Clofarabine in Pediatric Acute Relapsed or Refractory Leukemia: Where Do We Stand on the Bridge to Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation?

Sarah Ramiz, Osama Elhaj, Khawar Siddiqui, Saadiya Khan, Hawazen AlSaedi, Awatif AlAnazi, Ali Al-Ahmari, Abdullah Al-Jefri, Oudai Sahvan, Mouhab Ayas, Ibrahim Ghemlas

Abstract


Background: Despite pronounced improvement in overall survival (OS) in pediatric leukemia, a proportion of patients continue to suffer from lack of response or relapse, and the management of such patients is exceedingly difficult. Immunotherapy and engineered chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy have shown promising results in the course of relapsed or refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). However, conventional chemotherapy continues to be utilized for re-induction purposes whether independently or in combination with immunotherapy.

Methods: Forty-three pediatric leukemia patients (age < 14 years at diagnosis) consecutively diagnosed at our institution and got treated with clofarabine based regimen at a single tertiary care hospital between January 2005 and December 2019 were enrolled in this study. ALL comprised of 30 (69.8%) patients of the cohort while the remaining 13 (30.2%) were with acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Results: Post-clofarabine bone marrow (BM) was negative in 18 (45.0%) cases. Overall clofarabine failure rate was 58.1% (n = 25) with 60.0% (n = 18) in ALL and 53.8% (n = 7) in AML (P = 0.747). Eighteen (41.9%) patients eventually underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT); 11 (61.1%) were from ALL group and remaining seven (38.9%) were AML (P = 0.332). Three- and 5-year OS of our patients was 37.77.6% and 32.77.3%. There was a trend of better OS for ALL patients compared to AML (40.99.3% vs. 15.410.0%, P = 0.492). Cumulative probability of 5-year OS was significantly better in transplanted patients (48.112.1% vs. 21.48.4%, P = 0.024).

Conclusions: Though almost 90% of our patients proceeded to HSCT with complete response post-clofarabine treatment, yet clofarabine-based regimens are associated with the significant burden of infectious complications and sepsis-related deaths.




J Hematol. 2023;12(1):16-26
doi: https://doi.org/10.14740/jh1065

Keywords


Clofarabine; Stem cell transplantation; Bridging chemotherapy

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