BACKGROUND. Extramedullary acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is rare, and said to be more common after treatment with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) than after any other treatment.
This cooperative prospective study was designed to answer the following questions in cases with acute lymphoblastic leukemia induced to achieve complete remission with the combination of vincristine and prednisone (if by day 29 the bone marrow was not M1, daunorubicin was added to the former regimen) and who received preventive CNS therapy with 2400 rad of cobalt-60 to craniocervical region and simultaneously intrathecal methotrexate and dexamethasone: 1) Is a short intensification with cytosine-arabinoside and cyclophosphamide immediately after complete remission useful? 2) Does the use of weekly doses of 6-mercaptopurine and methotrexate have the same maintenance effect as daily 6-mercaptopurine and twice weekly methotrexate? and 3) Do further 3 month-doses of intrathecal methotrexate and dexamethasone help to decrease still more the incidence of meningeal leukemia? From October 1972 to December 1975, 473 previously untreated patients entered this study and 465 (390 children and 75 adults) are evaluated in this paper. Of them, 373 (80%) achieved complete remission (children 84% and adults 61%). Out of 109 "high risk" children (one or more of the following characteristics at diagnosis: marked organomegaly, mediastinal widening, leukocytosis above 50000/ mm3 and CNS involvement) 83 (76%) and out of 281 "standard risk'' children (all the others) 244 (87%) achieved complete remission. The median duration of complete remission according to different prognostic factors was as follows: "high risk" children 10 months, adults 24 months and "standard risk" children 25 months. Duration of complete remission of the "standard risk" children in relation to with or without intensification, daily or weekly maintenance and additional intrathecal therapy or none, showed no significant difference; however, those who received intensification, daily maintenance and further intrathecal therapy behaved slightly better. Median survival for all the cases of this study was as follows: adults 10 months, "high risk" children 12 months and "standard risk" children 26. months. At 36 months, 13% of "high risk" children, 25% of adults and 39% of "standard risk" children are still alive. We conclude that the variables studied in this protocol did not show significant extension of complete remission, however the sum of them seems to offer some advantage. Moreover, what appears clear is the importance of prognostic factors which must be taken into account in future studies.
This study tested the efficacy of rubidazone and cytosine arabinoside in 35 patients (13 children and 22 adults) with acute myelocytic leukemia in first relapse. Induction consisted of 1-2 courses of rubidazone 200 mg/m2 days x 4 days plus cytosine arabinoside 100 mg/m2 x 7 days in CI followed by 2 consolidation courses of 3 days and 5 days. Nineteen patients (54%) achieved complete remission, 8 failed to respond, and 8 died. Twelve patients relapsed after 1 to 9 months, at a median of 4 months, 1 patient died of cardiac failure and 1 remains in complete remission at 12 months. Five patients underwent bone marrow transplantation, 3 of them autologous, 1 was still in complete remission at 29 months, 1 relapsed, and 1 died of sepsis. Two received allogeneic marrow transplants and died at 3 and 4 months afterwards of VOD and graft failure. The main toxicity was severe and prolonged myelosuppression.
A patient with Sézary syndrome refractory to cytotoxic agents underwent leukapheresis on the Aminco continuous flow centrifuge. Five procedures were performed over a 15-day period. A total of 6.9 X 10(9) cells were removed. The patient's skin lesions and lymphadenopathy regressed. Repeated removal of the buffy coat by leukapheresis has not resulted in thrombocytopenia. It is concluded that cytapheresis may be effective in this clinical condition even when the peripheral leukocyte count is normal.
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