Poor adherence is the main reason for loss of CCyR and imatinib failure for chronic myeloid leukemia patients on long-term therapy

We studied the relation between adherence to imatinib measured with microelectronic monitoring systems and the probabilities of losing a complete cytogenetic response (CCyR) and of imatinib failure in 87 CCyR chronic myeloid leukemia patients receiving long-term therapy. We included in our analysis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2011-04, Vol.117 (14), p.3733-3736
Hauptverfasser: Ibrahim, Amr R., Eliasson, Lina, Apperley, Jane F., Milojkovic, Dragana, Bua, Marco, Szydlo, Richard, Mahon, Francois-Xavier, Kozlowski, Kasia, Paliompeis, Christos, Foroni, Letizia, Khorashad, Jamshid S., Bazeos, Alex, Molimard, Mathieu, Reid, Alistair, Rezvani, Katayoun, Gerrard, Gareth, Goldman, John, Marin, David
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We studied the relation between adherence to imatinib measured with microelectronic monitoring systems and the probabilities of losing a complete cytogenetic response (CCyR) and of imatinib failure in 87 CCyR chronic myeloid leukemia patients receiving long-term therapy. We included in our analysis the most relevant prognostic factors described to date. On multivariate analysis, the adherence rate and having failed to achieve a major molecular response were the only independent predictors for loss of CCyR and discontinuation of imatinib therapy. The 23 patients with an adherence rate less than or equal to 85% had a higher probability of losing their CCyR at 2 years (26.8% vs 1.5%, P = .0002) and a lower probability of remaining on imatinib (64.5% vs 90.6%, P = .006) than the 64 patients with an adherence rate more than 85%. In summary, we have shown that poor adherence is the principal factor contributing to the loss of cytogenetic responses and treatment failure in patients on long-term therapy.
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2010-10-309807