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Treatment outcomes and secondary cancer incidence in young patients with hairy cell leukaemia.


ABSTRACT: Repeated therapy of hairy cell leukaemia (HCL) with treatments that have potential long-term toxicities has raised concerns regarding increased risk for younger patients. We compared clinical outcomes and disease complications in 63 patients with HCL aged ≤40 years at diagnosis with 268 patients >40 years treated at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. The rate of complete remission following initial therapy was 87% and 83% (P = 0·71) and estimated 10-year overall survival was 100% and 82% (P = 0·25) in younger and older patients, respectively. Younger patients required therapy earlier and had a significantly shorter time between first and second therapy (median: 63 months vs. 145 months) (P = 0·008). Younger patients required significantly more lines of therapy during follow-up. The 10-year cumulative incidence of secondary malignancies in young and old patients was 0·205 and 0·287, respectively (P = 0·22). The incidence of secondary cancers in patients aged >40 years at diagnosis increased with the number of treatments for HCL (P = 0·018). These results highlight that young patients with HCL have shorter responses to treatment and require more lines of therapy to maintain disease control, while attaining similar long-term survival. This has implications in the design of future clinical trials given our findings that secondary malignancies increase with more chemotherapy exposure.

SUBMITTER: Getta BM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5539949 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Treatment outcomes and secondary cancer incidence in young patients with hairy cell leukaemia.

Getta Bartlomiej M BM   Woo Kaitlin M KM   Devlin Sean S   Park Jae H JH   Abdel-Wahab Omar O   Saven Alan A   Rai Kanti K   Tallman Martin S MS  

British journal of haematology 20160628 3


Repeated therapy of hairy cell leukaemia (HCL) with treatments that have potential long-term toxicities has raised concerns regarding increased risk for younger patients. We compared clinical outcomes and disease complications in 63 patients with HCL aged ≤40 years at diagnosis with 268 patients >40 years treated at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. The rate of complete remission following initial therapy was 87% and 83% (P = 0·71) and estimated 10-year overall survival was 100% and 82% (P  ...[more]

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