Michele BaccaraniGianantonio RostiAntonio De VivoFrancesca BonifaziDomenico RussoGiovanni MartinelliNicoletta TestoniMarilina AmabileMauro FiacchiniEnrico MontefuscoGiuseppe SaglioS Tura
Interferon-α (IFN-α) has significantly prolonged survival in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), but some patients do not respond and many responses are not durable. To improve the results, IFN-α has been combined with other treatments, but so far only the association with low-dose arabinosyl cytosine (LDAC) has been shown to increase the response rate and to prolong survival. Here are reported the results of a study of 538 Philadelphia chromosome–positive CML patients who were assigned at random to treatment with IFN-α2a alone or in combination with LDAC. The scheduled dose of IFN-α2a was 56IU/m2/d. The scheduled dose of AC was 40 mg/d for the first 10 days of each month of treatment. The efficacy endpoints were a complete hematologic response rate at 6 months (62% in the IFN-α–plus–LDAC arm versus 55% in the IFN-α arm; P = .11), major cytogenetic response (MCgR) rate at 24 months (28% versus 18%; P = .003), and overall survival (5-year survival, 68% versus 65%; P = .77). Treatment did not affect overall survival within different prognostic risk groups: low, intermediate, or high. Also the duration of MCgR was identical. The results of this study confirm the results of a similar French study only for the response rate, not for survival, suggesting that the relationship between cytogenetic response and survival may be extremely variable and that a meta-analysis of these and other studies of IFN-α versus IFN-α plus LDAC is required to settle the issue of the role of LDAC in the treatment of CML.
Jill R. SchofieldWilliam A. Robinson
A. Alonso SánchezWilliam A. RobinsonAllen Lee CohnRené GonzálezArun Adlakha
Gianantonio RostiFrancesca BonifaziElena TrabacchiAntonio De VivoSebastián BassiGiovanni MartinelliNicoletta TestoniDomenico RussoMichele Baccaranifor the Italian Cooperative Study Group on Chronic Myeloid Leukemia
Shelby D. ReedKevin J. AnstromJ LudmerG. Alastair GlendenningKevin A. Schulman