Transcript
Page 1: UPFRONT TRANSPLANT IN  ALL-HL

When, How, and What Cell Source for Transplantation in ALL CR1

Hillard M. Lazarus, MD, FACPProfessor of Medicine

Director of Novel Cell TherapiesUniversity Hospitals Case Medical Center

Case Western Reserve University

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ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIADefinitions In This Presentation

Philadelphia chromosome t(9;22)(q34;q11) negativePhiladelphia chromosome t(9;22)(q34;q11) negative

““Adults” = age Adults” = age >> 35 years 35 years

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ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIABackground

• Pediatric ALL: 85% cure rate

• Adult ALL: Different biology and treatment results

• ~ 90% complete remission in age < 60 yr

• But despite arduous, long term therapy:

• 5-yr survival 30-40% in pts < age 60 yr

• 5-yr survival <15% in pts > age 60 yr

7% survival @ 5 years after relapse: few 2nd chances

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AH Goldstone, MRC, ECOG. Blood 111: 1827-1833, 2008.

ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIAMRC UKALL XII / ECOG 2993: N=1,929

JM Rowe, MRC & ECOG. Blood 106: 3760-3767, 2005

INDUCTION

RandomizeAssign

Sibling Allograft

Autograft Consolidation/Maintenance

HLA donor< 50 (or 55) yr

No donor

High-dose methotrexate x 3

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Factors at Presentation Prognosis Association

Age Worse with increasing age

CNS involvement Slightly worse outcome

WBC count at diagnosis

Adverse: B cell >30,000/μL; T cell >100,000/μL

Immunophenotype B-ALL: Adverse for CD20 and CD25 expressionT-ALL: Adverse for CD13; Favorable for CD1a

Cytogenetic abnormalities

Adverse: t(9;22); t(4;11); t(1;19); complex (>5); low hypodiploid; near tetraploid; BCR-ABL-likeFavorable: high hyperdiploid; del 9q

Molecular abnormalities Adverse: JAK2; IKFZ1; PAX5; TLX3; BAALCFavorable: TLX1

ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA Clinical and Laboratory Risk Factors

JM Rowe. Br J Haematol 144: 468-483, 2009.B Oran, DJ Weisdorf. Curr Opin Hematol 18: 395–400, 2011.R Bassan, D Hoelzer. J Clin Oncol 29: 532-543, 2011.J-M Ribera. Curr Opin Oncol 23: 692–699, 2011.

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Factors After Therapy Prognosis Association

Time to initial response Adverse: no CR within 4 weeks

Minimal residual disease Adverse: detection at various times

ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA Clinical and Laboratory Risk Factors (con’t)

JM Rowe. Br J Haematol 144: 468-483, 2009.B Oran, DJ Weisdorf. Curr Opin Hematol 18: 395–400, 2011.R Bassan, D Hoelzer. J Clin Oncol 29: 532-543, 2011.J-M Ribera. Curr Opin Oncol 23: 692–699, 2011.

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ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA“BCR-ABL-Like”

JR Downing, CG Mullighan. Am Soc Hematol Educ Prog 118-22, 508, 2006.ML den Boer, Erasmus. Lancet Oncol 10: 125–134, 2009.

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PROSPECTIVE POST-REMISSION TRIALS

Chemotherapy vs Autograft vs Allograft

Design and Outcome

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ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIAAutologous Transplant vs Chemotherapy

AH Goldstone, MRC, ECOG. Blood 111: 1827-1833, 2008.

Autotransplants not efficacious (unlike Ph pos ALL)

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ADULT ALL POST-REMISSIONADULT ALL POST-REMISSION> 100 Patients/Trial: Age 15-64 Years> 100 Patients/Trial: Age 15-64 Years

Group/Year

No. Pts

Disease-Free Survival or Overall Survival Donor No Donor

PETHEMA2005

156 OS: 40% @ 5 yr 49% @ 5 yr

MRC-ECOG2008

1031 High-riskOS: 41% @ 5 yrStandard-riskOS: 62% @ 5 yr

35% @ 5 yr

52% @ 5 yr

HOVON 2009

257 DFS: 60% @ 5 yr 42% @ 5 yr

JALSG2011

649 High-riskOS: 54% @ 10 yrStandard-riskOS: 38% @ 10 yr

40% @ 10 yr

25% @ 10 yr

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TRANSPLANT INTENT-TO-TREAT TRIALSPitfalls Donor vs No Donor Studies

• Donor / no donor assigned @ different time points

• “Geography” of locating sibs affects search time–If no sib, ? assign to “no donor” @ diagnosis

• Older studies: do not address unrelated donors

• “Relatively” less-intense induction– CALGB AYA study 10403

• Not all “donor” assignments go to transplant–Physician bias and patient refusal

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ALTERNATIVE DONORS

Graft Source Considerations

Time-censoring bias may improves URD outcome: correction requiredJ Mehta. Blood 112: 447-448, 2008

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ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIAMatched-Related vs Matched-Unrelated Donor

O Ringden, CIBMTR. Blood 113: 3110-3118, 2009.

N=483

N=189

Leu

kem

ia-F

ree

Su

rviv

al

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ALTERNATIVE GRAFT SOURCES IN ALLUCB vs Matched Unrelated Donor: Retrospective

Author/Group

No. Pts TRM/NRM Relapse DFS/LFS/OS

Eapen:CIBMTR,

EBMT

165 UCB

1360 MUD

33% @ 2 yr

40% @ 2 yr

-

-

44% @ 2 yr

50% @ 2 yr

Atsuta:Japan

114 UCB

222 MUD

24% @ 2 yr

25% @ 2 yr

31% @ 2 yr

24% @ 2 yr

49% @ 2 yr

57% @ 2 yr

Ferra:GETH,

PETHEMA

87 UCB

62 MUD

31% @ 1 yr

48% @ 1 yr

29% @ 5 yr

29% @ 5 yr

33% @ 5 yr

22% @ 5 yr

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GRAFT SOURCES IN ALL CR1 Ph-UCB vs Matched Related & Unrelated Donor

S Nishiwaki, Japan Society for HCT. Proc ASCO 2012 (abstract #6533).

95 UCB, ‘CB’388 related, ‘RD’434 unrelated, ‘URD’

Overall Survival

Cumulative incidence relapse

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REDUCED INTENSITY CONDITIONING

Relying On “Allogeneic Effect”

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Evidence For GVL Effect In Adult ALL? Evidence For GVL Effect In Adult ALL? YesYes

PL Weiden, FHCRC. NEJM 300: 1068-1073, 1979

• 163 allografts without GVHD vs 79 allografts with GVHD• Relative relapse rate 2.5 times lower with GVHD (p<0.01)

• Anti-leukemia effect more marked in ALL than AML

AH Goldstone, UK MRC & ECOG. Blood 111: 1827-1833, 2008

• 239 pts: relapse rate 24% for donor vs 49% no donor (p<0.00005)

• High-risk: 37% relapse rate donor vs 63% no donor (p<0.00005)

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ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIAADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIAReduced Intensity ConditioningReduced Intensity Conditioning

Author/Center No. Pts (CR1) Relapse DFS/LFS/OS

Stein:City of Hope

24 (11) 21% @ 2 yr 62% @ 2 yr

Bachanova:U Minnesota

22 (12) 36% @ 3 yr 50% @ 3 yr

Cho:Korea

37 (30) 20% @ 3 yr 64% @ 3 yr

Nishiwaki:Japan

26 (21) 26% @ 2 yr 63% @ 2 yr

Mohty:EBMTR

127 (105) 47% @ 2 yr 32% @ 2 yr

Marks:CIBMTR

93 (55) 35% @ 3 yr 45% @ 3 yr

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0

25

50

75

100

0 2 4 6 8 10

ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA Ph-RIC vs Full-Intensity in CR1/CR2: Survival

Su

rviv

al (

%)

Years

Full-intensity conditioning(n=1,428)

Reduced-intensity conditioning(n=93)

DI Marks, CIBMTR. Blood 116: 366-374, 2010.

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Remission Induction/Consolidation; start donor search

Randomize (stratify by): Intent: chemotherapy vs HCT after Blinatumumab; MRD status

Blinatumomab No Blinatumomab

Chemotherapy ± Blinatumomab versus HCT (optional)

Intensification

MRD Assessment

E1910 INTERGROUP New diagnosis Ph-, Age 35-70 Yr

CR

Bispecific anti-CD3, anti-CD19 antibody

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MINIMAL RESIDUAL DISEASE

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Theoretic Time Course LeukemiaMinimal Residual Disease (MRD) Assessment

M Brüggemann, et al. Blood 2012

100

10-1

10-2

10-5

10-4

10-3

Complete remission Hematologic relapse

MRD relapse

MRD persistence

Complete MRD response

Detection limitMorphology

Lower limit MRD assay

Sensitivity limitMRD assay

MRD-based remission assessment

Pro

po

rtio

n le

uk

emic

ce

lls

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MINIMAL RESIDUAL DISEASEMethodologies

• Detection sensitivity at least 1:10,000 cells

• Molecular

• Clonal rearrangements of T cell Receptor (TCR) genes

• Clonal rearrangement immunoglobulin (Ig) genes

• Flow cytometry

• Leukemia-associated phenotye (flow)

• FUTURE: high-throughput sequencing universally amplifies antigen-receptor gene segments: more sensitive; use E1910

M Faham, D Campagna, et al. Blood 2012

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ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIAADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIABetter Outcome MRDBetter Outcome MRDnegneg vs MRD vs MRDpos pos PatientsPatients

R Bassan, Northern Italy Leukemia Group. Blood 113: 4153-4162, 2009

MRDneg patients = < 10-4 via PCR @ wk 16 & totally undetectable @ wk 22; all other patients classified MRDpos

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MINIMAL RESIDUAL DISEASE: ALLKiel MRD ConferenceKiel MRD Conference

M Brüggemann, Kiel MRD Conference. Leukemia 24: 521-535, 2010M Brüggemann, et al. Blood 2012

Technique Advantage Disadvantage

PCR Ig genes & TCR genes

high sensitivity

highly standardized

stability of DNA

time-consuming

requires extensive knowledge/experience

expensive

Multiparameter flow cytometry

quantitative

rapid

applicable most pt

low cellularity

requires extensive knowledge/experience

less sensitive 3-4 color (most now use 6 color)

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MINIMAL RESIDUAL DISEASE: ALLMRD Positive Patients

R Bassan, Northern Italian Leukemia Group. Blood 113: 4153-4162, 2009

MRD pos @ 16 & 22 wk correlated with 10 wk

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MINIMAL RESIDUAL DISEASEUnresolved Issues

• Greater use in Europe; need to penetrate USA & other areas

• Time to perform assay; real-time availability

• Determine optimal methodologies

• Standardization of methodologies and definitions

• Ensure comparability

• Which time points to assay?

• Increased cost; who will pay?

• Effect of change in therapy?

• Transplant (positive) vs no transplant (negative)

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SUMMARY

Factors to Consider For Transplant

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ALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRLikelihood To Recommend TransplantLikelihood To Recommend Transplant

VariableFavor Transplant

Does Not Favor Transplant

Clinical & laboratory risk high-risk standard-risk

Induction & consolidation “adult” regimen “pediatric” regimen

Sibling-matched donor available none available

Minimal residual disease (MRD): result @ 12-16 weeks

positive negative

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ALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRFactors Affecting Transplant ConditioningFactors Affecting Transplant Conditioning

Variable Favor Myeloablative Conditioning

Favor Reduced-Intensity Conditioning

Age 35-55 years 56-70 years

Comorbidities absent present

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ALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRFactors Affecting Graft SourceFactors Affecting Graft Source

Variable Favor MUD Favor UCB

Institutional experience

8/8 alleleic graft, especially marrow(rather than blood)

“Center of Excellence”, extensive UCB experience

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ALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRALL CR1 PATIENTS AGE 35-70 YRRecommendations and *ParadoxRecommendations and *Paradox

Given greater use of more intensive induction & consolidation therapy in younger patients: **potentially more transplants in older patients

**Anthony H. Goldstone, MD

• Age <35 yr, enroll on “peds intensity” regimen:• ? whether abrogates need for transplant • ? age at which regimen not tolerated by adults

• Age 35-45 yr – gray area, assess risk factors• strongly consider hematopoietic cell transplant

• Age > 45 yr – consider transplant, possibly RIC


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