Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2136613 Leukemia Research 2014 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•FCR is an oral regimen with reported limiting toxicity, not very used in old CLL patients.•Median age in CLL is 72, most of clinical trials report about patients <65 years old.•We treated 30 CLL patients with oral FC+ rirtuximab in order to show feasibility of an outpatient treatment.•Treatment was well tolerated and efficacious.

Median age at diagnosis for chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) patients is now 72 years, thus a consistent number of patients may not tolerate standard doses i.v. of fludarabine, cyclophosphamide and rituximab (FCR), the best available therapy, due to unacceptable myelotoxicity and risk of severe infections. We studied safety and efficacy of the addition of rituximab to the oral low-dose FC regimen (old-FCR) in a selected population of 30 elderly (median age 75, 15 untreated, 15 treated with 1 prior therapy) CLL patients. Complete remission (CR) rate was 80% in the untreated patients (overall response rate, ORR 93%), and 30% in pretreated patients (ORR 74%). Progression free survivals (PFS) were 45 months and 30 months in the untreated and treated patients, respectively. In patients achieving CR, old-FCR led to PFS of 67 months. Moreover, haematological toxicity was mild (grade 3–4: 15%) and patients were treated mostly in outpatient clinic. Old-FCR could be a good therapy option for elderly CLL patients outside clinical trials, larger studies are needed to confirm our findings.

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