Pediatric-inspired chemotherapy incorporating pegaspargase is safe and results in high rates of minimal residual disease negativity in adults up to age 60 with Philadelphia chromosome-negative acute lymphoblastic leukemia Journal Article


Authors: Geyer, M. B.; Ritchie, E. K.; Rao, A. V.; Vemuri, S.; Flynn, J.; Hsu, M.; Devlin, S. M.; Roshal, M.; Gao, Q.; Shukla, M.; Salcedo, J. M.; Maslak, P.; Tallman, M. S.; Douer, D.; Park, J. H.
Article Title: Pediatric-inspired chemotherapy incorporating pegaspargase is safe and results in high rates of minimal residual disease negativity in adults up to age 60 with Philadelphia chromosome-negative acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Abstract: Administration of pediatric-inspired chemotherapy to adults up to age 60 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is challenging in part due to toxicities of asparaginase as well as myelosuppression. We conducted a multicenter phase II clinical trial (NCT01920737) investigating a pediatric-inspired regimen, based on the augmented arm of the Children's Cancer Group 1882 protocol, incorporating 6 doses of pegaspargase 2000 IU/m2, rationally synchronized to avoid overlapping toxicity with other agents. We treated 39 adults ages 20-60 years (median, 38 years) with newly-diagnosed ALL (n=31) or lymphoblastic lymphoma (n=8). Grade 3-4 hyperbilirubinemia occurred frequently and at higher rates in patients 40-60 (n=18) vs 18-39 (n=21) years (44 vs 10%, p=0.025). However, 8/9 patients re-challenged with pegaspargase did not experience recurrent grade 3-4 hyperbilirubinemia. Grade 3-4 hypertriglyceridemia and hypofibrinogenemia were common (each 59%). Asparaginase activity at 7-days post-infusion reflected levels associated with adequate asparagine depletion, even among those with antibodies to pegaspargase. Complete response (CR)/CR with incomplete hematologic recovery was observed post-induction in 38/39 (97%) patients. Among patients with ALL, rates of MRD negativity by multiparameter flow cytometry were 33% and 83% following Induction Phase I and Phase II, respectively. Event-free and overall survival at 3 years (67.8 and 76.4%) compare favorably to outcomes observed in other series. These results demonstrate pegaspargase can be administered in the context of intensive multi-agent chemotherapy to adults age ≤60 with manageable toxicity. This regimen may serve as an effective backbone into which novel agents may be incorporated in future frontline studies.
Journal Title: Haematologica
Volume: 106
Issue: 8
ISSN: 0390-6078
Publisher: Ferrata Storti Foundation  
Date Published: 2021-08-01
Start Page: 2086
End Page: 2094
Language: English
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2020.251686
PUBMED: 33054114
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8327717
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 November 2020 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Meier Hsu
    169 Hsu
  2. Martin Stuart Tallman
    649 Tallman
  3. Jae Hong Park
    356 Park
  4. Peter Maslak
    197 Maslak
  5. Dan Douer
    87 Douer
  6. Sean McCarthy Devlin
    601 Devlin
  7. Mikhail Roshal
    227 Roshal
  8. Qi   Gao
    66 Gao
  9. Mark Blaine Geyer
    83 Geyer
  10. Jessica Flynn
    182 Flynn
  11. Shreya Vemuri
    15 Vemuri
  12. Madhulika Shukla
    6 Shukla