Obesity in adult acute myeloid leukemia is not associated with inferior response or survival even when dose capping anthracyclines: An ECOG-ACRIN analysis Journal Article


Authors: Foran, J. M.; Sun, Z.; Lai, C.; Fernandez, H. F.; Cripe, L. D.; Ketterling, R. P.; Racevskis, J.; Luger, S. M.; Paietta, E.; Lazarus, H. M.; Zhang, Y.; Bennett, J. M.; Levine, R. L.; Rowe, J. M.; Litzow, M. R.; Tallman, M. S.
Article Title: Obesity in adult acute myeloid leukemia is not associated with inferior response or survival even when dose capping anthracyclines: An ECOG-ACRIN analysis
Abstract: Background: Obesity (body mass index [BMI] ≥30 kg/m2) is an important epidemiological risk factor for developing acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Therefore, the authors studied the association of obesity with clinical and genetic phenotype and its impact on outcome in adults with AML. Methods: The authors analyzed BMI in 1088 adults who were receiving intensive remission induction and consolidation therapy in two prospective, randomized therapeutic clinical trials of the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group-American College of Radiology Imaging Network: E1900 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00049517; patients younger than 60 years) and E3999 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00046930; patients aged 60 years or older). Results: Obesity was prevalent at diagnosis (33%) and, compared with nonobesity, was associated with intermediate-risk cytogenetics group (p =.008), poorer performance status (p =.01), and a trend toward older age (p =.06). Obesity was not associated with somatic mutations among a selected 18-gene panel that was tested in a subset of younger patients. Obesity was not associated with clinical outcome (including complete remission, early death, or overall survival), and the authors did not identify any patient subgroup that had inferior outcomes based on BMI. Obese patients were significantly more likely to receive <90% of the intended daunorubicin dose despite protocol specification, particularly in the E1900 high-dose (90 mg/m2) daunorubicin arm (p =.002); however, this did not correlate with inferior overall survival on multivariate analysis (hazard ratio, 1.39; 95% confidence interval, 0.90–2.13; p =.14). Conclusions: Obesity is associated with unique clinical and disease-related phenotypic features in AML and may influence physician treatment decisions regarding daunorubicin dosing. However, the current study demonstrates that obesity is not a factor in survival, and strict adherence to body surface area-based dosing is not necessary because dose adjustments do not affect outcomes. © 2023 American Cancer Society.
Keywords: genetics; leukemia, myeloid, acute; cytarabine; antineoplastic agent; prospective study; prospective studies; antineoplastic combined chemotherapy protocols; obesity; daunorubicin; remission; remission induction; epidemiology; antibiotics, antineoplastic; anthracycline; anthracyclines; antineoplastic antibiotic; complication; acute myeloid leukemia (aml); acute myeloid leukemia; body mass index (bmi); humans; human; dose adjustment
Journal Title: Cancer
Volume: 129
Issue: 16
ISSN: 0008-543X
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 2023-08-15
Start Page: 2479
End Page: 2490
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.34807
PUBMED: 37185873
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10932613
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Ross Levine
    778 Levine
  2. Yanming Zhang
    199 Zhang