• Traitements

  • Traitements systémiques : applications cliniques

  • Leucémie

Reducing Daunorubicin in Induction Therapy in Children With B-Lineage ALL With Favorable Prognosis: Results of Phase III Trial AIEOP-BFM ALL 2009

Mené sur 2 514 patients pédiatriques atteints d'une leucémie lymphoblastique aiguë à cellules B à faible risque de récidive (âge : 1-17 ans), cet essai de phase III évalue l'efficacité, du point de vue de la survie sans événement à 5 ans, et la toxicité d'une réduction de dose de daunorubicine en traitement d'induction

Purpose: Modern ALL therapy aims to reduce toxicity, while maintaining and improving the current high cure rates. Acute and late sequelae of anthracyclines are of major concern. The AIEOP-BFM ALL 2009 trial aimed to clarify the need for anthracyclines in low-risk patients.

Patients and Methods: After 2 weeks of induction therapy, which included two daunorubicin (DNR) doses once weekly (30 mg/m2 each) as part of a 4-drug therapy, patients age 1-17 years with newly diagnosed non–high-risk B-ALL either positive for ETV6::RUNX1 or with rapid treatment response, as assessed by induction day-15 evaluation, were randomly assigned to receive either two additional doses of DNR (control arm [CA]) or no further DNR during induction (experimental arm [EA]). Patients treated as randomly assigned were included in the primary analysis on noninferiority in event-free survival (EFS). Adverse reactions of special interest (ARSI) were analyzed in the as-treated population.

Results: Of 6,136 patients enrolled in AIEOP-BFM ALL 2009, 2,514 patients (41.0%) were eligible for this random assignment, with 82.7% actually randomly assigned (EA: n = 1,040 and CA: n = 1,039). The 5-year EFS was 92.5% (SE 0.8%) in CA and 92.2% (SE 0.9%) in EA. Accordingly, cumulative incidence of relapse was 5.8% (SE 0.7%) and 5.7% (SE 0.7%), and overall survival was 97.6% (SE 0.5%) and 97.4% (SE 0.5%) in CA and EA, respectively. Life-threatening and fatal ARSI were similar in the two arms, but there was a three times lower incidence of invasive fungal infections in the EA (0.5% v 1.5%, P = .02).

Conclusion: A reduced DNR dose during induction did not compromise the outcome of patients with favorable prognostic factors but did diminish infectious toxicity indicated by the lower rate of invasive fungal infections.

Journal of Clinical Oncology , résumé, 2025

Voir le bulletin