AI Article Synopsis

  • Troxacitabine was evaluated for treating untreated adverse karyotype acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in older patients, compared to traditional treatments with idarubicin and cytarabine.
  • A randomized study was designed where patients were assigned to receive different combinations of chemotherapy, but adaptations favored more successful treatments over time.
  • The results showed that the traditional IA regimen had a significantly higher complete remission rate than the troxacitabine combinations (TA and TI), indicating that troxacitabine was not superior in this context.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Troxacitabine has activity in refractory myeloid leukemia, either as a single agent or when combined with cytarabine (ara-C) or with idarubicin. A prospective, randomized study was conducted in patients aged 50 years or older with untreated, adverse karyotype, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) to assess troxacitabine-based regimes as induction therapy.

Patients And Methods: Patients were randomized to receive idarubicin and ara-C (IA) versus troxacitabine and ara-C (TA) versus troxacitabine and idarubicin (TI). A Bayesian design was used to adaptively randomly assign patients to treatment. Thus, although there was initially an equal chance for randomization to IA, TA, or TI, treatment arms with a higher success rate progressively received a greater proportion of patients.

Results: Thirty-four patients were treated. Randomization to TI stopped after five patients and randomization to TA stopped after 11 patients. Defining success as complete remission (CR) that occurred within 49 days of starting treatment, success rates were 55% (10 of 18 patients) with IA, 27% (three of 11 patients) with TA, and 0% (zero of five patients) with TI. Because three CRs occurred after day 49, final CR rates were 55% (10 of 18 patients) with IA, 45% (five of 11 patients) with TA, and 20% (one of five patients) with TI. The probability that TA was inferior to IA was 70%, with a 5% probability that TA would have a 20% higher CR rate than IA. Survival was equivalent with all three regimens.

Conclusion: Neither troxacitabine combination was superior to IA in elderly patients with previously untreated adverse karyotype AML.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/JCO.2003.11.016DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

versus troxacitabine
16
patients
14
adverse karyotype
12
myeloid leukemia
12
randomized study
8
cytarabine versus
8
troxacitabine idarubicin
8
years older
8
karyotype acute
8
acute myeloid
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!