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Clinical Trial
.2013 Jul 11;369(2):111-21.
doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa1300874.

Retinoic acid and arsenic trioxide for acute promyelocytic leukemia

Francesco Lo-Coco  1Giuseppe AvvisatiMarco VignettiChristian ThiedeSonia Maria OrlandoSimona IacobelliFelicetto FerraraPaola FaziLaura CicconiEros Di BonaGiorgina SpecchiaSimona SicaMariadomenica DivonaAlessandro LevisWalter FiedlerElisa CerquiMassimo BrecciaGiuseppe FioritoniHelmut R SalihMario CazzolaLorella MelilloAngelo M CarellaChristian H BrandtsEnrica MorraMarie von Lilienfeld-ToalBernd HertensteinMohammed WattadMichael LübbertMatthias HänelNorbert SchmitzHartmut LinkMaria Grazia KroppAlessandro RambaldiGiorgio La NasaMario LuppiFabio CiceriOlimpia FinizioAdriano VendittiFrancesco FabbianoKonstanze DöhnerMichaela SauerArnold GanserSergio AmadoriFranco MandelliHartmut DöhnerGerhard EhningerRichard F SchlenkUwe PlatzbeckerGruppo Italiano Malattie Ematologiche dell'AdultoGerman-Austrian Acute Myeloid Leukemia Study GroupStudy Alliance Leukemia
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Free article
Clinical Trial

Retinoic acid and arsenic trioxide for acute promyelocytic leukemia

Francesco Lo-Coco et al. N Engl J Med..
Free article

Abstract

Background: All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) with chemotherapy is the standard of care for acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), resulting in cure rates exceeding 80%. Pilot studies of treatment with arsenic trioxide with or without ATRA have shown high efficacy and reduced hematologic toxicity.

Methods: We conducted a phase 3, multicenter trial comparing ATRA plus chemotherapy with ATRA plus arsenic trioxide in patients with APL classified as low-to-intermediate risk (white-cell count, ≤10×10(9) per liter). Patients were randomly assigned to receive either ATRA plus arsenic trioxide for induction and consolidation therapy or standard ATRA-idarubicin induction therapy followed by three cycles of consolidation therapy with ATRA plus chemotherapy and maintenance therapy with low-dose chemotherapy and ATRA. The study was designed as a noninferiority trial to show that the difference between the rates of event-free survival at 2 years in the two groups was not greater than 5%.

Results: Complete remission was achieved in all 77 patients in the ATRA-arsenic trioxide group who could be evaluated (100%) and in 75 of 79 patients in the ATRA-chemotherapy group (95%) (P=0.12). The median follow-up was 34.4 months. Two-year event-free survival rates were 97% in the ATRA-arsenic trioxide group and 86% in the ATRA-chemotherapy group (95% confidence interval for the difference, 2 to 22 percentage points; P<0.001 for noninferiority and P=0.02 for superiority of ATRA-arsenic trioxide). Overall survival was also better with ATRA-arsenic trioxide (P=0.02). As compared with ATRA-chemotherapy, ATRA-arsenic trioxide was associated with less hematologic toxicity and fewer infections but with more hepatic toxicity.

Conclusions: ATRA plus arsenic trioxide is at least not inferior and may be superior to ATRA plus chemotherapy in the treatment of patients with low-to-intermediate-risk APL. (Funded by Associazione Italiana contro le Leucemie and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number,NCT00482833.).

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