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Title: A phase II randomized study evaluating azacitidine versus conventional care regimens in newly diagnosed elderly Japanese patients with unfavorable acute myeloid leukemia. Author: Iida H, Imada K, Ueda Y, Kubo K, Yokota A, Ito Y, Kiguchi T, Hata T, Nawa Y, Ikezoe T, Uchida T, Morita Y, Kawashima I, Chiba M, Morimoto K, Hirooka S, Miyazaki Y, Ohno R, Naoe T, Study Group. Journal: Int J Hematol; 2022 May; 115(5):694-703. PubMed ID: 35211840. Abstract: A multicenter phase II study was conducted in 44 elderly (≥ 65 years) Japanese patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML) to evaluate whether azacitidine is also effective and feasible in Japanese AML patients. The 28 patients with AML with poor-risk cytogenetics and/or myelodysplasia-related changes (unfavorable AML) were randomly assigned to receive either azacitidine or conventional care regimens (CCR), and the other 16 patients without unfavorable AML received azacitidine alone. The primary endpoint was overall survival. At the median follow-up of 29 months, among the 26 evaluable patients with unfavorable AML, the median survival time (MST) of patients who received azacitidine (N = 14) was 9.6 months and that of patients who received CCR (N = 12) was 5.3 months (HR 0.73; 95% CI 0.31-1.69; log-rank P = 0.459). The MST of all 29 patients who received azacytidine, including the 15 evaluable patients without unfavorable AML, was 12.4 months. Adverse events of azacitidine were manageable and consistent with its established safety profile. Azacitidine tended to prolong survival in newly diagnosed elderly Japanese patients with AML, and was feasible as a front-line therapy for elderly AML patients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]