Easily manageable prognostic factors in 152 Chinese elderly acute myeloid leukemia patients: a single-center retrospective study
Author(s) -
Xu Jiadai,
Tingmei Chen,
Yun Liu,
Zhu Huayuan,
Wei Wu,
Shen Wenyi,
Bei Xu,
Qian Sixuan,
Jianyong Li,
Liu Peng
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of biomedical research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.617
H-Index - 31
eISSN - 2352-4685
pISSN - 1674-8301
DOI - 10.7555/jbr.28.20130164
Subject(s) - medicine , myeloid leukemia , univariate analysis , white blood cell , lactate dehydrogenase , adverse effect , gastroenterology , multivariate analysis , single center , bone marrow , retrospective cohort study , log rank test , logistic regression , survival analysis , oncology , biology , biochemistry , enzyme
We retrospectively investigated the prognostic factors of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in 152 Chinese patients with de novo AML who were older than 60 years of age and who received treatment at our hospital. Log-rank test showed that 6 parameters including older age, higher white blood cell (WBC) counts, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and bone marrow (BM) blasts at diagnosis, unfavorable risk cytogenetics, and non-mutated CEBPα were significant adverse prognostic factors of overall survival (OS) for elderly AML patients (P = 0.0013, 0.0358, 0.0132, 0.0242, 0.0236 and 0.0130, respectively). Moreover, older age and higher LDH were significant adverse predictors for relapse-free survival (RFS) (P = 0.0447 and 0.0470, respectively). Univariate analysis revealed similar results for OS to those of the log-rank test and only higher LDH at diagnosis was a significant adverse predictor for RFS (P = 0.028, HR: 1.979, 95%CI: 1.075-3.644). In multivariate analysis, we identified 2 trends towards independent prognostic factors for OS, including BM blasts at diagnosis (P = 0.057, HR: 1.676, 95%CI: 0.984-2.854) and mutation status of CEBPα (P = 0.064, HR: 4.173, 95%CI: 0.918-18.966). Our data indicated that older age, gender and a previous history of hematologic diseases resulted in lower complete remission rate (P = 0.012, 0.051 and 0.086, respectively). We further developed an easy scoring system for predicting prognosis and response to induction therapy in older AML patients. Patients who had lower scores showed significantly longer OS and RFS (P = 0.0006 and 0.1001, respectively) and higher CR rate (P = 0.014). Our research is limited by its retrospective nature and the results from our study need to be further validated by prospective randomized clinical trials.
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