2005
DOI: 10.1038/sj.leu.2403924
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Treatment strategy and long-term results in paediatric patients treated in consecutive UK AML trials

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Cited by 272 publications
(261 citation statements)
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“…Relapse is a major risk post-HSCT and occurs in 30-60% of children with AML. 2,6,10 The majority of relapses occur in the first year after HSCT and in our study, for CR1 and CR2 HSCT recipients, we observed that patients who relapse later than 1-year post-HSCT are amenable to further therapy, donor leukocyte infusions and a second HSCT, with long-term survivors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…Relapse is a major risk post-HSCT and occurs in 30-60% of children with AML. 2,6,10 The majority of relapses occur in the first year after HSCT and in our study, for CR1 and CR2 HSCT recipients, we observed that patients who relapse later than 1-year post-HSCT are amenable to further therapy, donor leukocyte infusions and a second HSCT, with long-term survivors.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…However, 40-50% of patients relapse after achieving a CR1 with chemotherapy alone, and EFS remains at approximately 50% in most large series. [1][2][3] Although CR2 may be achieved in the majority of these children with chemotherapy alone, long-term survival is limited to 8-33%. [4][5][6] While most would recommend allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) as therapy for relapsed AML, the role of HSCT is less certain for children with AML in CR1.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Nevertheless, randomization between transplantation and chemotherapy is hardly feasible and likely to fail, as shown earlier by other groups in the same or different settings. 62,63 Treatment assignment in ongoing ALL relapse trials is mostly MRD based; chemotherapy plus cranial irradiation is planned for patients with MRD levels lower than 1 Â 10 3 (low risk) after induction and allogeneic transplantation for those with MRD levels higher than 1 Â 10 3 (high risk), whose EFS would be lower than 20% with chemo/ radiotherapy only. 34,64,65 Assessing the best available treatment for ALL in CR2 and defining the role of autologous transplantation is beyond the purpose of this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Allo-SCT was advocated for 'poor'-risk children, including children with more than 15% blasts in the BM after the first course of chemotherapy; those with adverse cytogenetic abnormalities of À5, À7, del(5q) and abn(3q); and those with complex karyotype and without favorable genetic abnormalities (t(8;21), inv (16), t (15;17)). 1 However, SCT using conditioning with TBI 1440 cGY and CY 120 mg/kg did not translate into an improved disease-free survival, and the use of unrelated donors in 'poor'-risk patients was associated with a significant TRM. 2 Most children with relapsed AML proceed to SCT once a second CR has been achieved; up to 40% of children are salvaged in this way.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%