Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
BENCH-PRESS : Original Article
BEYOND CLINICAL ONCOLOGY : Original Article
Brainteaser
BREAST CANCER : Original Article
BREAST CANCERS Original Article
Brief Commentary MEDic LAWgic Section
Brief Report, Public Health
CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY: Original Article
CANCER SURGERY : Original Article
Cardio-Oncology
Case Report
Case Series, Haematological
CLINICAL TRIAL : Original Article
COLORECTAL CANCER : Original Article
COMMENTARY
Consensus
Consensus Recommendations, Head Neck
Controversy
Corrigendum
Diagnostic Dilemma
Drug Review
DRUG REVIEW : Review Article
Editorial
Editorial Commentary
Editorial: Memoir
Erratum
ESOPHAGEAL CANCER : Original Article
FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE TRACT TUMORS : Original Article
GCT Review Article
GENITOURINARY : Original Article
GI CANCER Original Article
HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Original Article
HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Review Article
HEAD AND NECK CANCERS : Original Article
HISTOPATHOLOGY IN ONCOLOGY : Original Article
In Response
Letter to Editor
Letter to Editor, Breast
Letter to Editor: Oral Carcinoma
Letter to the Editor
Letters to Editor
Letters to the Editor
LEUKEMIA : Original Article
LEUKEMIAS : Original Article
LUNG CANCER: Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN AML : Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN HEAD AND NECK CANCERS : Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN LUNG CANCER : Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN OVARIAN CANCER : Original Article
Mini Commentary
Mini Symposium - FNAC VERSUS CORE BIOPSY: Editorial
Mini Symposium - FNAC VERSUS CORE BIOPSY: Original Article
Mini Symposium - RT DOSIMETRY AND FRACTIONATION: Editorial
Mini Symposium - RT DOSIMETRY AND FRACTIONATION: Original Article
Mini Symposium on Changing Landscape: Brief Article
Mini Symposium on Changing Landscape: Editorial
Mini Symposium on Changing Landscape: Original Article
Mini Symposium on CML
Mini Symposium on Supportive Care: Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Editorial
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Review Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK ONCOLOGY: Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY: Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY: Original Article
MISCELLANEOUS : Original Article
MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY : Original Article
MULTIPLE CANCERS Original Article
MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROME : Review Article
MYELOID LEUKEMIA : Original Article
NEURO ONCOLOGY : Review Article
NEURO-ONCOLOGY : Original Article
None
Notice of Retraction
OESOPHAGEAL CANCER : Original Article
Oncology Reflections
Original Article
Original Article : Bone & Soft Tissue Tumors
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Bone and Soft Tissue Sarcomas
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Breast Cancer
Original Article : Breast Cancers
Original Article : Gastro-intestinal & Hepatobiliary Cancers
Original Article : Genitourinary & Gynecological Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : GI Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : GI Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Gynaecologic Oncology
Original Article : Head and Neck Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Hematolymphoid
Original Article : Leukemia & Lymphoma
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Leukemia and Lymphoma
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Melanoma and Skin Cancer
Original Article : Pediatric and Adolescent Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : SAARC Selection
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Supportive Care and Others
Original Article, Breast
Original Article, Gastrointestinal
Original Article, Gynaecological
Original Article, Head Neck
Original Article, Neurological
Original Article, Public Health
Original Article: Bladder Cancer
Original Article: Bone and Soft Tissue Cancers
Original Article: Bone and Soft Tissue Tumor
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Bone and Soft Tissue Tumors
Original Article: Brain Tumor
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Brain Tumors
Original Article: Cancer Epidemiology and Screening
Original Article: Cancer Epidemiology, Screening and diagnosis
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Diagnostics in Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Epidemiology of Cancer and Cancer Screening
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gastro-intestinal & Hepatobiliary Cancer
Original Article: Gastrointestinal Cancer
Original Article: Genito Urinary Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Genitourinary & Gynaecological Cancer
Original Article: Genitourinary Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Genitourinary Cancers
Original Article: Geriatric Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: GI Cancers
Original Article: GI Cancers and Hepatobilliary Malignancies
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gynaecologic Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gynaecological Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gynaecological Cancers
Original Article: Gynecological Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Head and Neck Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Hematolymphoid Malignancies
Original Article: Hematolymphoid Malignancy
Original Article: Hepatobiliary Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Immuno - Oncology
Original Article: Leukemia -Lymphoma and Myeloma
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Leukemia, Lymphoma & Plasma Cell Disorder
Original Article: Lung Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Lung Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Neuroendocrine Tumors
Original Article: Paediatric Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Palliative Care
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Pediatric Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Sarcomas
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Sarcomas and Skin Cancer
Original Article: Skin Cancer
Original Article: Supportive and Palliative Care
Original Article: Supportive and Palliative Care in Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Supportive Care
Original Research Article
PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY : Original Article
PEDIATRIC SECTION: Editorial
PEDIATRIC SECTION: Original Article
Pictorial CME, Haematological
Poetry in Oncology
Position Paper
QUEST FOR AN ANTIDOTE TO RADIATION TOXICITY : Editorial
QUEST FOR AN ANTIDOTE TO RADIATION TOXICITY : Original Article
RCC Practical Consensus Recommendations
Regional Article
Review Article
Review Article, Breast
Review Article, Haematological
Review Article, International
SARCOMA : Original Article
SARCOMA Review Article
SOFT TISSUE SARCOMA : Original Article
South Asia update
SOUTH ASIAN UPDATE : An update
SOUTH ASIAN UPDATE : Original Article
TABACCO, THE MENACE : Original Article
THE CUTTING EDGE OF RADIOTHERAPEUTICS : Editorial
THE CUTTING EDGE OF RADIOTHERAPEUTICS : Original Article
THE GREAT DEBATE: Against HPV vaccine in cervical cancer
THE GREAT DEBATE: AGAINST IMATINIB AS THE FIRST LINE TKI CHOICE FOR CML
THE GREAT DEBATE: Editorial-HPV vaccine in cervical cancer
THE GREAT DEBATE: For HPV vaccine in cervical cancer
THE GREAT DEBATE: FOR IMATINIB AS THE FIRST LINE TKI CHOICE FOR CML
THE GREY-HAIRED CANCER PATIENT: Editorial
THE GREY-HAIRED CANCER PATIENT: Original Article
THE SKILLFUL SCALPEL: Editorial
THE SKILLFUL SCALPEL: Original Article
THE WAR ON MICROBES: Editorial
THE WAR ON MICROBES: Original Article
THROUGH THE MICROSCOPE : Original Article
THROUGH THE MICROSCOPE: Editorial
TREATMENT TOXICITY : Original Article
TRENDS IN HORMONAL THERAPY IN PROSTATE CANCER: Review Article
URO-ONCOLOGY : Original Article
View Point
Viewpoint
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Search in posts
Search in pages
Filter by Categories
BENCH-PRESS : Original Article
BEYOND CLINICAL ONCOLOGY : Original Article
Brainteaser
BREAST CANCER : Original Article
BREAST CANCERS Original Article
Brief Commentary MEDic LAWgic Section
Brief Report, Public Health
CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY: Original Article
CANCER SURGERY : Original Article
Cardio-Oncology
Case Report
Case Series, Haematological
CLINICAL TRIAL : Original Article
COLORECTAL CANCER : Original Article
COMMENTARY
Consensus
Consensus Recommendations, Head Neck
Controversy
Corrigendum
Diagnostic Dilemma
Drug Review
DRUG REVIEW : Review Article
Editorial
Editorial Commentary
Editorial: Memoir
Erratum
ESOPHAGEAL CANCER : Original Article
FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE TRACT TUMORS : Original Article
GCT Review Article
GENITOURINARY : Original Article
GI CANCER Original Article
HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Original Article
HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Review Article
HEAD AND NECK CANCERS : Original Article
HISTOPATHOLOGY IN ONCOLOGY : Original Article
In Response
Letter to Editor
Letter to Editor, Breast
Letter to Editor: Oral Carcinoma
Letter to the Editor
Letters to Editor
Letters to the Editor
LEUKEMIA : Original Article
LEUKEMIAS : Original Article
LUNG CANCER: Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN AML : Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN HEAD AND NECK CANCERS : Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN LUNG CANCER : Original Article
METRONOMIC THERAPY IN OVARIAN CANCER : Original Article
Mini Commentary
Mini Symposium - FNAC VERSUS CORE BIOPSY: Editorial
Mini Symposium - FNAC VERSUS CORE BIOPSY: Original Article
Mini Symposium - RT DOSIMETRY AND FRACTIONATION: Editorial
Mini Symposium - RT DOSIMETRY AND FRACTIONATION: Original Article
Mini Symposium on Changing Landscape: Brief Article
Mini Symposium on Changing Landscape: Editorial
Mini Symposium on Changing Landscape: Original Article
Mini Symposium on CML
Mini Symposium on Supportive Care: Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Editorial
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK CANCER : Review Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: HEAD AND NECK ONCOLOGY: Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY: Original Article
MINI SYMPOSIUM: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY: Original Article
MISCELLANEOUS : Original Article
MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY : Original Article
MULTIPLE CANCERS Original Article
MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROME : Review Article
MYELOID LEUKEMIA : Original Article
NEURO ONCOLOGY : Review Article
NEURO-ONCOLOGY : Original Article
None
Notice of Retraction
OESOPHAGEAL CANCER : Original Article
Oncology Reflections
Original Article
Original Article : Bone & Soft Tissue Tumors
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Bone and Soft Tissue Sarcomas
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Breast Cancer
Original Article : Breast Cancers
Original Article : Gastro-intestinal & Hepatobiliary Cancers
Original Article : Genitourinary & Gynecological Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : GI Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : GI Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Gynaecologic Oncology
Original Article : Head and Neck Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Hematolymphoid
Original Article : Leukemia & Lymphoma
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Leukemia and Lymphoma
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Melanoma and Skin Cancer
Original Article : Pediatric and Adolescent Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : SAARC Selection
ORIGINAL ARTICLE : Supportive Care and Others
Original Article, Breast
Original Article, Gastrointestinal
Original Article, Gynaecological
Original Article, Head Neck
Original Article, Neurological
Original Article, Public Health
Original Article: Bladder Cancer
Original Article: Bone and Soft Tissue Cancers
Original Article: Bone and Soft Tissue Tumor
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Bone and Soft Tissue Tumors
Original Article: Brain Tumor
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Brain Tumors
Original Article: Cancer Epidemiology and Screening
Original Article: Cancer Epidemiology, Screening and diagnosis
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Diagnostics in Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Epidemiology of Cancer and Cancer Screening
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gastro-intestinal & Hepatobiliary Cancer
Original Article: Gastrointestinal Cancer
Original Article: Genito Urinary Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Genitourinary & Gynaecological Cancer
Original Article: Genitourinary Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Genitourinary Cancers
Original Article: Geriatric Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: GI Cancers
Original Article: GI Cancers and Hepatobilliary Malignancies
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gynaecologic Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gynaecological Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Gynaecological Cancers
Original Article: Gynecological Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Head and Neck Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Hematolymphoid Malignancies
Original Article: Hematolymphoid Malignancy
Original Article: Hepatobiliary Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Immuno - Oncology
Original Article: Leukemia -Lymphoma and Myeloma
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Leukemia, Lymphoma & Plasma Cell Disorder
Original Article: Lung Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Lung Cancers
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Neuroendocrine Tumors
Original Article: Paediatric Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Palliative Care
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Pediatric Oncology
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Sarcomas
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Sarcomas and Skin Cancer
Original Article: Skin Cancer
Original Article: Supportive and Palliative Care
Original Article: Supportive and Palliative Care in Cancer
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Supportive Care
Original Research Article
PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY : Original Article
PEDIATRIC SECTION: Editorial
PEDIATRIC SECTION: Original Article
Pictorial CME, Haematological
Poetry in Oncology
Position Paper
QUEST FOR AN ANTIDOTE TO RADIATION TOXICITY : Editorial
QUEST FOR AN ANTIDOTE TO RADIATION TOXICITY : Original Article
RCC Practical Consensus Recommendations
Regional Article
Review Article
Review Article, Breast
Review Article, Haematological
Review Article, International
SARCOMA : Original Article
SARCOMA Review Article
SOFT TISSUE SARCOMA : Original Article
South Asia update
SOUTH ASIAN UPDATE : An update
SOUTH ASIAN UPDATE : Original Article
TABACCO, THE MENACE : Original Article
THE CUTTING EDGE OF RADIOTHERAPEUTICS : Editorial
THE CUTTING EDGE OF RADIOTHERAPEUTICS : Original Article
THE GREAT DEBATE: Against HPV vaccine in cervical cancer
THE GREAT DEBATE: AGAINST IMATINIB AS THE FIRST LINE TKI CHOICE FOR CML
THE GREAT DEBATE: Editorial-HPV vaccine in cervical cancer
THE GREAT DEBATE: For HPV vaccine in cervical cancer
THE GREAT DEBATE: FOR IMATINIB AS THE FIRST LINE TKI CHOICE FOR CML
THE GREY-HAIRED CANCER PATIENT: Editorial
THE GREY-HAIRED CANCER PATIENT: Original Article
THE SKILLFUL SCALPEL: Editorial
THE SKILLFUL SCALPEL: Original Article
THE WAR ON MICROBES: Editorial
THE WAR ON MICROBES: Original Article
THROUGH THE MICROSCOPE : Original Article
THROUGH THE MICROSCOPE: Editorial
TREATMENT TOXICITY : Original Article
TRENDS IN HORMONAL THERAPY IN PROSTATE CANCER: Review Article
URO-ONCOLOGY : Original Article
View Point
Viewpoint
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Original Article
12 (
03
); 274-279
doi:
10.1055/s-0042-1757303

Complications during Induction Chemotherapy in Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia: An Institutional Experience

Department of Medical Oncology, Mahatma Gandhi Cancer Hopsital and Research Institute, Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India
Department of Medical Oncology, Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences, Hyderabad, Telangana, India

*Corresponding author: Stalin Chowdary Bala, MD, DM, DNB, MRCP, Punjagutta, Hyderabad, Telangana 500082, India. stalinchowdarybala@gmail.com

Licence
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, transform, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
Disclaimer:
This article was originally published by Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.

Abstract

Abstract

Stalin Chowdary Bala
FI2220813-1 Stalin Chowdary Bala

Introduction Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) has transformed from a highly fatal disease to a highly curable one. Induction deaths continue to represent one of the major impediments in modern therapy of APL. Sepsis, hemorrhage, and differentiation syndrome are the major complications during induction therapy in APL. The present study reports the incidence and prognostic factors of major complications during induction chemotherapy in patients with newly diagnosed APL.

Materials and Methods The present study was a single institutional, observational, retrospective study. All cases of APL diagnosed by morphology and confirmed by RT PCR (PML RARα) were included in this study. Data were analyzed using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) version 25.

Results A total of 73 patients were analyzed. The median age at presentation was 30 years (range, 3–60 years) with a female to male ratio of 1.02:1. The most common symptom at presentation was fever (80%), followed by fatigue (56%) and gum bleeding (37%). The majority of the patients at presentation were high risk (42.4%), followed by intermediate risk (38.4%) and low risk (19.2%). Fifty-seven (78%) patients achieved complete hematological remission and 16 (22%) succumbed during induction chemotherapy. Infection was the most common cause of induction death (50%), followed by hemorrhage (37.5%) and differentiation syndrome (12.5%). On univariate analysis of prognostic factors, bcr3 variant, grade 3/4 bleeding during induction, and low levels of albumin at presentation were significant for induction mortality (p = 0.034, 0.041, and 0.008 respectively). On multivariate analysis, only serum albumin < 3.5 g/dL was an independent predictor for induction mortality (p = 0.043).

Conclusion The majority of patients were high risk at presentation. Sepsis was the most common complication during induction and also the leading cause of induction death. Identifying induction complications at the earliest and providing aggressive supportive measures can further improve outcomes in APL.

Keywords

PubMed

Introduction

Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is a biologically and clinically distinct variant of AML. The use of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) and in combination with anthracycline-based chemotherapy have led to remission induction rates of more than 90% as reported by several large multicenter studies.123456 However, induction deaths continue to represent one of the major impediments in modern therapy of APL. The most common causes of induction mortality are bleeding, differentiation syndrome, and infection.7 Uncertainty remains as to which prognostic factors are associated with various causes of induction mortality and complications in patients with APL.

The present study reports the incidence, time of occurrence, and prognostic factors of major complications during induction chemotherapy in patients with newly diagnosed APL.

Materials and Methods

The present study was a single institutional, observational, retrospective study done from 2012 to 2018.

Clinical characteristics, chemotherapy protocols used, outcome, and causes of early induction deaths were recorded from medical records and hospital death registry. All cases of APL diagnosed by morphology and confirmed by RT PCR (PML RARα) were included in this study. Patients who died within 72 hours of admission or declined treatment and patients who had taken prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy for the treatment of any malignancy were excluded from the analysis.

Definitions

Risk stratification: Patients were categorized into three groups. Low-risk patients had leucocyte counts ≤ 10 × 109/L and platelets > 40 × 109/L, intermediate-risk patients had leucocytes ≤ 10 × 109/L and platelets < 40 × 109/L, and high-risk patients had leucocytes > 10 × 109/L.

Differentiation syndrome: was diagnosed when the patient had least two of the following clinical features: unexplained fever, acute respiratory distress with interstitial pulmonary infiltrates, acute renal failure, weight gain greater than 5 kg, unexplained hypotension, and pleuropericardial effusion.

Treatment

The modified Protocol of International consortium on acute promyelocytic leukemia (IC-APL 2006)8 and ATRA + ATO9 were the two most commonly used protocols in this study.

Statistical Analysis

Data were analyzed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) version 25. Univariate analysis was done using Pearson's chi square analysis. Patient and disease characteristics that were examined in the prognostic factor analysis to establish their relation to induction response included age, sex, ECOG performance score, body mass index, biochemical parameters such as serum creatinine, fibrinogen and albumin, hematological variables including hemoglobin level, platelet, white blood cells (WBCs), and blast cell counts, morphological variants, PML/RARA isoforms, treatment protocol, and the presence of coagulopathy or infection at presentation. Multivariate analysis was performed using logistic regression model. A p-value of < 0.05 was considered as statistically significant.

Results

A total of 73 patients were analyzed, of which 36 (49.3%) were males and 37 (50.7%) were females. The median age at presentation was 30 years (range, 3–60) and the median duration of symptoms at presentation was 15 days (range, 3–90). The most common symptom at presentation was fever (80%), followed by fatigue (56%) and gum bleeding (37%). The majority of the patients at presentation were high risk (n = 31, 42.4%), followed by intermediate risk (n = 28, 38.4%) and low risk (n = 14, 19.2%). Of 73 patients, 55 (75%) patients received induction chemotherapy with ATRA and daunorubicin and 18 (25%) patients received ATRA and arsenic trioxide.

Fifty-seven (78%) patients achieved complete hematological remission and 16 (22%) succumbed during induction chemotherapy. The median time to CHR was 29 days (range, 20–40). Infection (50%), hemorrhage (37.5%), and differentiation syndrome (12.5%) were the causes of induction mortality.

Induction Mortality

On univariate analysis of prognostic factors, bcr3 variant, grade 3/4 bleeding during induction and low levels of albumin at presentation were significant for induction mortality (p = 0.034, 0.041, and 0.008 respectively). On multivariate analysis, only serum albumin < 3.5 g/dL predicted for induction mortality (p = 0.043). Univariate and multivariate analyses of variables for induction death are shown in Table 1.

Table 1
Univariate analysis and multivariate analysis for induction deaths

Baseline characteristics

N (%)

Induction deaths n (%)

Univariate analysis (p-Value)

Multivariate analysis (p-Value)

Age (y)

 < 40

33 (45.2)

7 (21.2)

0.89

0.630

 ≥ 40

40 (54.8)

9 (22.5)

Gender

 Male

36 (49.3)

6 (16.7)

0.453

0.592

 Female

37 (50.7)

10 (27)

Body mass index

 < 25

47 (68.4)

8 (17%)

0.174

0.264

 ≥25

26 (31.6)

8 (30.8%)

ECOG PS

 < 2

53 (72.6)

10 (18.9)

0.305

0.697

 ≥2

20 (27.4)

6 (30)

Infection at presentation

 Yes

12 (14%)

4 (33.3)

0.296

0.100

 No

61 (86%)

12 (19.7)

Grade 3/4 bleeding at presentation

 Yes

19 (26)

4 (21)

0.78

0.658

 No

54 (74)

12 (22)

Hemoglobin (g/dL)

 < 10

64 (86)

15 (23.4)

0.403

0.791

 ≥10

9 (14)

1 (11.1)

WBC (×109/L)

 < 10

49 (70.2)

9 (18.4)

0.295

0.533

 ≥10

24 (29.8)

7 (29.2)

Platelet (x109/L)

 < 40

42 (57.9)

9 (21.4)

0.906

0.995

 ≥40

31 (42.1)

7 (22.6)

Peripheral blood blasts (x109 /L)

 < 1

57 (80.7)

11 (19.3)

0.307

0.286

 ≥1

16 (19.3)

5 (31.3)

Serum fibrinogen (mg/dL)

 < 150

16 (21.1)

4 (25)

0.736

0.423

 ≥150

57 (78.9)

12 (21.1)

Serum creatinine (mg/dL)

 < 1.2

66 (91.2)

14 (28.6)

0.654

0.764

 ≥1.2

7 (8.8)

2 (21.2)

Serum albumin (g/dL)

 < 3.5

18 (17.5)

8 (44.4)

0.008

0.043

 ≥3.5

55 (82.5)

8 (14.5)

Pathological variant

 Hypergranular

58 (78.9)

13 (22.4)

0.840

0.330

 Microgranular

15 (21.1)

3 (20.0)

Risk stratification

 Low

14 (19.2)

3 (21.4)

 Intermediate

28 (38.4)

4 (14.2)

0.210

0.254

 High

31 (42.4)

9 (29)

PML RARA isoforms (N = 40)

 bcr1/bcr2

23 (57.5)

1 (4.3)

0.034

0.138

 bcr3/others

17 (42.5)

4 (23.5)

Induction protocol

 ATO + ATRA

18 (24.6)

4 (22.2)

0.971

0.817

 ATRA + Daunorubicin

55 (75.4)

12 (21.8)

Leukocytosis during induction

 Yes

17 (26.3)

2 (11.8)

0.248

0.686

 No

56 (73.7)

14 (25)

Differentiation syndrome

 Yes

18 (25)

4 (22)

0.81

0.974

 No

54 (75)

12 (22)

Febrile Neutropenia

 Yes

57 (87.7)

13 (22.8)

0.235

0.481

 No

16 (12.3)

3 (18.75)

Bleeding during induction

 Yes

15 (20.5)

7 (46.6)

0.046

0.184

 No

58 (79.5)

9 (15.5)

Febrile Neutropenia

Febrile neutropenia (FN), differentiation syndrome (DS), and bleeding during induction chemotherapy were seen in 58 (81.6%), 19 (26.7%), and 15 (20.5%) patients, respectively. Other complications included benign intracranial hypertension (11.2%), leukocytosis (23.3%), and skin toxicity (80%). None of the patients had prolonged QTc interval or other cardiac events.

Of 58 patients with febrile episodes, microbiologically documented infection was seen in 17 (29%) cases, 23 (40%) patients had clinical signs of infection, and 18 (31%) patients had fever without a focus of sepsis. Gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria accounted for 50% and 38% of all blood isolates, respectively. Candidemia was documented in two patients (12%). Radiological signs of infection were identified in 18 (31%) patients, majority being pulmonary (17 patients) and sino-orbital in one patient. The median day of onset of febrile neutropenia (FN) was day 10 (range, 3–24). Of 58 patients with FN, 8 (13.7%) patients succumbed to sepsis. On univariate analysis, high WBC at presentation (p = 0.03) and APL2006 protocol (p = 0.017) significantly predicted for febrile neutropenia. Age ≥ 40 years, female gender, BMI ≥ 25, ECOG PS ≥ 2, infection at presentation, hemoglobin ≤10 g/dL, blasts ≥ 1 × 109/L at presentation, platelet count < 40,000, fibrinogen < 150, serum creatinine ≥ 1.2 mg/dL, serum albumin < 3.5 g/dL, hypergranular variant, bcr3 variant, leukocytosis during induction did not significantly predict febrile neutropenia. On multivariate analysis, only APL2006 induction protocol was an independent prognostic factor for febrile neutropenia (p = 0.033).

Differentiation Syndrome

Leukocytosis during induction therapy was seen in 17 (23.3%) patients with a median day of onset of 6 days (range, 2–15) after initiation of therapy. The median peak of WBC count in these patients was 12.7 × 109/µL (range, 8–54.6). Nine out of 18 patients (50%) treated with ATRA and ATO and 8 out of 55 patients (14.5%) treated with APL2006 protocol had leukocytosis during induction. Nine patients (9/17, 53%) with leukocytosis developed differentiation syndrome.

Differentiation syndrome (DS) was seen in 19 (26.7%) patients. The occurrence of DS in patients treated with APL2006 protocol and ATRA plus ATO protocol is 27.3% (15/55) and 22.2% (4/18), respectively. The median day of onset was day 5 (range, 0–18). The most common presentation of differentiation syndrome was dyspnea and pulmonary infiltrates (90%), followed by weight gain (80%). Of 19 patients with DS, 17 (89.4%) responded to therapy with corticosteroids and temporary cessation of ATRA and 2 (10.6%) patients succumbed to DS. Peripheral blasts ≥ 1 × 109/L at presentation, ECOG PS ≥ 2, serum creatinine ≥ 1.2 mg/dL, and leukocytosis during induction (p = 0.02, 0.04, 0.01 and p = 0.009, respectively) significantly predicted for the development of DS on univariate analysis. Age ≥ 40 years, female gender, BMI ≥ 25, infection at presentation, hemoglobin ≤ 10 g/dL, WBC count ≥ 10,000, platelet count < 40,000, fibrinogen < 150, serum albumin < 3.5 g/dL, hypergranular variant, bcr3 variant, and induction protocol did not significantly predicted differentiation syndrome. On multivariate analysis, leukocytosis during induction (p = 0.01) was the only significant independent prognostic factor.

Bleeding Manifestations

During induction chemotherapy, bleeding was seen in 15 (20.5%) patients. Common site of bleeding was from mucous membranes (53%) (oral, nasal, gastrointestinal, and genitourinary) followed by lungs (27%) and CNS (20%). Pulmonary hemorrhage and intracranial hemorrhage were the cause of mortality in four and two patients, respectively. On univariate and multivariate analyses, high WBC count at presentation was significant for bleeding (p = 0.04) during induction. Age ≥ 40 years, female gender, BMI ≥ 25, ECOG PS ≥2, infection at presentation, hemoglobin ≤ 10 g/dL, blasts ≥ 1 × 109/L at presentation, platelet count < 40,000, fibrinogen < 150, serum creatinine ≥ 1.2 mg/dL, serum albumin < 3.5 g/dL, hypergranular variant, bcr3 variant, induction protocol, leukocytosis during induction did not significantly predicted for bleeding.

Fifty-seven (78%) patients survived induction chemotherapy. At the end of consolidation complete molecular remission was seen in 76.7% of patients. One patient who had molecular persistence of disease at the end of consolidation, received second-line chemotherapy with ATRA plus ATO and attained CMR.

Discussion

Acute promyelocytic leukemia is a clinically and biologically distinct subtype of AML. Complications during induction chemotherapy such as differentiation syndrome, bleeding, and febrile neutropenia are more fatal compromising survivals. The present study was designed to analyze the induction complications in APL patients and various predicting factors for those induction complications.

The median age at presentation in the present study was 30 years, which was similar to the study done by Bajpai et al10 and was less compared to that by Sanz et al11 and Mandelli et al.4 The majority of patients in the present study were high risk (42.4%) as compared with the study by Bajpai et al10 (23%), PETHEMA (22.9%), and GIMEMA groups (22.2%).11 This difference could be attributed to the delay in diagnosis and referral to oncological center and hospital referral bias. ATRA and daunorubicin was the sole protocol used in the study until 2014 and after that low and intermediate risk groups received ATRA +ATO. Seven patients received daunorubicin in view of leukocytosis not controlled with hydroxyurea or cessation of ATRA. In the study done by Bajpai et al,10 the majority of patients (78%) received ATRA plus daunorubicin, followed by single agent arsenic trioxide. Modified AIDA and AIDA were the only protocols used by Sanz et al11 and Mandelli et al,4 respectively.

Induction mortality of 22% in the present study was similar to the study by Bajpai et al (18.1%). Induction mortality in the present study was higher compared to Mandelli et al4 (5%) and Sanz et al12 (10.1%). Mathews et al13 from India reported 14% induction mortality with single-agent arsenic trioxide. Sepsis was the most common cause of death followed by bleeding in the present study, which was similar to other study from India by Dayama et al.14 However, the majority of studies reported hemorrhage as the major cause of early death followed by infection.415 This may be due to the exclusion of early deaths (<72 h) prior to the confirmation of diagnosis or the initiation of treatment from analysis. In contrast to a study done by de la Serna et al15 serum albumin (less than 3.5 g/dL), PML-RARA isoform (bcr3 variant), and bleeding during induction were predicted for the induction mortality in the present study. This disparity could be because of the small sample size in the present study.

Febrile neutropenia during remission induction was seen in 81.6% of patients in the present study, which was almost similar to the incidence of FN reported by Bajpai et al (91%)10 and higher than the study by Dayama et al (64%).14 Pneumonia represented the most common clinically documented infection in the present study. The most common site of infection in the study by Dayama et al (14) and Girmenia et al16 was pulmonary, while that reported by Bajpai et al10 was genitourinary. On multivariate analysis for febrile neutropenia, the use of IC-APL2006 induction protocol emerged as prognostic factor. This emphasizes the use of less intensive protocols or risk adapted protocols, thereby reducing the incidence of febrile neutropenia and death due to infection.

The incidence of DS (26.7%) in our study was comparable to the overall incidence of DS reported by Montesinos et al17 (24.8%) and Bajpai et al10 (33%). All patients who developed DS responded to higher doses of dexamethasone except for two deaths. In a study by Montesinos et al17 pretreatment variables predictive of the differentiation syndrome were WBC count (> 5 × 109/L), abnormal serum creatinine levels, whereas in the present study, leukocytosis during induction was the only factor that predicted for DS. Bleeding during induction was seen in 15 (20.5%) of patients, of which 6 patients succumbed to hemorrhage. Similar to the study done by Mantha et al,18 high WBC of > 10 × 109/L emerged as an independent predictor of hemorrhagic death in the present study. The overall incidence of hemorrhagic death of 8.2% (6/73) was less compared to the death due to infection 10.9% (8/73) probably because of exclusion of early deaths.

The survival rate at the end of induction therapy of 78% in the present study was close to the earlier study from north India10 (81.8%) and far below the Western studies by Mandelli et al4 (95%) and Sanz et al5 (89%). This rate of survival at the end of induction in the present study reflects the high induction mortality due to several reasons described above and depicts the challenges in managing APL in the real-world scenario.

The present study is limited by the retrospective nature of data collection followed by the small sample size, which decreases the power of the study. Future prospective studies with large sample size are required to further validate the prognostic factors obtained in the present study. Pooled data from various parts of India can help us in framing uniform guidelines on this rare entity, thereby improving outcomes.

Conclusion

Majority of APL patients were at high risk at presentation. Sepsis was the most common complication during induction and the leading cause of induction death. Understanding the prognostic factors that predict the complications during induction helps in planning aggressive supportive measures improving induction outcomes, thereby further improving survival in APL.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the Department of Pathology, Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences, and the Department of Microbiology, Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences.

References

  1. , , , et al , . Analysis of prognostic factors in newly diagnosed acute promyelocytic leukemia treated with all-trans retinoic acid and chemotherapy. J Clin Oncol. 1998;16(01):78-85.
    [Google Scholar]
  2. , , , , , . Presenting white blood cell count and kinetics of molecular remission predict prognosis in acute promyelocytic leukemia treated with all-trans retinoic acid: result of the Randomized MRC Trial. Blood. 1999;93(12):4131-4143.
    [Google Scholar]
  3. , , , et al , . A randomized comparison of all transretinoic acid (ATRA) followed by chemotherapy and ATRA plus chemotherapy and the role of maintenance therapy in newly diagnosed acute promyelocytic leukemia. Blood. 1999;94(04):1192-1200.
    [Google Scholar]
  4. , , , et al . Molecular remission in PML/RAR α-positive acute promyelocytic leukemia by combined all-trans retinoic acid and idarubicin (AIDA) therapy. Gruppo Italiano-Malattie Ematologiche Maligne dell'Adulto and Associazione Italiana di Ematologia ed Oncologia Pediatrica Cooperative Groups. Blood. 1997;90(03):1014-1021.
    [Google Scholar]
  5. , , , et al . A modified AIDA protocol with anthracycline-based consolidation results in high antileukemic efficacy and reduced toxicity in newly diagnosed PML/RARalpha-positive acute promyelocytic leukemia. PETHEMA group. Blood. 1999;94(09):3015-3021.
    [Google Scholar]
  6. , , , et al . All-trans-retinoic acid in acute promyelocytic leukemia. N Engl J Med. 1997;337(15):1021-1028.
    [Google Scholar]
  7. , . Acute promyelocytic leukemia. Acta Med Scand. 1957;159(03):189-194.
    [Google Scholar]
  8. , , , et al . Improving acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) outcome in developing countries through networking, results of the International Consortium on APL. Blood. 2013;121(11):1935-1943.
    [Google Scholar]
  9. , , , et al , , , . Retinoic acid and arsenic trioxide for acute promyelocytic leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2013;369(02):111-121.
    [Google Scholar]
  10. , , , et al . Acute promyelocytic leukemia: an experience from a tertiary care centre in north India. Indian J Cancer. 2011;48(03):316-322.
    [Google Scholar]
  11. , , , et al . Definition of relapse risk and role of nonanthracycline drugs for consolidation in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia: a joint study of the PETHEMA and GIMEMA cooperative groups. Blood. 2000;96(04):1247-1253.
    [Google Scholar]
  12. , , , et al , . Risk-adapted treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia with all-trans-retinoic acid and anthracycline monochemotherapy: a multicenter study by the PETHEMA group. Blood. 2004;103(04):1237-1243.
    [Google Scholar]
  13. , , , et al . Single-agent arsenic trioxide in the treatment of newly diagnosed acute promyelocytic leukemia: durable remissions with minimal toxicity. Blood. 2006;107(07):2627-2632.
    [Google Scholar]
  14. , , , , , , . Clinico-hematological profile and outcome of acute promyelocytic leukemia patients at a tertiary care center in North India. Indian J Cancer. 2015;52(03):309-312.
    [Google Scholar]
  15. , , , et al . Causes and prognostic factors of remission induction failure in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia treated with all-trans retinoic acid and idarubicin. Blood. 2008;111(07):3395-3402.
    [Google Scholar]
  16. , , , et al . Infectious complications in patients with acute promyelocytic leukaemia treated with the AIDA regimen. Leukemia. 2003;17(05):925-930.
    [Google Scholar]
  17. , , , et al . Differentiation syndrome in patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia treated with all-trans retinoic acid and anthracycline chemotherapy: characteristics, outcome, and prognostic factors. Blood. 2009;113(04):775-783.
    [Google Scholar]
  18. , , , et al . Determinants of fatal bleeding during induction therapy for acute promyelocytic leukemia in the ATRA era. Blood. 2017;129(13):1763-1767.
    [Google Scholar]
Show Sections