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At present, it is not clear whether sorafenib maintenance after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) has any significant impact on the survival of fms like tyrosine kinase – internal tandem duplication (FLT3-ITD) mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients. Li Xuan from the Nanfang Hospital, Guangzhou, China, and colleagues, retrospectively assessed the effect of maintenance therapy with sorafenib, a multi-kinase inhibitor, on the clinical outcomes of FLT3-ITD mutated AML patients undergoing allo-HSCT. The findings of this study were presented at the 44th Annual Meeting of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT), Lisbon, Portugal.
Overall, 144 consecutive FLT3-ITD AML patients (median age at the time of transplantation = 35 years, range, 14–57) who underwent allo-HSCT between January 2012–December 2015 were enrolled in this retrospective multicenter study. Sorafenib therapy pre-HSCT was initiated at the time of induction, post-remission maintenance or relapse, and continued until one week prior to the start of the conditioning regimen. Sorafenib maintenance post-HSCT was started from day 30 to 180 post-transplantation. Either before or after transplantation, the initial dose of sorafenib was 400 mg twice daily and was adjusted on the basis of suspected toxicity or emerging drug resistance (dose range, 200-800 mg daily).
Depending on whether they were receiving sorafenib before transplantation or sorafenib maintenance after transplantation, patients were divided into four groups including patients receiving sorafenib before transplantation (Group A, n = 36), patients receiving sorafenib maintenance after transplantation (Group B, n = 32), patients receiving sorafenib both before and after transplantation (Group C, n = 26), and patients receiving sorafenib neither before nor after transplantation (Group D, n = 50).
The authors concluded by stating that “sorafenib before transplantation, sorafenib maintenance after transplantation, and their combined application all could improve the outcomes for patients with FLT3-ITD AML. Further study is needed to determine whether the use of sorafenib both before and after transplantation might be ideal”. Currently, there is an ongoing multicenter randomized study (NCT02474290), which is evaluating the efficacy of sorafenib for prophylaxis of leukemia relapse in FLT3-ITD AML patients undergoing allo-HSCT.
The results of this study were recently published in the March 2018 issue of Cancer.
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