postremission therapy

Last reviewed 01/2018

Remission is not synonymous with cure. Following remission induction further treatment is required since disease free survival (DFS) for patients who do not receive additional therapy is only 4-8 months. The aim of postremission therapy is to prevent relapse with maximal efficiency and minimal toxicity (1).

Therapeutic options include:

  • repeated intensive conventional  chemotherapy
    • Cancer and Leukaemia Group B (CALGB) have compared high dose of cytarabine (3 g/m2) with 400 mg/m2 and 100 mg/m2 doses and found out that in patients less than 60 years old, the 4 year DFS was higher in the high-dose cytarabine arm than the lower dose group (44% when compared with 29% and 24%)
    • treatment-related mortality and significant neurotoxicity was reported in about 5%  of patients older than 40 years with this treatment
    • although similar outcomes can be observed with the use of other intense chemotherapy regimens, prolonged intensive consolidation or of multiagent chemotherapy does not appear to be superior to cytarabine alone
  • high-dose chemoradiotherapy with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
  • high-dose chemotherapy with autologous bone marrow transplantation (2)

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