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Brief Title: Malaysia Stop Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Trial
Official Title: A Randomized Control Trial Comparing Peginterferon-α-2a Versus Observation After Stopping Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor in Chronic Myeloid Leukemia With Deep Molecular Response for at Least Two Years
Study ID: NCT02381379
Brief Summary: To compare administration of peginterferon-α-2a for 1 year versus observation after stopping tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients with deep MR ≥ 2 years.
Detailed Description: Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm signified by the presence of Philadephia chromosome, which is the derivative of chromosome 22 after translocation between chromosome 9 and 22. The Philadephia chromosome will produce the mutated tyrosine kinase (BCR-ABL1), which will initiate the pathogenesis of the disease. Imatinib is the first tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), which has changed the treatment paradigm of CML since its approval from U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2001 for the treatment of CML. It signifies a new era of oncological treatment using targeted therapy. Subsequent generation TKIs have been marketed as a more potent therapy for CML. Tyrosine kinase inhibitor is conventionally thought not able to cure CML and it has to be taken for life. It is able to induce a very deep molecular response (MR) in about 10% of CML patients as evidenced by persistent undetectable or ≤0.0032% (International Scale IS) BCR-ABL1 transcript in quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test on current molecular assays, which is labelled as MR4.5 or more. However these patients have to continue taking their TKIs as per recommendations from the European Leukaemia Net and this is the current practice in our institution and in Malaysia. Long term treatment is cumbersome, there is a concern of chronic side effects with long term tyrosine kinase inhibition and it is a financial burden on most countries' health budget as these drugs are very expensive. Current available data showed that 40% of CML patients with prior stable MR4.5 for 2 years or more will be able to stay imatinib-free for at least 2 years. About 13% of patients without confirmed molecular relapse by the study criteria have low persistent BCR-ABL1 but remain imatinib-free for median follow-up of 22 months (range 6 - 35). A few patients with confirmed molecular relapse by study criteria remained drug free on follow-up. This postulates a component of immunity suppressing the leukemic clone. Interferon is the standard treatment of CML before the era of TKI. As a single agent, it induces complete cytogenetic response (CCR) in about 20%, and non-sustainable deep MR in about 10% of patients in early chronic phase. These are much smaller figures compared to TKI. Imatinib at the dose of 400mg daily induces CCR in about 70% and deep MR in about 10% of patient in chronic phase after one year of treatment. However, interferon-responded patients may indeed retain the response once interferon was withdrawn via interferon-induced immunity towards the leukemic clone, which leads to longer drug free period compared to TKI. Hence, it is logical to postulate the use of interferon after TKI was stopped when patients have attained deep MR for more than two years will increase the percentage of patients remain TKI-free on follow-up. Unfortunately, there are not many studies concerning this matter. Carella et al described a case series of five patients with deep MR ranging from 12 to 41 months, were put on interferon with follow-up ranging from three to 16 months. Recently, there was a study from Japan, nine out of 12 analyzable patients including 3 patients with previous treatment of interferon, who stopped TKI, was put on interferon remained in deep MR after median follow-up of 23 months (6-27 months). In regards to peginterferon, there is a small studies by Hardan I et al describing 11 CML patients with various responses after imatinib (from complete cytogenetic response N=3, major molecular response N=6, deep MR N=2) were put on peginterferon-α-2a for nine months together with imatinib, then imatinib was stopped and continued with peginterferon-α-2a for another three months. It is difficult to draw any conclusion from this paper because of the small number of subjects, only two subjects have achieved deep MR (with unknown duration) before study entry, and peginterferon-α-2a was combined with imatinib for nine months which will cloud the true effect of peginterferon-α-2a after imatinib was stopped. So far, there is no randomized study comparing interferon administered for fix duration after TKI was stopped versus observation to see whether the percentage and duration of CML patient who remains TKI-free can be increased and prolonged with interferon, respectively. It will be of interest to see how long the group which was given interferon remains TKI-free. If they remain TKI-free for a long duration, it not only suggests the interferon-induced immunity, but also suggests the interferon-induced immunity can be induced when only a very low level of leukemic cells present. Economical wise, TKI-free certainly give a big relief on the limited health budget of the on-growing CML population.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Sultanah Aminah Hospital, Johor Bahru, Johor, Malaysia
Sultanah Bahiyah Hospital, Alor Setar, Kedah, Malaysia
Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia
Sarawak General Hospital, Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia
Miri Hospital, Miri, Sarawak, Malaysia
Sibu Hospital, Sibu, Sarawak, Malaysia
Ampang Hospital, Ampang, Selangor, Malaysia
Malacca General Hospital, Melaka, , Malaysia
Hospital Pulau Pinang, Pulau Pinang, , Malaysia
Name: Kian Meng Chang, FRCP(London)
Affiliation: Ampang Hospital, Malaysia
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR