7%) (p = 0.017). An early CNS relapse-< 12 months from diagnosis-was observed in 41 patients. In multivariate analysis, risk factors for early CNS relapse included T-cell phenotype (p = <0.001), hyperleucocytosis >100 x 10(9)/L (p<0.001) and male gender (p = 0.015). Treatment was heterogeneous, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy, intrathecal therapy and novel agents. A complete remission (CR) was obtained in 39 patients (55%) with no differences among strategies. After CR, 26 patients underwent an allogenic transplant, with a significant overall survival benefit compared to non-transplanted patients (p = 0.012). After a median observation of 8 months from CNS relapse, 23 patients (32%) were alive. In multivariate analysis, the time to CNS relapse was the strongest predictor of a lower 2-year post-relapse survival (p<0.001). In conclusion, in adult ALL the outcome after a CNS relapse remains very poor. Effective CNS prophylaxis remains the best approach and allogenic transplant should be pursued when possible.
Additional details
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1112517
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1112517
- Origin repository
- UNIGE