Litcius/Paper detail

Sustained remissions in CLL after frontline FCR treatment with very-long-term follow-up

Philip A. Thompson, Alexandre Bazinet, William G. Wierda, Constantine S. Tam, Susan O’Brien, Satabdi Saha, Christine B. Peterson, William Plunkett, Michael J. Keating

2023Blood47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chemoimmunotherapy with fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab (FCR) achieves durable remissions, with flattening of the progression-free survival (PFS) curve in patients with mutated immunoglobulin heavy chain variable gene (IGHV-M). We updated long-term follow-up results from the original 300-patient FCR study initiated at MD Anderson in 1999. The current median follow-up is 19.0 years. With this extended follow-up, the median PFS for patients with IGHV-M was 14.6 years vs 4.2 years for patients with unmutated IGHV (IGHV-UM). Disease progression beyond 10 years was uncommon. In total, 16 of 94 (17%) patients in remission at 10 years subsequently progressed with the additional follow-up compared with the patients in our prior report in 2015. Only 4 of 45 patients (9%) with IGHV-M progressed beyond 10 years. Excluding Richter transformation, 96 of 300 patients (32%) developed 106 other malignancies, with 19 of 300 (6.3%) developing therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (tMNs), which were fatal in 16 of 19 (84%). No pretreatment patient characteristics predicted the risk of tMNs. In summary, FCR remains an option for patients with IGHV-M chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), with a significant fraction achieving functional cure of CLL. A risk-benefit assessment is warranted when counseling patients, balancing potential functional cure with the risk of late relapses and serious secondary malignancies.

Topics & Concepts

IGHV@ChemoimmunotherapyFludarabineMedicineRituximabChronic lymphocytic leukemiaCyclophosphamideInternal medicineOncologyLeukemiaImmunologyGastroenterologyLymphomaChemotherapyChronic Lymphocytic Leukemia ResearchImmunodeficiency and Autoimmune DisordersLymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment