Sickle cell disease phenotype reversed by gene therapy

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SAN DIEGO – An adult with sickle cell disease has had significant remissions in symptoms and a near elimination of transfusion requirements after receiving an infusion of autologous stem cells genetically modified to simultaneously induce the fetal form of hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin.

In a first-in-human, proof-of-concept study, transduction of hematopoietic stem cells with a lentiviral vector targeted against the gamma globin repressor BCL11A in erythroid cells led to rapid induction of fetal hemoglobin and a reversal of the sickle cell disease (SCD) phenotype in the early phase of stem cell reconstitution, reported Erica B. Esrick, MD, from the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center in Boston.

“The potential advantage of this approach over the gene-addition strategy of gene therapy is that we can harness the physiologic switch machinery that exists in the cell to simultaneously increase fetal hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin,” she said at a briefing prior to her presentation at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Several research groups are developing autologous gene therapy for beta-hemoglobinopathies, including the use of CRISPR-Cas9 technology to mimic a rare, naturally occurring mutation that causes the fetal type of hemoglobin to persist into adulthood in some patients with SCD and beta-thalassemia.

Dr. Esrick and her colleagues are trying a different approach: Using gene therapy to knock down BCL11A expression to induce gamma globin expression.

For the treatment, autologous hematopoietic stem cells are collected from patients following mobilization with plerixafor. The cells are then transduced with a lentiviral vector consisting of a novel short hairpin RNA embedded in an endogenous micro-RNA. The investigators refer to the construct as a shmiR (“schmeer”). The construct is designed to be erythroid specific, with BCL11A knocked down only in the red cell lineage, to avoid potential off-target effects of the therapy.

Following stem cell collection and transduction, patients undergo conditioning with busulfan prior to infusion of the modified stem cells.

In three patients treated thus far, the process has been shown to be highly efficient, with approximately 96% of treated cells transduced.

In the patient mentioned before, neutrophil engraftment was confirmed on day 22 after transfusion of the modified cells. He experienced adverse events that were consistent with myeloablative conditioning, but no adverse events associated with the modified cells.

During 6 months of follow-up the patient did not experience SCD-related pain, respiratory events, or neurologic events, and did not have anemia, with a total hemoglobin of 11 g/dL at 6 months. He has not required any transfusions since engraftment.

Patients in the trial will be followed for 2 years, and then will be enrolled in a 15-year follow-up study designed to evaluate the safety and the durability of therapy.

Dr. Esrick reported receiving honoraria from Bluebird Bio, maker of the short hairpin RNA construct used in the trial.

SOURCE: Esrick EB et al. ASH 2018, Abstract 1023.

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SAN DIEGO – An adult with sickle cell disease has had significant remissions in symptoms and a near elimination of transfusion requirements after receiving an infusion of autologous stem cells genetically modified to simultaneously induce the fetal form of hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin.

In a first-in-human, proof-of-concept study, transduction of hematopoietic stem cells with a lentiviral vector targeted against the gamma globin repressor BCL11A in erythroid cells led to rapid induction of fetal hemoglobin and a reversal of the sickle cell disease (SCD) phenotype in the early phase of stem cell reconstitution, reported Erica B. Esrick, MD, from the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center in Boston.

“The potential advantage of this approach over the gene-addition strategy of gene therapy is that we can harness the physiologic switch machinery that exists in the cell to simultaneously increase fetal hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin,” she said at a briefing prior to her presentation at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Several research groups are developing autologous gene therapy for beta-hemoglobinopathies, including the use of CRISPR-Cas9 technology to mimic a rare, naturally occurring mutation that causes the fetal type of hemoglobin to persist into adulthood in some patients with SCD and beta-thalassemia.

Dr. Esrick and her colleagues are trying a different approach: Using gene therapy to knock down BCL11A expression to induce gamma globin expression.

For the treatment, autologous hematopoietic stem cells are collected from patients following mobilization with plerixafor. The cells are then transduced with a lentiviral vector consisting of a novel short hairpin RNA embedded in an endogenous micro-RNA. The investigators refer to the construct as a shmiR (“schmeer”). The construct is designed to be erythroid specific, with BCL11A knocked down only in the red cell lineage, to avoid potential off-target effects of the therapy.

Following stem cell collection and transduction, patients undergo conditioning with busulfan prior to infusion of the modified stem cells.

In three patients treated thus far, the process has been shown to be highly efficient, with approximately 96% of treated cells transduced.

In the patient mentioned before, neutrophil engraftment was confirmed on day 22 after transfusion of the modified cells. He experienced adverse events that were consistent with myeloablative conditioning, but no adverse events associated with the modified cells.

During 6 months of follow-up the patient did not experience SCD-related pain, respiratory events, or neurologic events, and did not have anemia, with a total hemoglobin of 11 g/dL at 6 months. He has not required any transfusions since engraftment.

Patients in the trial will be followed for 2 years, and then will be enrolled in a 15-year follow-up study designed to evaluate the safety and the durability of therapy.

Dr. Esrick reported receiving honoraria from Bluebird Bio, maker of the short hairpin RNA construct used in the trial.

SOURCE: Esrick EB et al. ASH 2018, Abstract 1023.

 

SAN DIEGO – An adult with sickle cell disease has had significant remissions in symptoms and a near elimination of transfusion requirements after receiving an infusion of autologous stem cells genetically modified to simultaneously induce the fetal form of hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin.

In a first-in-human, proof-of-concept study, transduction of hematopoietic stem cells with a lentiviral vector targeted against the gamma globin repressor BCL11A in erythroid cells led to rapid induction of fetal hemoglobin and a reversal of the sickle cell disease (SCD) phenotype in the early phase of stem cell reconstitution, reported Erica B. Esrick, MD, from the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center in Boston.

“The potential advantage of this approach over the gene-addition strategy of gene therapy is that we can harness the physiologic switch machinery that exists in the cell to simultaneously increase fetal hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin,” she said at a briefing prior to her presentation at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Several research groups are developing autologous gene therapy for beta-hemoglobinopathies, including the use of CRISPR-Cas9 technology to mimic a rare, naturally occurring mutation that causes the fetal type of hemoglobin to persist into adulthood in some patients with SCD and beta-thalassemia.

Dr. Esrick and her colleagues are trying a different approach: Using gene therapy to knock down BCL11A expression to induce gamma globin expression.

For the treatment, autologous hematopoietic stem cells are collected from patients following mobilization with plerixafor. The cells are then transduced with a lentiviral vector consisting of a novel short hairpin RNA embedded in an endogenous micro-RNA. The investigators refer to the construct as a shmiR (“schmeer”). The construct is designed to be erythroid specific, with BCL11A knocked down only in the red cell lineage, to avoid potential off-target effects of the therapy.

Following stem cell collection and transduction, patients undergo conditioning with busulfan prior to infusion of the modified stem cells.

In three patients treated thus far, the process has been shown to be highly efficient, with approximately 96% of treated cells transduced.

In the patient mentioned before, neutrophil engraftment was confirmed on day 22 after transfusion of the modified cells. He experienced adverse events that were consistent with myeloablative conditioning, but no adverse events associated with the modified cells.

During 6 months of follow-up the patient did not experience SCD-related pain, respiratory events, or neurologic events, and did not have anemia, with a total hemoglobin of 11 g/dL at 6 months. He has not required any transfusions since engraftment.

Patients in the trial will be followed for 2 years, and then will be enrolled in a 15-year follow-up study designed to evaluate the safety and the durability of therapy.

Dr. Esrick reported receiving honoraria from Bluebird Bio, maker of the short hairpin RNA construct used in the trial.

SOURCE: Esrick EB et al. ASH 2018, Abstract 1023.

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Key clinical point: Gene therapy to induce the fetal form of hemoglobin reversed the symptoms of sickle cell disease in an adult patient.

Major finding: During 6 months of follow-up the patient did not experience sickle cell disease–related pain, respiratory events, or neurologic events, and did not have anemia.

Study details: A first-in-human study in seven adults with sickle cell disease.

Disclosures: Dr. Esrick reported receiving honoraria from Bluebird Bio, maker of the short hairpin RNA construct used in the trial.

Source: Esrick EB et al. ASH 2018, Abstract 1023.

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Flipping the fetal hemoglobin switch reverses sickle cell symptoms

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Mon, 04/08/2019 - 09:06

SAN DIEGO – Researchers were able to “flip the switch” from the adult to fetal form of hemoglobin using autologous stem cells genetically modified to simultaneously induce the fetal form of hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin.

The advance was announced by investigators at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Boston Children’s Hospital at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology. At 6 months of follow-up, one adult patient in the proof-of-concept study has experienced a reversal of the sickle cell phenotype, with no pain episodes or respiratory or neurologic events.

The fetal form of hemoglobin is known to be protective against the signs and symptoms of sickle cell disease, but apart from a few rare exceptions, people with the disorder begin to experience debilitating symptoms as levels of the fetal form begin to decline in early childhood and levels of the adult form of hemoglobin steadily rise.

In this video interview, Erica B. Esrick, MD, from the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, describes the novel approach of using RNA interference to knock down a repressor that suppresses expression of gamma globin in sickle cell disease.

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SAN DIEGO – Researchers were able to “flip the switch” from the adult to fetal form of hemoglobin using autologous stem cells genetically modified to simultaneously induce the fetal form of hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin.

The advance was announced by investigators at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Boston Children’s Hospital at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology. At 6 months of follow-up, one adult patient in the proof-of-concept study has experienced a reversal of the sickle cell phenotype, with no pain episodes or respiratory or neurologic events.

The fetal form of hemoglobin is known to be protective against the signs and symptoms of sickle cell disease, but apart from a few rare exceptions, people with the disorder begin to experience debilitating symptoms as levels of the fetal form begin to decline in early childhood and levels of the adult form of hemoglobin steadily rise.

In this video interview, Erica B. Esrick, MD, from the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, describes the novel approach of using RNA interference to knock down a repressor that suppresses expression of gamma globin in sickle cell disease.

SAN DIEGO – Researchers were able to “flip the switch” from the adult to fetal form of hemoglobin using autologous stem cells genetically modified to simultaneously induce the fetal form of hemoglobin and decrease sickle hemoglobin.

The advance was announced by investigators at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Boston Children’s Hospital at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology. At 6 months of follow-up, one adult patient in the proof-of-concept study has experienced a reversal of the sickle cell phenotype, with no pain episodes or respiratory or neurologic events.

The fetal form of hemoglobin is known to be protective against the signs and symptoms of sickle cell disease, but apart from a few rare exceptions, people with the disorder begin to experience debilitating symptoms as levels of the fetal form begin to decline in early childhood and levels of the adult form of hemoglobin steadily rise.

In this video interview, Erica B. Esrick, MD, from the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, describes the novel approach of using RNA interference to knock down a repressor that suppresses expression of gamma globin in sickle cell disease.

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Cortactin expression aids in CLL-MCL differential

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Fri, 12/16/2022 - 12:36

 

The presence or absence in tumor cells of cortactin, a cytoskeleton-remodeling adapter protein, may be a marker to help pathologists distinguish between chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), investigators suggest.

A study of cortactin expression in tumor samples from patients with B-cell CLL, MCL, and other hematologic malignancies showed that while cortactin was present in 14 of 17 CLL samples, it was not expressed on any of 16 MCL samples, reported Marco Pizzi, MD, PhD, from the University of Padova (Italy) and his colleagues.

“In particular, cortactin may contribute to the differential diagnosis between CLL and MCL, two neoplasms with similar histological features but very different clinical outcome. Further studies are needed to clarify the molecular mechanisms of deranged cortactin expression in MCL and CLL and to investigate any possible relationship between cortactin status and the biological features of these lymphomas,” they wrote in Human Pathology.

Overexpression of cortactin has been reported in several solid tumors, and increased expression of CTTN, the gene encoding for cortactin, has been associated with aggressive, poor prognosis disease, the investigators noted.

To characterize cortactin expression in lymphoid and hematopoietic cells and detect potential associations between cortactin and virulence of hematologic malignancies, the investigators performed immunohistochemical analysis on samples from 131 patients treated at their center. The samples included 17 cases of CLL, 16 of MCL, 25 of follicular lymphoma (FL), 30 of marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), 10 of hairy cell leukemia, three of splenic diffuse red pulp small B-cell lymphomas (SDRPBL), and 30 of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

They found that cortactin was expressed in 14 of the 17 CLL samples, all 10 of the HCL samples, and 22 of the 30 DLBCL samples. In contrast, there was no cortactin expression detected in any of either 16 MCL or three SDRPBL samples. The researchers found that 13 of 30 MZL samples had low-level staining. In FL, cortactin was expressed in 2 of the samples but in the remaining 23 cases the researchers found only scattered cortactin-positive lymphoid elements of non–B-cell lineage.

The investigators also found that cortactin expression in CLL correlated with other CLL-specific markers, and found that expression of two or more of the markers had 89.1% sensitivity, 100% specificity, a 100% positive predictive value, and 90.5% negative predictive value for a diagnosis of CLL.

In addition, they saw that the immunohistochemical results were similar to those for CTTN gene expression assessed by in silico analysis.

The investigators noted that CLL and MCL are challenging to differentiate from one another because of morphologic similarities and partially overlapping immunophenotypes.

“In this context, cortactin expression would strongly sustain a diagnosis of CLL over MCL, particularly in association with other CLL markers (i.e., LEF1 and CD200),” they wrote.

The study was internally supported. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Pizzi M et al. Hum Pathol. 2018 Nov 17. doi: 10.1016/j.humpath.2018.10.038.
 

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The presence or absence in tumor cells of cortactin, a cytoskeleton-remodeling adapter protein, may be a marker to help pathologists distinguish between chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), investigators suggest.

A study of cortactin expression in tumor samples from patients with B-cell CLL, MCL, and other hematologic malignancies showed that while cortactin was present in 14 of 17 CLL samples, it was not expressed on any of 16 MCL samples, reported Marco Pizzi, MD, PhD, from the University of Padova (Italy) and his colleagues.

“In particular, cortactin may contribute to the differential diagnosis between CLL and MCL, two neoplasms with similar histological features but very different clinical outcome. Further studies are needed to clarify the molecular mechanisms of deranged cortactin expression in MCL and CLL and to investigate any possible relationship between cortactin status and the biological features of these lymphomas,” they wrote in Human Pathology.

Overexpression of cortactin has been reported in several solid tumors, and increased expression of CTTN, the gene encoding for cortactin, has been associated with aggressive, poor prognosis disease, the investigators noted.

To characterize cortactin expression in lymphoid and hematopoietic cells and detect potential associations between cortactin and virulence of hematologic malignancies, the investigators performed immunohistochemical analysis on samples from 131 patients treated at their center. The samples included 17 cases of CLL, 16 of MCL, 25 of follicular lymphoma (FL), 30 of marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), 10 of hairy cell leukemia, three of splenic diffuse red pulp small B-cell lymphomas (SDRPBL), and 30 of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

They found that cortactin was expressed in 14 of the 17 CLL samples, all 10 of the HCL samples, and 22 of the 30 DLBCL samples. In contrast, there was no cortactin expression detected in any of either 16 MCL or three SDRPBL samples. The researchers found that 13 of 30 MZL samples had low-level staining. In FL, cortactin was expressed in 2 of the samples but in the remaining 23 cases the researchers found only scattered cortactin-positive lymphoid elements of non–B-cell lineage.

The investigators also found that cortactin expression in CLL correlated with other CLL-specific markers, and found that expression of two or more of the markers had 89.1% sensitivity, 100% specificity, a 100% positive predictive value, and 90.5% negative predictive value for a diagnosis of CLL.

In addition, they saw that the immunohistochemical results were similar to those for CTTN gene expression assessed by in silico analysis.

The investigators noted that CLL and MCL are challenging to differentiate from one another because of morphologic similarities and partially overlapping immunophenotypes.

“In this context, cortactin expression would strongly sustain a diagnosis of CLL over MCL, particularly in association with other CLL markers (i.e., LEF1 and CD200),” they wrote.

The study was internally supported. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Pizzi M et al. Hum Pathol. 2018 Nov 17. doi: 10.1016/j.humpath.2018.10.038.
 

 

The presence or absence in tumor cells of cortactin, a cytoskeleton-remodeling adapter protein, may be a marker to help pathologists distinguish between chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), investigators suggest.

A study of cortactin expression in tumor samples from patients with B-cell CLL, MCL, and other hematologic malignancies showed that while cortactin was present in 14 of 17 CLL samples, it was not expressed on any of 16 MCL samples, reported Marco Pizzi, MD, PhD, from the University of Padova (Italy) and his colleagues.

“In particular, cortactin may contribute to the differential diagnosis between CLL and MCL, two neoplasms with similar histological features but very different clinical outcome. Further studies are needed to clarify the molecular mechanisms of deranged cortactin expression in MCL and CLL and to investigate any possible relationship between cortactin status and the biological features of these lymphomas,” they wrote in Human Pathology.

Overexpression of cortactin has been reported in several solid tumors, and increased expression of CTTN, the gene encoding for cortactin, has been associated with aggressive, poor prognosis disease, the investigators noted.

To characterize cortactin expression in lymphoid and hematopoietic cells and detect potential associations between cortactin and virulence of hematologic malignancies, the investigators performed immunohistochemical analysis on samples from 131 patients treated at their center. The samples included 17 cases of CLL, 16 of MCL, 25 of follicular lymphoma (FL), 30 of marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), 10 of hairy cell leukemia, three of splenic diffuse red pulp small B-cell lymphomas (SDRPBL), and 30 of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

They found that cortactin was expressed in 14 of the 17 CLL samples, all 10 of the HCL samples, and 22 of the 30 DLBCL samples. In contrast, there was no cortactin expression detected in any of either 16 MCL or three SDRPBL samples. The researchers found that 13 of 30 MZL samples had low-level staining. In FL, cortactin was expressed in 2 of the samples but in the remaining 23 cases the researchers found only scattered cortactin-positive lymphoid elements of non–B-cell lineage.

The investigators also found that cortactin expression in CLL correlated with other CLL-specific markers, and found that expression of two or more of the markers had 89.1% sensitivity, 100% specificity, a 100% positive predictive value, and 90.5% negative predictive value for a diagnosis of CLL.

In addition, they saw that the immunohistochemical results were similar to those for CTTN gene expression assessed by in silico analysis.

The investigators noted that CLL and MCL are challenging to differentiate from one another because of morphologic similarities and partially overlapping immunophenotypes.

“In this context, cortactin expression would strongly sustain a diagnosis of CLL over MCL, particularly in association with other CLL markers (i.e., LEF1 and CD200),” they wrote.

The study was internally supported. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Pizzi M et al. Hum Pathol. 2018 Nov 17. doi: 10.1016/j.humpath.2018.10.038.
 

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Key clinical point: Cortactin expression may aid in the differential diagnosis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia from mantle cell lymphoma.

Major finding: Cortactin was expressed on 14 of 17 CLL samples vs. none of 16 MCL samples.

Study details: Immunohistochemistry analysis of samples from 131 patients with B-cell lineage non-Hodgkin lymphomas.

Disclosures: The study was internally supported. The authors reported having no conflicts of interest.

Source: Pizzi M et al. Hum Pathol. 2018 Nov 17. doi: 10.1016/j.humpath.2018.10.038.

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ASH 2018 coming attractions look at the big picture

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Thu, 01/12/2023 - 10:45

 

In the closest thing the medical world has to movie trailers, the American Society of Hematology held a press conference offering a peek into the much anticipated (and much hyped) clinical and research abstracts that will be presented at the 2018 ASH annual meeting.

Shorter R-CHOP regimen for DLBCL

Under the heading “Big Trials, Big Results” will be data from the FLYER trial, a phase 3, randomized, deescalation trial in 592 patients aged 18-60 years with favorable-prognosis diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The investigators report that both progression-free survival and overall survival with four cycles of R-CHOP (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone) were noninferior to those for patients treated with six cycles of R-CHOP (abstract 781).

Dr. Robert A. Brodsky
“Chemotherapy can have late effects: There can be cardiac toxicity from the Adriamycin [doxorubicin] years later and there can even be second malignancies, so especially in younger patients with low-risk disease it’s a big advantage to be able to deescalate care, and this is almost certain to be practice changing,” said Robert A. Brodsky, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, who also currently serves as ASH secretary.

Ibrutinib mastery in CLL

Also on the program are results of a study showing that ibrutinib (Imbruvica), either alone or in combination with rituximab, is associated with superior progression-free survival than bendamustine and rituximab in older patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).

The trial, the Alliance North American Intergroup Study A041202 (abstract 6) is the first major trial to pit ibrutinib against the modern standard of immunochemotherapy rather than the older standard of chlorambucil, Dr. Brodsky noted.

Anemia support in beta-thalassemia, MDS

In nonmalignant disease, investigators in the randomized, phase 3 BELIEVE trial are reporting results of their study showing that the first-in-class erythroid maturation agent luspatercept was associated with significant reductions in the need for RBC transfusion in adults with transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia.

The investigators report that the experimental agent was “generally well tolerated” (abstract 163).

Dr. Alexis A. Thompson

“Beyond a proof of principle, [this is] certainly a very exciting advancement in this group of patients who otherwise had very few treatment options,” said Alexis A. Thompson, MD, associate director of equity and minority health at the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, Chicago, and the current ASH president.

Dr. Thompson also highlighted the MEDALIST trial (abstract 1), a phase 3, randomized study showing that luspatercept significantly reduced transfusion burden, compared with placebo, in patients with anemia caused by very low–, low-, or intermediate-risk myelodysplastic syndrome with ring sideroblasts who require RBC transfusions.

“This group of patients were individuals who were refractory or were not responders or did not tolerate erythropoietic stimulating agents and therefore were requiring regular transfusion,” Dr. Thompson said.

Worth the wait

The late-breaking abstract program was stretched from the usual six abstracts to seven this year because of the unusually high quality of the science, Dr. Brodsky said.

 

 

Among these star attractions are results of a phase 3, randomized study of daratumumab (Darzalex) plus lenalidomide and dexamethasone versus lenalidomide-dexamethasone alone for patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma who are ineligible for transplant.

The investigators found that adding daratumumab reduced the risk of disease progression or death by close to 50%, supporting the combination as a new standard of care in these patients, according to Thierry Facon, MD, from the Hospital Claude Huriez in Lille, France, and colleagues (abstract LBA-2).

Two other late-breakers deal with CLL. The first, a randomized, phase 3 study of ibrutinib-based therapy versus standard fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab chemoimmunotherapy in younger patients with untreated CLL, found that ibrutinib and rituximab provided significantly better progression-free survival and overall survival (abstract LBA-4).

“These findings have immediate practice-changing implications and establish ibrutinib-based therapy as the most efficacious first-line therapy for patients with CLL,” wrote Tait D. Shanafelt, MD, from Stanford (Calif.) University, and colleagues.

On a less positive note, Australian researchers report their discovery of a recurrent mutation in BCL2 that confers resistance to venetoclax (Venclexta) in patients with progressive CLL (abstract LBA-7).

“This mutation provides new insights into the pathobiology of venetoclax resistance and provides a potential biomarker of impending clinical relapse,” wrote Piers Blombery, MBBS, from the University of Melbourne, and colleagues.

Finally, investigators from children’s hospitals in the United States and Europe report promising findings on the safety and efficacy of emapalumab for the treatment of patients with the rare genetic disorder primary hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH).

The drug, newly approved by the Food and Drug Administration, was able to control HLH’s hyperinflammatory activity, and allowed a substantial proportion of patients to survive to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, the investigators said (abstract LBA-6­).

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In the closest thing the medical world has to movie trailers, the American Society of Hematology held a press conference offering a peek into the much anticipated (and much hyped) clinical and research abstracts that will be presented at the 2018 ASH annual meeting.

Shorter R-CHOP regimen for DLBCL

Under the heading “Big Trials, Big Results” will be data from the FLYER trial, a phase 3, randomized, deescalation trial in 592 patients aged 18-60 years with favorable-prognosis diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The investigators report that both progression-free survival and overall survival with four cycles of R-CHOP (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone) were noninferior to those for patients treated with six cycles of R-CHOP (abstract 781).

Dr. Robert A. Brodsky
“Chemotherapy can have late effects: There can be cardiac toxicity from the Adriamycin [doxorubicin] years later and there can even be second malignancies, so especially in younger patients with low-risk disease it’s a big advantage to be able to deescalate care, and this is almost certain to be practice changing,” said Robert A. Brodsky, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, who also currently serves as ASH secretary.

Ibrutinib mastery in CLL

Also on the program are results of a study showing that ibrutinib (Imbruvica), either alone or in combination with rituximab, is associated with superior progression-free survival than bendamustine and rituximab in older patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).

The trial, the Alliance North American Intergroup Study A041202 (abstract 6) is the first major trial to pit ibrutinib against the modern standard of immunochemotherapy rather than the older standard of chlorambucil, Dr. Brodsky noted.

Anemia support in beta-thalassemia, MDS

In nonmalignant disease, investigators in the randomized, phase 3 BELIEVE trial are reporting results of their study showing that the first-in-class erythroid maturation agent luspatercept was associated with significant reductions in the need for RBC transfusion in adults with transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia.

The investigators report that the experimental agent was “generally well tolerated” (abstract 163).

Dr. Alexis A. Thompson

“Beyond a proof of principle, [this is] certainly a very exciting advancement in this group of patients who otherwise had very few treatment options,” said Alexis A. Thompson, MD, associate director of equity and minority health at the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, Chicago, and the current ASH president.

Dr. Thompson also highlighted the MEDALIST trial (abstract 1), a phase 3, randomized study showing that luspatercept significantly reduced transfusion burden, compared with placebo, in patients with anemia caused by very low–, low-, or intermediate-risk myelodysplastic syndrome with ring sideroblasts who require RBC transfusions.

“This group of patients were individuals who were refractory or were not responders or did not tolerate erythropoietic stimulating agents and therefore were requiring regular transfusion,” Dr. Thompson said.

Worth the wait

The late-breaking abstract program was stretched from the usual six abstracts to seven this year because of the unusually high quality of the science, Dr. Brodsky said.

 

 

Among these star attractions are results of a phase 3, randomized study of daratumumab (Darzalex) plus lenalidomide and dexamethasone versus lenalidomide-dexamethasone alone for patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma who are ineligible for transplant.

The investigators found that adding daratumumab reduced the risk of disease progression or death by close to 50%, supporting the combination as a new standard of care in these patients, according to Thierry Facon, MD, from the Hospital Claude Huriez in Lille, France, and colleagues (abstract LBA-2).

Two other late-breakers deal with CLL. The first, a randomized, phase 3 study of ibrutinib-based therapy versus standard fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab chemoimmunotherapy in younger patients with untreated CLL, found that ibrutinib and rituximab provided significantly better progression-free survival and overall survival (abstract LBA-4).

“These findings have immediate practice-changing implications and establish ibrutinib-based therapy as the most efficacious first-line therapy for patients with CLL,” wrote Tait D. Shanafelt, MD, from Stanford (Calif.) University, and colleagues.

On a less positive note, Australian researchers report their discovery of a recurrent mutation in BCL2 that confers resistance to venetoclax (Venclexta) in patients with progressive CLL (abstract LBA-7).

“This mutation provides new insights into the pathobiology of venetoclax resistance and provides a potential biomarker of impending clinical relapse,” wrote Piers Blombery, MBBS, from the University of Melbourne, and colleagues.

Finally, investigators from children’s hospitals in the United States and Europe report promising findings on the safety and efficacy of emapalumab for the treatment of patients with the rare genetic disorder primary hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH).

The drug, newly approved by the Food and Drug Administration, was able to control HLH’s hyperinflammatory activity, and allowed a substantial proportion of patients to survive to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, the investigators said (abstract LBA-6­).

 

In the closest thing the medical world has to movie trailers, the American Society of Hematology held a press conference offering a peek into the much anticipated (and much hyped) clinical and research abstracts that will be presented at the 2018 ASH annual meeting.

Shorter R-CHOP regimen for DLBCL

Under the heading “Big Trials, Big Results” will be data from the FLYER trial, a phase 3, randomized, deescalation trial in 592 patients aged 18-60 years with favorable-prognosis diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The investigators report that both progression-free survival and overall survival with four cycles of R-CHOP (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine and prednisone) were noninferior to those for patients treated with six cycles of R-CHOP (abstract 781).

Dr. Robert A. Brodsky
“Chemotherapy can have late effects: There can be cardiac toxicity from the Adriamycin [doxorubicin] years later and there can even be second malignancies, so especially in younger patients with low-risk disease it’s a big advantage to be able to deescalate care, and this is almost certain to be practice changing,” said Robert A. Brodsky, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, who also currently serves as ASH secretary.

Ibrutinib mastery in CLL

Also on the program are results of a study showing that ibrutinib (Imbruvica), either alone or in combination with rituximab, is associated with superior progression-free survival than bendamustine and rituximab in older patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).

The trial, the Alliance North American Intergroup Study A041202 (abstract 6) is the first major trial to pit ibrutinib against the modern standard of immunochemotherapy rather than the older standard of chlorambucil, Dr. Brodsky noted.

Anemia support in beta-thalassemia, MDS

In nonmalignant disease, investigators in the randomized, phase 3 BELIEVE trial are reporting results of their study showing that the first-in-class erythroid maturation agent luspatercept was associated with significant reductions in the need for RBC transfusion in adults with transfusion-dependent beta-thalassemia.

The investigators report that the experimental agent was “generally well tolerated” (abstract 163).

Dr. Alexis A. Thompson

“Beyond a proof of principle, [this is] certainly a very exciting advancement in this group of patients who otherwise had very few treatment options,” said Alexis A. Thompson, MD, associate director of equity and minority health at the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, Chicago, and the current ASH president.

Dr. Thompson also highlighted the MEDALIST trial (abstract 1), a phase 3, randomized study showing that luspatercept significantly reduced transfusion burden, compared with placebo, in patients with anemia caused by very low–, low-, or intermediate-risk myelodysplastic syndrome with ring sideroblasts who require RBC transfusions.

“This group of patients were individuals who were refractory or were not responders or did not tolerate erythropoietic stimulating agents and therefore were requiring regular transfusion,” Dr. Thompson said.

Worth the wait

The late-breaking abstract program was stretched from the usual six abstracts to seven this year because of the unusually high quality of the science, Dr. Brodsky said.

 

 

Among these star attractions are results of a phase 3, randomized study of daratumumab (Darzalex) plus lenalidomide and dexamethasone versus lenalidomide-dexamethasone alone for patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma who are ineligible for transplant.

The investigators found that adding daratumumab reduced the risk of disease progression or death by close to 50%, supporting the combination as a new standard of care in these patients, according to Thierry Facon, MD, from the Hospital Claude Huriez in Lille, France, and colleagues (abstract LBA-2).

Two other late-breakers deal with CLL. The first, a randomized, phase 3 study of ibrutinib-based therapy versus standard fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab chemoimmunotherapy in younger patients with untreated CLL, found that ibrutinib and rituximab provided significantly better progression-free survival and overall survival (abstract LBA-4).

“These findings have immediate practice-changing implications and establish ibrutinib-based therapy as the most efficacious first-line therapy for patients with CLL,” wrote Tait D. Shanafelt, MD, from Stanford (Calif.) University, and colleagues.

On a less positive note, Australian researchers report their discovery of a recurrent mutation in BCL2 that confers resistance to venetoclax (Venclexta) in patients with progressive CLL (abstract LBA-7).

“This mutation provides new insights into the pathobiology of venetoclax resistance and provides a potential biomarker of impending clinical relapse,” wrote Piers Blombery, MBBS, from the University of Melbourne, and colleagues.

Finally, investigators from children’s hospitals in the United States and Europe report promising findings on the safety and efficacy of emapalumab for the treatment of patients with the rare genetic disorder primary hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH).

The drug, newly approved by the Food and Drug Administration, was able to control HLH’s hyperinflammatory activity, and allowed a substantial proportion of patients to survive to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, the investigators said (abstract LBA-6­).

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BAP1 expression augurs prognosis of metastatic RCC

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Expression in metastatic tissues of BAP1, a gene encoding for a tumor suppressor protein, is a significant marker for progression-free and overall survival in patients with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), investigators contended.

An analysis of tissue samples from 124 patients with metastatic ccRCC showed that patients with metastatic tissues expressing BAP1 had a 5-year overall survival (OS) rate of 53.2%, compared with 35.1% for patients whose tissues did not express the gene (P = .004), reported Walter Henriques da Costa, MD, PhD, and colleagues from the A.C. Camargo Cancer Center in Sao Paulo.

BAP1 expression was also associated with significantly better progression-free survival (PFS), but expression of a different gene thought to be associated with prognosis in metastatic ccRCC, PBRM1, was not a significant predictor of either overall survival (OS) or PFS.

“The pattern of immunohistochemical expression of both PBRM1 and BAP1 was shown to be significantly discordant when comparing the expression of primary tumor and metastatic tumor tissue. The use of prognostic biomarkers identified in the primary tumor tissue might be not reliable in the metastatic disease scenario. Patients with metastatic ccRCC that present loss of BAP1 expression in metastatic tissue demonstrated poor survival rates and represent a relevant risk group for tumor recurrence and death,” the investigators wrote in Urologic Oncology.

Both BAP1 and PBRM1 have been shown to be frequently mutated in ccRCC. These and other mutated genes recently identified through next-generation sequencing encode proteins that are involved in chromatin regulation and act as gene suppressors.

To see whether expression of the genes had prognostic value, they performed immunohistochemical studies of tissues from 124 consecutive patients in their center who underwent metastasectomy or biopsy of metastases and from 38 paired cases with tissues from the primary tumors of patients who underwent partial or radical nephrectomies.

They found that 98 of the metastatic samples (79%) stained negative for PBRM1 and 26 (21%) stained positive for expression of the gene; 62.1% of samples were negative for BAP1 expression and 37.9% were positive.

There were discordant expression patterns between primary tumors and metastases for BAP1 in 17 of the 38 (44.7%) samples from patients with both primary and metastatic tissues and for PBRM1 in 19 of 38 (50%) samples.

As noted before, the 5-year OS rate was 53.2% for patients with BAP1-positive metastases, compared with 35.1% for patients with BAP1-negative tissues (P = .004). The respective 5-year PFS rates for BAP1 expression were 14.9% and 3.9% (P = .003).

There were no significant differences associated with PBRM1 expression for either PFS or OS, however.

Negative expression of BAP1 in metastases was associated in multivariate analysis with both higher risk of death (hazard ratio, 2.017; P = .045) and with disease progression (HR, 1.586; P = .012).

The finding of discordance in expression between the primary tumor and metastases shows that the “strategy of using tissue markers of the primary tumor in the prediction of response of metastatic disease is not reliable. Such fact reinforces the imminent need for identification and validation of tumor markers in metastatic tissue,” the authors wrote.

No funding source or author disclosures were reported.

SOURCE: da Costa WH et al. Urol Oncol. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2018.10.017.

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Expression in metastatic tissues of BAP1, a gene encoding for a tumor suppressor protein, is a significant marker for progression-free and overall survival in patients with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), investigators contended.

An analysis of tissue samples from 124 patients with metastatic ccRCC showed that patients with metastatic tissues expressing BAP1 had a 5-year overall survival (OS) rate of 53.2%, compared with 35.1% for patients whose tissues did not express the gene (P = .004), reported Walter Henriques da Costa, MD, PhD, and colleagues from the A.C. Camargo Cancer Center in Sao Paulo.

BAP1 expression was also associated with significantly better progression-free survival (PFS), but expression of a different gene thought to be associated with prognosis in metastatic ccRCC, PBRM1, was not a significant predictor of either overall survival (OS) or PFS.

“The pattern of immunohistochemical expression of both PBRM1 and BAP1 was shown to be significantly discordant when comparing the expression of primary tumor and metastatic tumor tissue. The use of prognostic biomarkers identified in the primary tumor tissue might be not reliable in the metastatic disease scenario. Patients with metastatic ccRCC that present loss of BAP1 expression in metastatic tissue demonstrated poor survival rates and represent a relevant risk group for tumor recurrence and death,” the investigators wrote in Urologic Oncology.

Both BAP1 and PBRM1 have been shown to be frequently mutated in ccRCC. These and other mutated genes recently identified through next-generation sequencing encode proteins that are involved in chromatin regulation and act as gene suppressors.

To see whether expression of the genes had prognostic value, they performed immunohistochemical studies of tissues from 124 consecutive patients in their center who underwent metastasectomy or biopsy of metastases and from 38 paired cases with tissues from the primary tumors of patients who underwent partial or radical nephrectomies.

They found that 98 of the metastatic samples (79%) stained negative for PBRM1 and 26 (21%) stained positive for expression of the gene; 62.1% of samples were negative for BAP1 expression and 37.9% were positive.

There were discordant expression patterns between primary tumors and metastases for BAP1 in 17 of the 38 (44.7%) samples from patients with both primary and metastatic tissues and for PBRM1 in 19 of 38 (50%) samples.

As noted before, the 5-year OS rate was 53.2% for patients with BAP1-positive metastases, compared with 35.1% for patients with BAP1-negative tissues (P = .004). The respective 5-year PFS rates for BAP1 expression were 14.9% and 3.9% (P = .003).

There were no significant differences associated with PBRM1 expression for either PFS or OS, however.

Negative expression of BAP1 in metastases was associated in multivariate analysis with both higher risk of death (hazard ratio, 2.017; P = .045) and with disease progression (HR, 1.586; P = .012).

The finding of discordance in expression between the primary tumor and metastases shows that the “strategy of using tissue markers of the primary tumor in the prediction of response of metastatic disease is not reliable. Such fact reinforces the imminent need for identification and validation of tumor markers in metastatic tissue,” the authors wrote.

No funding source or author disclosures were reported.

SOURCE: da Costa WH et al. Urol Oncol. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2018.10.017.

Expression in metastatic tissues of BAP1, a gene encoding for a tumor suppressor protein, is a significant marker for progression-free and overall survival in patients with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC), investigators contended.

An analysis of tissue samples from 124 patients with metastatic ccRCC showed that patients with metastatic tissues expressing BAP1 had a 5-year overall survival (OS) rate of 53.2%, compared with 35.1% for patients whose tissues did not express the gene (P = .004), reported Walter Henriques da Costa, MD, PhD, and colleagues from the A.C. Camargo Cancer Center in Sao Paulo.

BAP1 expression was also associated with significantly better progression-free survival (PFS), but expression of a different gene thought to be associated with prognosis in metastatic ccRCC, PBRM1, was not a significant predictor of either overall survival (OS) or PFS.

“The pattern of immunohistochemical expression of both PBRM1 and BAP1 was shown to be significantly discordant when comparing the expression of primary tumor and metastatic tumor tissue. The use of prognostic biomarkers identified in the primary tumor tissue might be not reliable in the metastatic disease scenario. Patients with metastatic ccRCC that present loss of BAP1 expression in metastatic tissue demonstrated poor survival rates and represent a relevant risk group for tumor recurrence and death,” the investigators wrote in Urologic Oncology.

Both BAP1 and PBRM1 have been shown to be frequently mutated in ccRCC. These and other mutated genes recently identified through next-generation sequencing encode proteins that are involved in chromatin regulation and act as gene suppressors.

To see whether expression of the genes had prognostic value, they performed immunohistochemical studies of tissues from 124 consecutive patients in their center who underwent metastasectomy or biopsy of metastases and from 38 paired cases with tissues from the primary tumors of patients who underwent partial or radical nephrectomies.

They found that 98 of the metastatic samples (79%) stained negative for PBRM1 and 26 (21%) stained positive for expression of the gene; 62.1% of samples were negative for BAP1 expression and 37.9% were positive.

There were discordant expression patterns between primary tumors and metastases for BAP1 in 17 of the 38 (44.7%) samples from patients with both primary and metastatic tissues and for PBRM1 in 19 of 38 (50%) samples.

As noted before, the 5-year OS rate was 53.2% for patients with BAP1-positive metastases, compared with 35.1% for patients with BAP1-negative tissues (P = .004). The respective 5-year PFS rates for BAP1 expression were 14.9% and 3.9% (P = .003).

There were no significant differences associated with PBRM1 expression for either PFS or OS, however.

Negative expression of BAP1 in metastases was associated in multivariate analysis with both higher risk of death (hazard ratio, 2.017; P = .045) and with disease progression (HR, 1.586; P = .012).

The finding of discordance in expression between the primary tumor and metastases shows that the “strategy of using tissue markers of the primary tumor in the prediction of response of metastatic disease is not reliable. Such fact reinforces the imminent need for identification and validation of tumor markers in metastatic tissue,” the authors wrote.

No funding source or author disclosures were reported.

SOURCE: da Costa WH et al. Urol Oncol. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2018.10.017.

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Key clinical point: Metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma tissue expression of BAP1 is a marker for better overall and progression-free survival.

Major finding: The 5-year overall OS rate was 53.2% for patients with BAP1-positive metastases versus 35.1% for those with BAP1-negative tissues (P = .004).

Study details: A retrospective analysis of tumor samples from 124 patients with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma and 38 patients with paired primary tumor and metastases samples.

Disclosures: No funding source or author disclosures were reported.

Source: da Costa WH et al. Urol Oncol. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2018.10.017.

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PD-L1 correlates with worse sporadic, hereditary ccRCC outcomes

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In patients with either sporadic or hereditary clear cell renal cell carcinoma, tumor expression of programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) is associated with aggressive disease, investigators have found.

Analysis of tumor samples from patients with sporadic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) and others with Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL)–associated hereditary ccRCC showed that positive PD-L1 correlated with aggressive clinicopathologic features, reported Baoan Hong, MD, from Peking University First Hospital in Beijing, and colleagues.

“PD-L1 is a promising predictive biomarker for the utilization of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors in ccRCC patients,” they wrote in Genitourinary Cancer.

The investigators conducted a retrospective analysis of PD-L1 expression and its potential correlation with disease features using samples from 129 patients with sporadic ccRCC and 26 patients with VHL disease who underwent partial or radical nephrectomy at their center from 2010 to 2017.

Sporadic ccRCC

The median age of patients with sporadic ccRCC was 61 years and the median tumor size was 4.3 cm. Of the 129 patients, 56 had pathological stage T1a at diagnosis, 44 had stage T1b, 8 had stage T2, and 21 had stage T3. In all, 25 patients had Fuhrman nuclear grade 3 tumors and 104 had grade 1 or 2 tumors. A total of 7 patients had metastases to lymph nodes, 41 had microvascular invasion, and 16 had tumor necrosis.

In all, 61 of these patients had PD-L1-positive tumors and 68 were PD-L1 negative. Positive PD-L1 was significantly associated with male gender (P = .025) and worse disease features, including higher T stage (P = .0011) and higher Fuhrman nuclear grade (P = .022).

After a median follow-up of 68 months, 9 patients in this group died and 17 others developed distant metastases or recurrent disease. Patients whose tumors were PD-L1 negative had significantly longer disease-free survival than patients with PD-L1-positive tumors, at a median 36 versus 28 months (P = .037).

VHL-associated ccRCC

Of the 26 patients with VHL-associated hereditary ccRCC (13 men and 13 women; median age, 42 years), 13 had pathological stage T1a disease, 7 had T1b, and 2 each has stage T2a, T3a, and T3b tumors. A total of 18 patients had Fuhrman nuclear grade 1 tumors and 8 had grade 2 tumors.

In this cohort, 17 patients had PD-L1-negative tumors, and 9 had PD-L1-positive tumors. PD-L1 expression was more common in patients with Fuhrman nuclear grade 2 tumors (six of eight cases). Patients with Fuhrman nuclear grade 1 tumors were more likely to be PD-L1 negative (15 of 18, P = .008). PD-L1 expression was not significantly correlated with either gender or tumor stage in this cohort.

There were no associations in this population between PD-L1 status and either age, tumor size, microvascular invasion, tumor necrosis, or lymph node metastases.

The investigators also compared the age of onset of all VHL-associated tumors in this cohort in PD-L1-positive versus PD-L1-negative patients, but found no statistically significant differences.

The authors acknowledged that the cohort sizes were small and that follow-up was relatively short, which could have a bearing on the analysis of associations between PD-L1 expression and disease features.

“Whether PD-L1 expression level in ccRCC is related to the effectiveness of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy needs to be further investigated,” they wrote.

The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and Special Health Development Research Project of Capital. The authors reported having no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Hong B et al. Clin Genitourin Cancer. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.clgc.2018.11.001.

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In patients with either sporadic or hereditary clear cell renal cell carcinoma, tumor expression of programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) is associated with aggressive disease, investigators have found.

Analysis of tumor samples from patients with sporadic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) and others with Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL)–associated hereditary ccRCC showed that positive PD-L1 correlated with aggressive clinicopathologic features, reported Baoan Hong, MD, from Peking University First Hospital in Beijing, and colleagues.

“PD-L1 is a promising predictive biomarker for the utilization of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors in ccRCC patients,” they wrote in Genitourinary Cancer.

The investigators conducted a retrospective analysis of PD-L1 expression and its potential correlation with disease features using samples from 129 patients with sporadic ccRCC and 26 patients with VHL disease who underwent partial or radical nephrectomy at their center from 2010 to 2017.

Sporadic ccRCC

The median age of patients with sporadic ccRCC was 61 years and the median tumor size was 4.3 cm. Of the 129 patients, 56 had pathological stage T1a at diagnosis, 44 had stage T1b, 8 had stage T2, and 21 had stage T3. In all, 25 patients had Fuhrman nuclear grade 3 tumors and 104 had grade 1 or 2 tumors. A total of 7 patients had metastases to lymph nodes, 41 had microvascular invasion, and 16 had tumor necrosis.

In all, 61 of these patients had PD-L1-positive tumors and 68 were PD-L1 negative. Positive PD-L1 was significantly associated with male gender (P = .025) and worse disease features, including higher T stage (P = .0011) and higher Fuhrman nuclear grade (P = .022).

After a median follow-up of 68 months, 9 patients in this group died and 17 others developed distant metastases or recurrent disease. Patients whose tumors were PD-L1 negative had significantly longer disease-free survival than patients with PD-L1-positive tumors, at a median 36 versus 28 months (P = .037).

VHL-associated ccRCC

Of the 26 patients with VHL-associated hereditary ccRCC (13 men and 13 women; median age, 42 years), 13 had pathological stage T1a disease, 7 had T1b, and 2 each has stage T2a, T3a, and T3b tumors. A total of 18 patients had Fuhrman nuclear grade 1 tumors and 8 had grade 2 tumors.

In this cohort, 17 patients had PD-L1-negative tumors, and 9 had PD-L1-positive tumors. PD-L1 expression was more common in patients with Fuhrman nuclear grade 2 tumors (six of eight cases). Patients with Fuhrman nuclear grade 1 tumors were more likely to be PD-L1 negative (15 of 18, P = .008). PD-L1 expression was not significantly correlated with either gender or tumor stage in this cohort.

There were no associations in this population between PD-L1 status and either age, tumor size, microvascular invasion, tumor necrosis, or lymph node metastases.

The investigators also compared the age of onset of all VHL-associated tumors in this cohort in PD-L1-positive versus PD-L1-negative patients, but found no statistically significant differences.

The authors acknowledged that the cohort sizes were small and that follow-up was relatively short, which could have a bearing on the analysis of associations between PD-L1 expression and disease features.

“Whether PD-L1 expression level in ccRCC is related to the effectiveness of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy needs to be further investigated,” they wrote.

The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and Special Health Development Research Project of Capital. The authors reported having no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Hong B et al. Clin Genitourin Cancer. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.clgc.2018.11.001.

 

In patients with either sporadic or hereditary clear cell renal cell carcinoma, tumor expression of programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) is associated with aggressive disease, investigators have found.

Analysis of tumor samples from patients with sporadic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) and others with Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL)–associated hereditary ccRCC showed that positive PD-L1 correlated with aggressive clinicopathologic features, reported Baoan Hong, MD, from Peking University First Hospital in Beijing, and colleagues.

“PD-L1 is a promising predictive biomarker for the utilization of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitors in ccRCC patients,” they wrote in Genitourinary Cancer.

The investigators conducted a retrospective analysis of PD-L1 expression and its potential correlation with disease features using samples from 129 patients with sporadic ccRCC and 26 patients with VHL disease who underwent partial or radical nephrectomy at their center from 2010 to 2017.

Sporadic ccRCC

The median age of patients with sporadic ccRCC was 61 years and the median tumor size was 4.3 cm. Of the 129 patients, 56 had pathological stage T1a at diagnosis, 44 had stage T1b, 8 had stage T2, and 21 had stage T3. In all, 25 patients had Fuhrman nuclear grade 3 tumors and 104 had grade 1 or 2 tumors. A total of 7 patients had metastases to lymph nodes, 41 had microvascular invasion, and 16 had tumor necrosis.

In all, 61 of these patients had PD-L1-positive tumors and 68 were PD-L1 negative. Positive PD-L1 was significantly associated with male gender (P = .025) and worse disease features, including higher T stage (P = .0011) and higher Fuhrman nuclear grade (P = .022).

After a median follow-up of 68 months, 9 patients in this group died and 17 others developed distant metastases or recurrent disease. Patients whose tumors were PD-L1 negative had significantly longer disease-free survival than patients with PD-L1-positive tumors, at a median 36 versus 28 months (P = .037).

VHL-associated ccRCC

Of the 26 patients with VHL-associated hereditary ccRCC (13 men and 13 women; median age, 42 years), 13 had pathological stage T1a disease, 7 had T1b, and 2 each has stage T2a, T3a, and T3b tumors. A total of 18 patients had Fuhrman nuclear grade 1 tumors and 8 had grade 2 tumors.

In this cohort, 17 patients had PD-L1-negative tumors, and 9 had PD-L1-positive tumors. PD-L1 expression was more common in patients with Fuhrman nuclear grade 2 tumors (six of eight cases). Patients with Fuhrman nuclear grade 1 tumors were more likely to be PD-L1 negative (15 of 18, P = .008). PD-L1 expression was not significantly correlated with either gender or tumor stage in this cohort.

There were no associations in this population between PD-L1 status and either age, tumor size, microvascular invasion, tumor necrosis, or lymph node metastases.

The investigators also compared the age of onset of all VHL-associated tumors in this cohort in PD-L1-positive versus PD-L1-negative patients, but found no statistically significant differences.

The authors acknowledged that the cohort sizes were small and that follow-up was relatively short, which could have a bearing on the analysis of associations between PD-L1 expression and disease features.

“Whether PD-L1 expression level in ccRCC is related to the effectiveness of PD-1/PD-L1 checkpoint inhibitor immunotherapy needs to be further investigated,” they wrote.

The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and Special Health Development Research Project of Capital. The authors reported having no relevant disclosures.

SOURCE: Hong B et al. Clin Genitourin Cancer. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.clgc.2018.11.001.

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Key clinical point: Expression of programmed death–ligand 1 (PD-L1) in both sporadic and hereditary clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) was associated with worse prognosis.

Major finding: Median disease-free survival of patients with sporadic ccRCC tumors negative for PD-L1 was 36 months, compared with 28 months for patients with PD-L1-positive tumors.

Study details: A retrospective analysis of tissues from 129 patients with sporadic ccRCC and 26 with Von Hippel-Lindau–associated hereditary ccRCC.

Disclosures: The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and Special Health Development Research Project of Capital. The authors reported having no relevant disclosures.

Source: Hong B et al. Clin Genitourin Cancer. 2018 Nov 13. doi: 10.1016/j.clgc.2018.11.001.

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R-CHOP effective as first-line treatment in FL

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R-CHOP effective as first-line treatment in FL

 

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Long-term data suggest R-CHOP can be effective as first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

In a phase 2-3 trial, investigators compared R-CHOP-21 and R-CHOP-14 in a cohort of patients with indolent lymphomas, most of whom had FL.

 

Ten-year survival rates were similar between the R-CHOP-21 and R-CHOP-14 groups, with progression-free survival (PFS) rates of 33% and 39%, respectively, and overall survival (OS) rates of 81% and 85%, respectively.

 

The investigators did note that 9% of patients in each treatment group developed secondary malignancies, and grade 3 infections were a concern as well.

 

Takashi Watanabe, MD, PhD, of Mie University in Japan, and his colleagues reported these results in The Lancet Haematology.

 

The trial (JCOG0203) included 300 patients with stage III or IV indolent B-cell lymphomas from 44 Japanese hospitals.

 

Most patients (n=248) had grade 1-3a FL, 17 had grade 3b FL, 6 had marginal zone lymphoma, 6 had diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 4 had mantle cell lymphoma, 2 had small lymphocytic lymphoma, 1 had plasmacytoma, 13 had other indolent B-cell lymphomas, and 3 had other lymphomas.

 

The patients were randomly assigned to receive six cycles of R-CHOP 21 (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone every 3 weeks) or R-CHOP 14 (R-CHOP every 2 weeks with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor support). Neither group received rituximab maintenance.

 

Overall results

 

The median follow-up was 11.2 years (interquartile range, 10.1 to 12.7 years).

 

The 10-year PFS was 33% in the R-CHOP-21 group and 39% in the R-CHOP-14 group (hazard ratio=0.89). The 10-year OS was 81% and 85%, respectively (hazard ratio=0.87).

 

At 10 years, the incidence of secondary malignancies was 9% in both the R-CHOP-21 group (14/148) and the R-CHOP-14 group (14/151).

 

The most frequent solid tumor malignancies were stomach (n=5), lung (n=4), colon (n=3), bladder (n=2), and prostate (n=2) cancers. Hematologic malignancies included myelodysplastic syndromes (n=6), acute myeloid leukemia (n=2), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (n=1), and chronic myeloid leukemia (n=1).

 

There were nine deaths from secondary malignancies, four in the R-CHOP-21 group and five in the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

The rate of grade 3 adverse events was 18% (n=53) for the entire cohort. Grade 3 infections occurred in 23% of the R-CHOP-21 group and 12% of the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

Focus on grade 1-3a FL

 

Among the 248 patients with grade 1-3a FL, the PFS (for both treatment groups) was 45% at 5 years, 39% at 8 years, and 36% at 10 years. The OS was 94% at 5 years, 87% at 8 years, and 85% at 10 years.

 

Histological transformation was observed in 11% of the patients who had grade 1-3a FL at enrollment. The cumulative incidence of histological transformation was 2.4% at 3 years, 3.2% at 5 years, 8.5% at 8 years, and 9.3% at 10 years.

 

Secondary malignancies occurred in 10% (12/125) of the R-CHOP-21 group and 11% (13/123) of the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

The cumulative incidence of hematologic secondary malignancies at 10 years was 2.9%.

 

The investigators noted that the actual incidence of secondary solid tumors or hematologic malignancies apart from the setting of autologous stem cell transplants is not known. They emphasized that patients should be followed beyond 10 years to ensure the risk of secondary malignancies is not underestimated.

 

“Clinicians choosing a first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma should be cautious of secondary malignancies caused by immunochemotherapy and severe complications of infectious diseases in the long-term follow-up—both of which could lead to death,” the investigators wrote.

 

This study was supported by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan and the National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund of Japan.

 

 

 

Dr. Wantanabe has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Taisho Toyama, Celgene, Nippon Shinyaku, and Novartis and funding resources from TakaraBio and United Immunity to support the Department of Immuno-Gene Therapy at Mie University. Multiple co-authors reported similar relationships.

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Vials of drugs

 

Long-term data suggest R-CHOP can be effective as first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

In a phase 2-3 trial, investigators compared R-CHOP-21 and R-CHOP-14 in a cohort of patients with indolent lymphomas, most of whom had FL.

 

Ten-year survival rates were similar between the R-CHOP-21 and R-CHOP-14 groups, with progression-free survival (PFS) rates of 33% and 39%, respectively, and overall survival (OS) rates of 81% and 85%, respectively.

 

The investigators did note that 9% of patients in each treatment group developed secondary malignancies, and grade 3 infections were a concern as well.

 

Takashi Watanabe, MD, PhD, of Mie University in Japan, and his colleagues reported these results in The Lancet Haematology.

 

The trial (JCOG0203) included 300 patients with stage III or IV indolent B-cell lymphomas from 44 Japanese hospitals.

 

Most patients (n=248) had grade 1-3a FL, 17 had grade 3b FL, 6 had marginal zone lymphoma, 6 had diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 4 had mantle cell lymphoma, 2 had small lymphocytic lymphoma, 1 had plasmacytoma, 13 had other indolent B-cell lymphomas, and 3 had other lymphomas.

 

The patients were randomly assigned to receive six cycles of R-CHOP 21 (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone every 3 weeks) or R-CHOP 14 (R-CHOP every 2 weeks with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor support). Neither group received rituximab maintenance.

 

Overall results

 

The median follow-up was 11.2 years (interquartile range, 10.1 to 12.7 years).

 

The 10-year PFS was 33% in the R-CHOP-21 group and 39% in the R-CHOP-14 group (hazard ratio=0.89). The 10-year OS was 81% and 85%, respectively (hazard ratio=0.87).

 

At 10 years, the incidence of secondary malignancies was 9% in both the R-CHOP-21 group (14/148) and the R-CHOP-14 group (14/151).

 

The most frequent solid tumor malignancies were stomach (n=5), lung (n=4), colon (n=3), bladder (n=2), and prostate (n=2) cancers. Hematologic malignancies included myelodysplastic syndromes (n=6), acute myeloid leukemia (n=2), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (n=1), and chronic myeloid leukemia (n=1).

 

There were nine deaths from secondary malignancies, four in the R-CHOP-21 group and five in the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

The rate of grade 3 adverse events was 18% (n=53) for the entire cohort. Grade 3 infections occurred in 23% of the R-CHOP-21 group and 12% of the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

Focus on grade 1-3a FL

 

Among the 248 patients with grade 1-3a FL, the PFS (for both treatment groups) was 45% at 5 years, 39% at 8 years, and 36% at 10 years. The OS was 94% at 5 years, 87% at 8 years, and 85% at 10 years.

 

Histological transformation was observed in 11% of the patients who had grade 1-3a FL at enrollment. The cumulative incidence of histological transformation was 2.4% at 3 years, 3.2% at 5 years, 8.5% at 8 years, and 9.3% at 10 years.

 

Secondary malignancies occurred in 10% (12/125) of the R-CHOP-21 group and 11% (13/123) of the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

The cumulative incidence of hematologic secondary malignancies at 10 years was 2.9%.

 

The investigators noted that the actual incidence of secondary solid tumors or hematologic malignancies apart from the setting of autologous stem cell transplants is not known. They emphasized that patients should be followed beyond 10 years to ensure the risk of secondary malignancies is not underestimated.

 

“Clinicians choosing a first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma should be cautious of secondary malignancies caused by immunochemotherapy and severe complications of infectious diseases in the long-term follow-up—both of which could lead to death,” the investigators wrote.

 

This study was supported by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan and the National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund of Japan.

 

 

 

Dr. Wantanabe has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Taisho Toyama, Celgene, Nippon Shinyaku, and Novartis and funding resources from TakaraBio and United Immunity to support the Department of Immuno-Gene Therapy at Mie University. Multiple co-authors reported similar relationships.

 

Photo by Bill Branson
Vials of drugs

 

Long-term data suggest R-CHOP can be effective as first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

In a phase 2-3 trial, investigators compared R-CHOP-21 and R-CHOP-14 in a cohort of patients with indolent lymphomas, most of whom had FL.

 

Ten-year survival rates were similar between the R-CHOP-21 and R-CHOP-14 groups, with progression-free survival (PFS) rates of 33% and 39%, respectively, and overall survival (OS) rates of 81% and 85%, respectively.

 

The investigators did note that 9% of patients in each treatment group developed secondary malignancies, and grade 3 infections were a concern as well.

 

Takashi Watanabe, MD, PhD, of Mie University in Japan, and his colleagues reported these results in The Lancet Haematology.

 

The trial (JCOG0203) included 300 patients with stage III or IV indolent B-cell lymphomas from 44 Japanese hospitals.

 

Most patients (n=248) had grade 1-3a FL, 17 had grade 3b FL, 6 had marginal zone lymphoma, 6 had diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 4 had mantle cell lymphoma, 2 had small lymphocytic lymphoma, 1 had plasmacytoma, 13 had other indolent B-cell lymphomas, and 3 had other lymphomas.

 

The patients were randomly assigned to receive six cycles of R-CHOP 21 (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone every 3 weeks) or R-CHOP 14 (R-CHOP every 2 weeks with granulocyte-colony stimulating factor support). Neither group received rituximab maintenance.

 

Overall results

 

The median follow-up was 11.2 years (interquartile range, 10.1 to 12.7 years).

 

The 10-year PFS was 33% in the R-CHOP-21 group and 39% in the R-CHOP-14 group (hazard ratio=0.89). The 10-year OS was 81% and 85%, respectively (hazard ratio=0.87).

 

At 10 years, the incidence of secondary malignancies was 9% in both the R-CHOP-21 group (14/148) and the R-CHOP-14 group (14/151).

 

The most frequent solid tumor malignancies were stomach (n=5), lung (n=4), colon (n=3), bladder (n=2), and prostate (n=2) cancers. Hematologic malignancies included myelodysplastic syndromes (n=6), acute myeloid leukemia (n=2), acute lymphoblastic leukemia (n=1), and chronic myeloid leukemia (n=1).

 

There were nine deaths from secondary malignancies, four in the R-CHOP-21 group and five in the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

The rate of grade 3 adverse events was 18% (n=53) for the entire cohort. Grade 3 infections occurred in 23% of the R-CHOP-21 group and 12% of the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

Focus on grade 1-3a FL

 

Among the 248 patients with grade 1-3a FL, the PFS (for both treatment groups) was 45% at 5 years, 39% at 8 years, and 36% at 10 years. The OS was 94% at 5 years, 87% at 8 years, and 85% at 10 years.

 

Histological transformation was observed in 11% of the patients who had grade 1-3a FL at enrollment. The cumulative incidence of histological transformation was 2.4% at 3 years, 3.2% at 5 years, 8.5% at 8 years, and 9.3% at 10 years.

 

Secondary malignancies occurred in 10% (12/125) of the R-CHOP-21 group and 11% (13/123) of the R-CHOP-14 group.

 

The cumulative incidence of hematologic secondary malignancies at 10 years was 2.9%.

 

The investigators noted that the actual incidence of secondary solid tumors or hematologic malignancies apart from the setting of autologous stem cell transplants is not known. They emphasized that patients should be followed beyond 10 years to ensure the risk of secondary malignancies is not underestimated.

 

“Clinicians choosing a first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma should be cautious of secondary malignancies caused by immunochemotherapy and severe complications of infectious diseases in the long-term follow-up—both of which could lead to death,” the investigators wrote.

 

This study was supported by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan and the National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund of Japan.

 

 

 

Dr. Wantanabe has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Taisho Toyama, Celgene, Nippon Shinyaku, and Novartis and funding resources from TakaraBio and United Immunity to support the Department of Immuno-Gene Therapy at Mie University. Multiple co-authors reported similar relationships.

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R-CHOP looks viable as first line in follicular lymphoma

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A decade of follow-up data suggest that patients with newly diagnosed follicular lymphoma may derive long-term benefit from first-line therapy with the R-CHOP regimen, according to investigators in Japan.

Patho/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Among patients with untreated follicular and other indolent B-cell lymphomas enrolled in a randomized phase 2/3 trial, the 10-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate for patients assigned to R-CHOP-21 (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone every 3 weeks) was 33%, and the 10-year PFS rate for patients assigned to R-CHOP-14 (R-CHOP every 2 weeks with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor [G-CSF] support] was 39%, and these PFS rates did not differ between the treatment arms, Takashi Watanabe, MD, PhD, from Mie University in Tsu, Japan, and his colleagues reported in the Lancet Haematology.

They also found that, compared with therapeutic regimens prior to the introduction of rituximab, R-CHOP was associated with a reduced likelihood of histological transformation of follicular lymphoma into a poor-prognosis diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), with no apparent increase in risk of secondary malignancies.

“The gold-standard, first-line treatment in patients with advanced-stage follicular lymphoma remains undetermined. However, because of the reduction in incidence of transformation without an increase in either secondary malignancies or fatal infectious events, the R-CHOP regimen should be a candidate for standard treatment, particularly from the viewpoint of long-term follow-up,” the investigators wrote


The JCOG0203 trial, which began enrollment in September 2002, included patients with stage III or IV indolent B-cell lymphomas, including grades 1-3 follicular lymphoma, from 44 Japanese hospitals. The patients were randomly assigned to receive six cycles of either R-CHOP-14 plus G-CSF or R-CHOP-21 administered once daily for 6 days beginning on day 8 of every cycle). Patients did not receive rituximab maintenance in either group.

In the primary analysis of the trial, published in 2011, the investigators reported that in 299 patients there were no significant differences in either PFS or 6-year overall survival (OS).

In the current analysis, the investigators reported that, for 248 patients with grade 1-3a follicular lymphoma, the 8-year PFS rate was 39% and the 10-year PFS rate was 36%.

The cumulative incidence of histological transformation was 3.2% at 5 years, 8.5% at 8 years, and 9.3% 10 years after the last patient was enrolled.

“In our study, survival after histological transformation was still poor; therefore, reducing histological transformation remains a crucial issue for patients with follicular lymphoma,” the investigators wrote.

The cumulative incidence of secondary malignancies at 10 years was 8.1%, and the cumulative incidence of hematological secondary malignancies was 2.9%.

The investigators noted that the actual incidence of secondary solid tumors or hematologic malignancies apart from the setting of autologous stem cell transplants is not known and emphasized that patients should be followed beyond 10 years to ensure that the risk of secondary malignancies is not underestimated.

“Clinicians choosing a first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma should be cautious of secondary malignancies caused by immunochemotherapy and severe complications of infectious diseases in the long-term follow-up – both of which could lead to death,” they advised.

The study was supported by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan and by the National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund of Japan. Dr. Watanabe has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Taisho Toyama, Celgene, Nippon Shinyaku, and Novartis and funding resources from TakaraBio and United Immunity to support the Department of Immuno-Gene Therapy at Mie University. Multiple coauthors reported similar relationships.

SOURCE: Watanabe T et al. Lancet Haematol. 2018 Nov;5(11):e520-31.

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A decade of follow-up data suggest that patients with newly diagnosed follicular lymphoma may derive long-term benefit from first-line therapy with the R-CHOP regimen, according to investigators in Japan.

Patho/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Among patients with untreated follicular and other indolent B-cell lymphomas enrolled in a randomized phase 2/3 trial, the 10-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate for patients assigned to R-CHOP-21 (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone every 3 weeks) was 33%, and the 10-year PFS rate for patients assigned to R-CHOP-14 (R-CHOP every 2 weeks with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor [G-CSF] support] was 39%, and these PFS rates did not differ between the treatment arms, Takashi Watanabe, MD, PhD, from Mie University in Tsu, Japan, and his colleagues reported in the Lancet Haematology.

They also found that, compared with therapeutic regimens prior to the introduction of rituximab, R-CHOP was associated with a reduced likelihood of histological transformation of follicular lymphoma into a poor-prognosis diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), with no apparent increase in risk of secondary malignancies.

“The gold-standard, first-line treatment in patients with advanced-stage follicular lymphoma remains undetermined. However, because of the reduction in incidence of transformation without an increase in either secondary malignancies or fatal infectious events, the R-CHOP regimen should be a candidate for standard treatment, particularly from the viewpoint of long-term follow-up,” the investigators wrote


The JCOG0203 trial, which began enrollment in September 2002, included patients with stage III or IV indolent B-cell lymphomas, including grades 1-3 follicular lymphoma, from 44 Japanese hospitals. The patients were randomly assigned to receive six cycles of either R-CHOP-14 plus G-CSF or R-CHOP-21 administered once daily for 6 days beginning on day 8 of every cycle). Patients did not receive rituximab maintenance in either group.

In the primary analysis of the trial, published in 2011, the investigators reported that in 299 patients there were no significant differences in either PFS or 6-year overall survival (OS).

In the current analysis, the investigators reported that, for 248 patients with grade 1-3a follicular lymphoma, the 8-year PFS rate was 39% and the 10-year PFS rate was 36%.

The cumulative incidence of histological transformation was 3.2% at 5 years, 8.5% at 8 years, and 9.3% 10 years after the last patient was enrolled.

“In our study, survival after histological transformation was still poor; therefore, reducing histological transformation remains a crucial issue for patients with follicular lymphoma,” the investigators wrote.

The cumulative incidence of secondary malignancies at 10 years was 8.1%, and the cumulative incidence of hematological secondary malignancies was 2.9%.

The investigators noted that the actual incidence of secondary solid tumors or hematologic malignancies apart from the setting of autologous stem cell transplants is not known and emphasized that patients should be followed beyond 10 years to ensure that the risk of secondary malignancies is not underestimated.

“Clinicians choosing a first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma should be cautious of secondary malignancies caused by immunochemotherapy and severe complications of infectious diseases in the long-term follow-up – both of which could lead to death,” they advised.

The study was supported by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan and by the National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund of Japan. Dr. Watanabe has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Taisho Toyama, Celgene, Nippon Shinyaku, and Novartis and funding resources from TakaraBio and United Immunity to support the Department of Immuno-Gene Therapy at Mie University. Multiple coauthors reported similar relationships.

SOURCE: Watanabe T et al. Lancet Haematol. 2018 Nov;5(11):e520-31.

A decade of follow-up data suggest that patients with newly diagnosed follicular lymphoma may derive long-term benefit from first-line therapy with the R-CHOP regimen, according to investigators in Japan.

Patho/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Among patients with untreated follicular and other indolent B-cell lymphomas enrolled in a randomized phase 2/3 trial, the 10-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate for patients assigned to R-CHOP-21 (rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone every 3 weeks) was 33%, and the 10-year PFS rate for patients assigned to R-CHOP-14 (R-CHOP every 2 weeks with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor [G-CSF] support] was 39%, and these PFS rates did not differ between the treatment arms, Takashi Watanabe, MD, PhD, from Mie University in Tsu, Japan, and his colleagues reported in the Lancet Haematology.

They also found that, compared with therapeutic regimens prior to the introduction of rituximab, R-CHOP was associated with a reduced likelihood of histological transformation of follicular lymphoma into a poor-prognosis diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), with no apparent increase in risk of secondary malignancies.

“The gold-standard, first-line treatment in patients with advanced-stage follicular lymphoma remains undetermined. However, because of the reduction in incidence of transformation without an increase in either secondary malignancies or fatal infectious events, the R-CHOP regimen should be a candidate for standard treatment, particularly from the viewpoint of long-term follow-up,” the investigators wrote


The JCOG0203 trial, which began enrollment in September 2002, included patients with stage III or IV indolent B-cell lymphomas, including grades 1-3 follicular lymphoma, from 44 Japanese hospitals. The patients were randomly assigned to receive six cycles of either R-CHOP-14 plus G-CSF or R-CHOP-21 administered once daily for 6 days beginning on day 8 of every cycle). Patients did not receive rituximab maintenance in either group.

In the primary analysis of the trial, published in 2011, the investigators reported that in 299 patients there were no significant differences in either PFS or 6-year overall survival (OS).

In the current analysis, the investigators reported that, for 248 patients with grade 1-3a follicular lymphoma, the 8-year PFS rate was 39% and the 10-year PFS rate was 36%.

The cumulative incidence of histological transformation was 3.2% at 5 years, 8.5% at 8 years, and 9.3% 10 years after the last patient was enrolled.

“In our study, survival after histological transformation was still poor; therefore, reducing histological transformation remains a crucial issue for patients with follicular lymphoma,” the investigators wrote.

The cumulative incidence of secondary malignancies at 10 years was 8.1%, and the cumulative incidence of hematological secondary malignancies was 2.9%.

The investigators noted that the actual incidence of secondary solid tumors or hematologic malignancies apart from the setting of autologous stem cell transplants is not known and emphasized that patients should be followed beyond 10 years to ensure that the risk of secondary malignancies is not underestimated.

“Clinicians choosing a first-line treatment for patients with follicular lymphoma should be cautious of secondary malignancies caused by immunochemotherapy and severe complications of infectious diseases in the long-term follow-up – both of which could lead to death,” they advised.

The study was supported by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan and by the National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund of Japan. Dr. Watanabe has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Taisho Toyama, Celgene, Nippon Shinyaku, and Novartis and funding resources from TakaraBio and United Immunity to support the Department of Immuno-Gene Therapy at Mie University. Multiple coauthors reported similar relationships.

SOURCE: Watanabe T et al. Lancet Haematol. 2018 Nov;5(11):e520-31.

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Key clinical point: Long-term data shows that R-CHOP is effective and safe as first-line treatment of patients with follicular lymphoma.

Major finding: Approximately one-third of patients treated with R-CHOP-14 plus G-CSF or R-CHOP-21 had no disease progression after 10 years of follow-up.

Study details: Long-term analysis of a randomized phase 2/3 trial in 299 patients with indolent B-cell lymphomas, including follicular lymphoma.

Disclosures: The study was supported by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan and by the National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund of Japan. Dr. Wantanabe has received honoraria from Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Taisho Toyama, Celgene, Nippon Shinyaku, and Novartis and funding resources from TakaraBio and United Immunity to support the Department of Immuno-Gene Therapy in Mie University. Multiple coauthors reported similar relationships.

Source: Wantanabe T et al. Lancet Haematol. 2018 Nov;5(11):e520-31.

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Preoperative anemia management saves blood, money

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Preoperative anemia management saves blood, money

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Christine M. Cahill

BOSTON—Results of a pilot program suggest preoperative management of anemia can reduce transfusion rates and cut costs, but the effect on patient outcomes isn’t clear.

For this program, anemic patients received dietary guidance and supplementation prior to surgery.

This increased day-of-surgery hemoglobin levels, reduced intraoperative and postoperative transfusions, and resulted in a cost savings of more than $100,000 over the life of the program.

Christine M. Cahill, BSN, MS, RN, of the University of Rochester and Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, New York, presented these results at AABB 2018 (abstract PBM4-ST4-22*).

“Anemia has been thought of as a relatively benign thing our patients live with, traditionally, but what we have been finding lately is that anemia is actually more serious than we once thought and is an independent risk factor for hospitalization, readmission, increased patient length of stay, loss of function, and diminished quality of life,” Cahill said.

She added that anemia also increases the likelihood that a patient will require transfusions.

The pilot program was implemented with this in mind. The program, which ran from February 2016 through September 2017, was designed to test the feasibility of diagnosing anemia during a cardiology consult visit and implementing an anemia management plan.

During the study period, 240 patients presenting for elective cardiac surgery were screened for anemia, and 58 were diagnosed as anemic (hemoglobin <12 g/dL). These patients were referred for anemia workups, which showed that 33 patients had iron-deficiency anemia, and 25 had anemia from other causes.

Preoperative anemia management for the iron-deficient patients included oral iron for seven patients, intravenous (IV) iron with or without folate for 20 patients, and oral folate with or without vitamin B12 for five patients. One iron-deficient patient could not have surgery delayed for anemia management.

Of the iron-replete patients, one received oral iron, 17 received folate with or without B12, and seven patients were not treated for anemia.

One iron-deficient patient had a reaction to the infusion and did not receive a scheduled second dose due to the need for immediate surgery. A second patient scheduled for IV iron and folate broke an arm and therefore missed an IV infusion appointment. No other complications or reactions occurred.

Results

The researchers compared the 58 patients from the pilot program to control subjects—patients who underwent cardiac surgery from March through July 2015, matched by age, sex, and procedures.

The anemia management group received 10 red blood cell (RBC) units intraoperatively, compared to 68 intraoperative RBC units for controls. The total number of postoperative RBC units was 13 and 22, respectively.

The rate of RBC transfusions was 24% in the anemia management group and 60% in controls (P<0.0001). The average RBC units per patient was 0.4 and 2.07, respectively (P<0.0001).

Patients in the anemia management program also had significantly higher day-of-surgery hemoglobin than controls—11.01 and 10.16 g/dL, respectively (P<0.001).

The program provided an average per-patient savings in acquisition costs of $367.40, an average transfusion cost savings of $1,837, and a total cost savings of $106,546 over the life of the program.

The key to success of a similar program is “to make sure you do your homework,” Cahill said.

Specifically, she recommended feasibility studies, evaluation of the potential impact of infusions on the service, work flow analyses, and cost analyses. It’s also important to get high-level administrative support as well as buy-in from surgeons and patients, she added.

Future studies should include assessment of patient outcomes, safety, and length of intensive care unit and hospital stay, Cahill emphasized.

 

 

This study was internally funded. Cahill reported no conflicts of interest.

*The data in the presentation differ from the abstract.

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Photo by Neil Osterweil
Christine M. Cahill

BOSTON—Results of a pilot program suggest preoperative management of anemia can reduce transfusion rates and cut costs, but the effect on patient outcomes isn’t clear.

For this program, anemic patients received dietary guidance and supplementation prior to surgery.

This increased day-of-surgery hemoglobin levels, reduced intraoperative and postoperative transfusions, and resulted in a cost savings of more than $100,000 over the life of the program.

Christine M. Cahill, BSN, MS, RN, of the University of Rochester and Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, New York, presented these results at AABB 2018 (abstract PBM4-ST4-22*).

“Anemia has been thought of as a relatively benign thing our patients live with, traditionally, but what we have been finding lately is that anemia is actually more serious than we once thought and is an independent risk factor for hospitalization, readmission, increased patient length of stay, loss of function, and diminished quality of life,” Cahill said.

She added that anemia also increases the likelihood that a patient will require transfusions.

The pilot program was implemented with this in mind. The program, which ran from February 2016 through September 2017, was designed to test the feasibility of diagnosing anemia during a cardiology consult visit and implementing an anemia management plan.

During the study period, 240 patients presenting for elective cardiac surgery were screened for anemia, and 58 were diagnosed as anemic (hemoglobin <12 g/dL). These patients were referred for anemia workups, which showed that 33 patients had iron-deficiency anemia, and 25 had anemia from other causes.

Preoperative anemia management for the iron-deficient patients included oral iron for seven patients, intravenous (IV) iron with or without folate for 20 patients, and oral folate with or without vitamin B12 for five patients. One iron-deficient patient could not have surgery delayed for anemia management.

Of the iron-replete patients, one received oral iron, 17 received folate with or without B12, and seven patients were not treated for anemia.

One iron-deficient patient had a reaction to the infusion and did not receive a scheduled second dose due to the need for immediate surgery. A second patient scheduled for IV iron and folate broke an arm and therefore missed an IV infusion appointment. No other complications or reactions occurred.

Results

The researchers compared the 58 patients from the pilot program to control subjects—patients who underwent cardiac surgery from March through July 2015, matched by age, sex, and procedures.

The anemia management group received 10 red blood cell (RBC) units intraoperatively, compared to 68 intraoperative RBC units for controls. The total number of postoperative RBC units was 13 and 22, respectively.

The rate of RBC transfusions was 24% in the anemia management group and 60% in controls (P<0.0001). The average RBC units per patient was 0.4 and 2.07, respectively (P<0.0001).

Patients in the anemia management program also had significantly higher day-of-surgery hemoglobin than controls—11.01 and 10.16 g/dL, respectively (P<0.001).

The program provided an average per-patient savings in acquisition costs of $367.40, an average transfusion cost savings of $1,837, and a total cost savings of $106,546 over the life of the program.

The key to success of a similar program is “to make sure you do your homework,” Cahill said.

Specifically, she recommended feasibility studies, evaluation of the potential impact of infusions on the service, work flow analyses, and cost analyses. It’s also important to get high-level administrative support as well as buy-in from surgeons and patients, she added.

Future studies should include assessment of patient outcomes, safety, and length of intensive care unit and hospital stay, Cahill emphasized.

 

 

This study was internally funded. Cahill reported no conflicts of interest.

*The data in the presentation differ from the abstract.

Photo by Neil Osterweil
Christine M. Cahill

BOSTON—Results of a pilot program suggest preoperative management of anemia can reduce transfusion rates and cut costs, but the effect on patient outcomes isn’t clear.

For this program, anemic patients received dietary guidance and supplementation prior to surgery.

This increased day-of-surgery hemoglobin levels, reduced intraoperative and postoperative transfusions, and resulted in a cost savings of more than $100,000 over the life of the program.

Christine M. Cahill, BSN, MS, RN, of the University of Rochester and Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, New York, presented these results at AABB 2018 (abstract PBM4-ST4-22*).

“Anemia has been thought of as a relatively benign thing our patients live with, traditionally, but what we have been finding lately is that anemia is actually more serious than we once thought and is an independent risk factor for hospitalization, readmission, increased patient length of stay, loss of function, and diminished quality of life,” Cahill said.

She added that anemia also increases the likelihood that a patient will require transfusions.

The pilot program was implemented with this in mind. The program, which ran from February 2016 through September 2017, was designed to test the feasibility of diagnosing anemia during a cardiology consult visit and implementing an anemia management plan.

During the study period, 240 patients presenting for elective cardiac surgery were screened for anemia, and 58 were diagnosed as anemic (hemoglobin <12 g/dL). These patients were referred for anemia workups, which showed that 33 patients had iron-deficiency anemia, and 25 had anemia from other causes.

Preoperative anemia management for the iron-deficient patients included oral iron for seven patients, intravenous (IV) iron with or without folate for 20 patients, and oral folate with or without vitamin B12 for five patients. One iron-deficient patient could not have surgery delayed for anemia management.

Of the iron-replete patients, one received oral iron, 17 received folate with or without B12, and seven patients were not treated for anemia.

One iron-deficient patient had a reaction to the infusion and did not receive a scheduled second dose due to the need for immediate surgery. A second patient scheduled for IV iron and folate broke an arm and therefore missed an IV infusion appointment. No other complications or reactions occurred.

Results

The researchers compared the 58 patients from the pilot program to control subjects—patients who underwent cardiac surgery from March through July 2015, matched by age, sex, and procedures.

The anemia management group received 10 red blood cell (RBC) units intraoperatively, compared to 68 intraoperative RBC units for controls. The total number of postoperative RBC units was 13 and 22, respectively.

The rate of RBC transfusions was 24% in the anemia management group and 60% in controls (P<0.0001). The average RBC units per patient was 0.4 and 2.07, respectively (P<0.0001).

Patients in the anemia management program also had significantly higher day-of-surgery hemoglobin than controls—11.01 and 10.16 g/dL, respectively (P<0.001).

The program provided an average per-patient savings in acquisition costs of $367.40, an average transfusion cost savings of $1,837, and a total cost savings of $106,546 over the life of the program.

The key to success of a similar program is “to make sure you do your homework,” Cahill said.

Specifically, she recommended feasibility studies, evaluation of the potential impact of infusions on the service, work flow analyses, and cost analyses. It’s also important to get high-level administrative support as well as buy-in from surgeons and patients, she added.

Future studies should include assessment of patient outcomes, safety, and length of intensive care unit and hospital stay, Cahill emphasized.

 

 

This study was internally funded. Cahill reported no conflicts of interest.

*The data in the presentation differ from the abstract.

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Preoperative anemia management saves blood, money
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Preop anemia management saves blood, costs

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Fri, 01/04/2019 - 10:39

BOSTON – A pilot anemia optimization program resulted in significant increases in day-of-surgery hemoglobin levels and reductions in RBC transfusion rates and costs in one center, but whether patient outcomes also improved is still not known.

Christine M. Cahill

By diagnosing anemia at the preanesthesia visit and providing anemic patients with dietary guidance and supplementation prior to cardiac surgery, blood program managers noticed a more than $360 reduction in per-patient blood-product acquisition costs, a more than $1,800 average reduction per patient in transfusion costs, and overall cost savings of more than $100,000 over 18 months, compared with historical data.

The findings were reported by Christine M. Cahill, RN, from Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, N.Y., and the University of Rochester (N.Y.), at AABB 2018, the annual meeting of the group formerly known as the American Association of Blood Banks.

“Anemia has been thought of as a relatively benign thing our patients live with traditionally, but what we have been finding lately is that anemia is actually more serious than we once thought, and is an independent risk factor for hospitalization, readmission, increased patient length of stay, loss of function, and diminished quality of life,” she said.

Anemia also increases the likelihood that a patient will require allogeneic transfusions and is an independent risk factor for morbidity and mortality, she added.

The pilot program, which ran from February 2016 to September 2017, was designed to test the feasibility of diagnosing anemia during a cardiology consult visit and implementing a management plan.

During the study period, 240 patients presenting for elective cardiac surgery were screened for anemia, and 58 were diagnosed as anemic, defined as a hemoglobin level of less than 12 g/dL. These patients were referred for anemia work-ups, which found that 33 patients had iron-deficient anemia and 25 had anemia from other causes. Controls were patients who underwent cardiac surgery from March to July 2015, matched by age, sex, and procedures.

Treatments for iron-deficient patients included oral iron (7 patients), intravenous iron with or without folate (20 patients), or oral folate with or without vitamin B12 (5 patients). One iron-deficient patient could not have surgery delayed for anemia management.

Of the iron-replete patients, one received oral iron and 17 received folate plus or minus vitamin B12. The remaining seven iron-replete patients were not treated for anemia.

One iron-deficient patient had a reaction to the infusion and did not receive a scheduled second dose due to the need for immediate surgery. A second patient scheduled for intravenous iron and folate broke an arm and therefore missed an intravenous infusion appointment. No other complications or reactions occurred.

Intraoperative transfusion units used in the anemia management group totaled 10, compared with 68 for controls. Postoperative transfusion units used were also significantly lower following anemia management at 13 versus 122, respectively.

The rate of RBC transfusions among patients with anemia management was 24%, compared with 60% for controls (P less than .0001). Patients in the management program also had significantly higher day-of-surgery hemoglobin, at 11.01 g/dL versus 10.16 g/dL (P less than .001), and less RBC utilization, at an average 0.40 units per patient versus 2.07 for controls (P less than .0001).

The average per patient savings in acquisition costs was $367.40, the average transfusion cost saving was $1,837, and the total cost savings over the life of the pilot program was $106,546.

The keys to success for similar programs is “to make sure you do your homework,” Ms. Cahill said. Specifically, she recommended feasibility studies, evaluation of the potential impact of infusions on the service, work flow analyses, and cost analyses. It’s also important to get high-level administrative support as well as buy-in from surgeons and patients.

Future studies should include assessment of patient outcomes, safety, and length of ICU and hospital stay, she emphasized.

The study was internally funded. Ms. Cahill reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Cahill CM et al. AABB 2018, Abstract PBM4-ST4-22.

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BOSTON – A pilot anemia optimization program resulted in significant increases in day-of-surgery hemoglobin levels and reductions in RBC transfusion rates and costs in one center, but whether patient outcomes also improved is still not known.

Christine M. Cahill

By diagnosing anemia at the preanesthesia visit and providing anemic patients with dietary guidance and supplementation prior to cardiac surgery, blood program managers noticed a more than $360 reduction in per-patient blood-product acquisition costs, a more than $1,800 average reduction per patient in transfusion costs, and overall cost savings of more than $100,000 over 18 months, compared with historical data.

The findings were reported by Christine M. Cahill, RN, from Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, N.Y., and the University of Rochester (N.Y.), at AABB 2018, the annual meeting of the group formerly known as the American Association of Blood Banks.

“Anemia has been thought of as a relatively benign thing our patients live with traditionally, but what we have been finding lately is that anemia is actually more serious than we once thought, and is an independent risk factor for hospitalization, readmission, increased patient length of stay, loss of function, and diminished quality of life,” she said.

Anemia also increases the likelihood that a patient will require allogeneic transfusions and is an independent risk factor for morbidity and mortality, she added.

The pilot program, which ran from February 2016 to September 2017, was designed to test the feasibility of diagnosing anemia during a cardiology consult visit and implementing a management plan.

During the study period, 240 patients presenting for elective cardiac surgery were screened for anemia, and 58 were diagnosed as anemic, defined as a hemoglobin level of less than 12 g/dL. These patients were referred for anemia work-ups, which found that 33 patients had iron-deficient anemia and 25 had anemia from other causes. Controls were patients who underwent cardiac surgery from March to July 2015, matched by age, sex, and procedures.

Treatments for iron-deficient patients included oral iron (7 patients), intravenous iron with or without folate (20 patients), or oral folate with or without vitamin B12 (5 patients). One iron-deficient patient could not have surgery delayed for anemia management.

Of the iron-replete patients, one received oral iron and 17 received folate plus or minus vitamin B12. The remaining seven iron-replete patients were not treated for anemia.

One iron-deficient patient had a reaction to the infusion and did not receive a scheduled second dose due to the need for immediate surgery. A second patient scheduled for intravenous iron and folate broke an arm and therefore missed an intravenous infusion appointment. No other complications or reactions occurred.

Intraoperative transfusion units used in the anemia management group totaled 10, compared with 68 for controls. Postoperative transfusion units used were also significantly lower following anemia management at 13 versus 122, respectively.

The rate of RBC transfusions among patients with anemia management was 24%, compared with 60% for controls (P less than .0001). Patients in the management program also had significantly higher day-of-surgery hemoglobin, at 11.01 g/dL versus 10.16 g/dL (P less than .001), and less RBC utilization, at an average 0.40 units per patient versus 2.07 for controls (P less than .0001).

The average per patient savings in acquisition costs was $367.40, the average transfusion cost saving was $1,837, and the total cost savings over the life of the pilot program was $106,546.

The keys to success for similar programs is “to make sure you do your homework,” Ms. Cahill said. Specifically, she recommended feasibility studies, evaluation of the potential impact of infusions on the service, work flow analyses, and cost analyses. It’s also important to get high-level administrative support as well as buy-in from surgeons and patients.

Future studies should include assessment of patient outcomes, safety, and length of ICU and hospital stay, she emphasized.

The study was internally funded. Ms. Cahill reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Cahill CM et al. AABB 2018, Abstract PBM4-ST4-22.

BOSTON – A pilot anemia optimization program resulted in significant increases in day-of-surgery hemoglobin levels and reductions in RBC transfusion rates and costs in one center, but whether patient outcomes also improved is still not known.

Christine M. Cahill

By diagnosing anemia at the preanesthesia visit and providing anemic patients with dietary guidance and supplementation prior to cardiac surgery, blood program managers noticed a more than $360 reduction in per-patient blood-product acquisition costs, a more than $1,800 average reduction per patient in transfusion costs, and overall cost savings of more than $100,000 over 18 months, compared with historical data.

The findings were reported by Christine M. Cahill, RN, from Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, N.Y., and the University of Rochester (N.Y.), at AABB 2018, the annual meeting of the group formerly known as the American Association of Blood Banks.

“Anemia has been thought of as a relatively benign thing our patients live with traditionally, but what we have been finding lately is that anemia is actually more serious than we once thought, and is an independent risk factor for hospitalization, readmission, increased patient length of stay, loss of function, and diminished quality of life,” she said.

Anemia also increases the likelihood that a patient will require allogeneic transfusions and is an independent risk factor for morbidity and mortality, she added.

The pilot program, which ran from February 2016 to September 2017, was designed to test the feasibility of diagnosing anemia during a cardiology consult visit and implementing a management plan.

During the study period, 240 patients presenting for elective cardiac surgery were screened for anemia, and 58 were diagnosed as anemic, defined as a hemoglobin level of less than 12 g/dL. These patients were referred for anemia work-ups, which found that 33 patients had iron-deficient anemia and 25 had anemia from other causes. Controls were patients who underwent cardiac surgery from March to July 2015, matched by age, sex, and procedures.

Treatments for iron-deficient patients included oral iron (7 patients), intravenous iron with or without folate (20 patients), or oral folate with or without vitamin B12 (5 patients). One iron-deficient patient could not have surgery delayed for anemia management.

Of the iron-replete patients, one received oral iron and 17 received folate plus or minus vitamin B12. The remaining seven iron-replete patients were not treated for anemia.

One iron-deficient patient had a reaction to the infusion and did not receive a scheduled second dose due to the need for immediate surgery. A second patient scheduled for intravenous iron and folate broke an arm and therefore missed an intravenous infusion appointment. No other complications or reactions occurred.

Intraoperative transfusion units used in the anemia management group totaled 10, compared with 68 for controls. Postoperative transfusion units used were also significantly lower following anemia management at 13 versus 122, respectively.

The rate of RBC transfusions among patients with anemia management was 24%, compared with 60% for controls (P less than .0001). Patients in the management program also had significantly higher day-of-surgery hemoglobin, at 11.01 g/dL versus 10.16 g/dL (P less than .001), and less RBC utilization, at an average 0.40 units per patient versus 2.07 for controls (P less than .0001).

The average per patient savings in acquisition costs was $367.40, the average transfusion cost saving was $1,837, and the total cost savings over the life of the pilot program was $106,546.

The keys to success for similar programs is “to make sure you do your homework,” Ms. Cahill said. Specifically, she recommended feasibility studies, evaluation of the potential impact of infusions on the service, work flow analyses, and cost analyses. It’s also important to get high-level administrative support as well as buy-in from surgeons and patients.

Future studies should include assessment of patient outcomes, safety, and length of ICU and hospital stay, she emphasized.

The study was internally funded. Ms. Cahill reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Cahill CM et al. AABB 2018, Abstract PBM4-ST4-22.

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REPORTING FROM AABB 2018

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Key clinical point: Preoperative management of anemia may result in significant reductions in blood product use.

Major finding: The total cost savings over the life of a pilot anemia management program was $106,546.

Study details: A case-control study with 58 patients scheduled for elective cardiac surgery and matched historical controls.

Disclosures: The study was internally funded. Ms. Cahill reported having no conflicts of interest.

Source: Cahill CM et al. AABB 2018, Abstract PBM4-ST4-22.

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