Influence of late treatment on how chronic myeloid leukemia responds to imatinib

Authors

  • Ana Carolina Costa Scerni Universidade Federal do Pará; Instituto de Ciências Biológicas
  • Leonardo Azevedo Alvares Universidade Federal do Pará; Instituto de Ciências Biológicas
  • Ana Cristina Beltrão Hospital Ophir Loyola
  • Iê Regina Bentes Hospital Ophir Loyola
  • Tereza Cristina Azevedo Hospital Ophir Loyola
  • Alessandra Quinto Bentes Hospital Ophir Loyola
  • José Alexandre Rodrigues Lemos Universidade Federal do Pará; Instituto de Ciências Biológicas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322009000800004

Keywords:

CML, BCR-ABL, Imatinib, major molecular remission, late treatment

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In Brazil, patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in the chronic phase were not given first-line imatinib treatment until 2008. Therefore, there was a long period of time between diagnosis and the initiation of imatinib therapy for many patients. This study aims to compare the major molecular remission (MMR) rates of early versus late imatinib therapy in chronic phase CML patients. METHODS: Between May 2002 and November 2007, 44 patients with chronic phase CML were treated with second-line imatinib therapy at the Hematology Unit of the Ophir Loyola Hospital (Belém, Pará, Brazil). BCR-ABL transcript levels were measured at approximately six-month intervals using quantitative polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS: The early treatment group presented a 60% probability of achieving MMR, while the probability for those patients who received late treatment was 40%. The probability of either not achieving MMR within one year of the initiation of imatinib therapy or losing MMR was higher in patients who received late treatment (79%), compared with patients who received early treatment (21%, odds ratio=5.75, P=0.012). The probability of maintaining MMR at 30 months of treatment was 80% in the early treatment group and 44% in the late treatment group (P=0.0005). CONCLUSIONS: For CML patients in the chronic phase who were treated with second-line imatinib therapy, the probability of achieving and maintaining MMR was higher in patients who received early treatment compared with those patients for whom the time interval between diagnosis and initiation of imatinib therapy was longer than one year.

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Published

2009-01-01

Issue

Section

Clinical Sciences

How to Cite

Influence of late treatment on how chronic myeloid leukemia responds to imatinib . (2009). Clinics, 64(8), 731-734. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1807-59322009000800004