A Retrospective Observational Real-World Study of the Characteristics, Genomic Analysis, Treatment Patterns and Outcomes of Patients (Pts) with Newly Diagnosed (ND) Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) in the United States

Introduction: Studies have found that AML pts treated at high pt volume, academic or NCI-designated cancer centers have improved outcomes compared to pts treated at smaller community hospitals. But little is known about the treatment patterns and outcomes as related to a combined academic and commun...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2021-11, Vol.138 (Supplement 1), p.3383-3383
Hauptverfasser: Byrd, John C., Gatz, Jennifer L, Cripe, Larry D., Lim Louis, Cynthia, Mims, Alice S., Borate, Uma, Yocum, Ashley O., Gana, Theophilus, Burd, Amy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction: Studies have found that AML pts treated at high pt volume, academic or NCI-designated cancer centers have improved outcomes compared to pts treated at smaller community hospitals. But little is known about the treatment patterns and outcomes as related to a combined academic and community based health system. Therefore, in a real-world cohort that included both academic and community hospitals that collaborate with one another, we evaluated pt characteristics, frequency of genomic testing, frequency of chemotherapy treatment (Tx) or any targeted therapy as a function of age, and outcomes in ND AML pts. Methods: This was a retrospective observational study of patients treated within a comprehensive health system in the Midwest US that includes both metropolitan and rural populations. Pts ≥18 years (yrs) with ND AML between 1 Jan 2011 and 31 Dec 2018 were identified using ICD-9 / ICD-10 codes for AML within the Health System or from one of two local cancer registries, with a follow-up period that ended with the pt's death, 2 years after initial diagnosis or 31 Dec 2018, whichever came first. Date of diagnosis served as the index date. Kaplan-Meier estimates were used to visualize overall survival. Results: A total of 629 pts with ND AML were identified in the 3 data sources and included in the cohort for analysis (Figure 1). At the index date, majority (55%) of the pts were older (61 yrs or more), male (55%) and White (89%) (Table 1). Majority of the identified pts (76%) died before the end of the study; higher proportion of older pts died vs younger pts (≥75 yrs: 89%; 61 - 74 yrs: 85% vs. ≤60 yrs: 62%). Most common comorbidities were renal disease (30%), cardiovascular diseases (24%), and diabetes (18%). Of the 500 pts with available cytogenetics data, majority had ELN-defined intermediate risk (49%), then adverse (25%) and favorable (6%); no pt ≥75 yrs had favorable risk profile. Only 82 pts (13%) had evidence of a sequencing genomic report; 78% of the pts had at least 1 mutation and 56% had 2 - 5 mutations (Table 2). By age, pts ≥75 yrs had the highest proportion of multiple (≥3) mutations (46%); most common overall were ASXL1, NPM1, and FLT3. By age, mutations with the highest frequencies were: ≥75 yrs - ASXL1, RUNX1 and TET2; 61 - 74 yrs - ASXL1, NPM1 and TP53; and ≤60 yrs - NPM1, FLT3 and DNMT3A. As expected, pts with TP53 mutations had a lower overall probability of survival vs pts with wild type TP53 or NPM1 mutations (Figure 2). Overal
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2021-153926