[HTML][HTML] Five-year follow-up of patients receiving imatinib for chronic myeloid leukemia

BJ Druker, F Guilhot, SG O'Brien… - … England Journal of …, 2006 - Mass Medical Soc
BJ Druker, F Guilhot, SG O'Brien, I Gathmann, H Kantarjian, N Gattermann, MWN Deininger
New England Journal of Medicine, 2006Mass Medical Soc
Background The cause of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a constitutively active BCR-
ABL tyrosine kinase. Imatinib inhibits this kinase, and in a short-term study was superior to
interferon alfa plus cytarabine for newly diagnosed CML in the chronic phase. For 5 years,
we followed patients with CML who received imatinib as initial therapy. Methods We
randomly assigned 553 patients to receive imatinib and 553 to receive interferon alfa plus
cytarabine and then evaluated them for overall and event-free survival; progression to …
Background
The cause of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a constitutively active BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase. Imatinib inhibits this kinase, and in a short-term study was superior to interferon alfa plus cytarabine for newly diagnosed CML in the chronic phase. For 5 years, we followed patients with CML who received imatinib as initial therapy.
Methods
We randomly assigned 553 patients to receive imatinib and 553 to receive interferon alfa plus cytarabine and then evaluated them for overall and event-free survival; progression to accelerated-phase CML or blast crisis; hematologic, cytogenetic, and molecular responses; and adverse events.
Results
The median follow-up was 60 months. Kaplan–Meier estimates of cumulative best rates of complete cytogenetic response among patients receiving imatinib were 69% by 12 months and 87% by 60 months. An estimated 7% of patients progressed to accelerated-phase CML or blast crisis, and the estimated overall survival of patients who received imatinib as initial therapy was 89% at 60 months. Patients who had a complete cytogenetic response or in whom levels of BCR-ABL transcripts had fallen by at least 3 log had a significantly lower risk of disease progression than did patients without a complete cytogenetic response (P<0.001). Grade 3 or 4 adverse events diminished over time, and there was no clinically significant change in the profile of adverse events.
Conclusions
After 5 years of follow-up, continuous treatment of chronic-phase CML with imatinib as initial therapy was found to induce durable responses in a high proportion of patients. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00006343.)
The New England Journal Of Medicine