COMPARATIVE STUDY
JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
RESEARCH SUPPORT, U.S. GOV'T, P.H.S.
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Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelocytic leukemia in children. Survival and prognostic factors.

Cancer 1983 August 16
The survival and the prognostic significance of the diagnostic characteristics of 39 children with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelocytic leukemia (Ph1-positive CML), seen between 1963-1976 at the Hôpital Saint-Louis of Paris, have been analyzed. The disease predominated in children older than age 4 years (95%), with girls being more affected than boys (24 versus 15). The clinical and hematological picture at presentation was similar to that observed in adults with Ph1-positive CML. Most children of this series were treated with busulfan which, as in adults, led to reduction of leucocytosis and organomegaly but did not prevent the occurrence of blastic crisis. Well-documented blastic crisis was observed in 78% of cases. Of 39 children, 12 were still alive, all in the chronic phase. Twenty-seven have died, 21 of them after blastic crisis, 4-156 months after diagnosis (median survival, 53 months). The effect of each diagnostic characteristic on survival was evaluated using the log-rank test. Of the 14 characteristics studied, only the degree of blood and marrow blastosis was associated with a shorter survival. Age, sex, bleeding, lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, degree of splenomegaly, hemoglobin level, total leucocyte, immature granulocyte (promyelocytes + myelocytes + metamyelocytes), eosinophil, basophil, and platelet counts in the peripheral blood were of no prognostic significance. The failure to attain a level of statistical significance for some characteristics found to be of prognostic value for adults, could be due to the small sample size and/or to the disease homogeneity. The results of this study, however, stress the importance of the initial blastic infiltration in determining the duration of survival, which is ultimately determined by the occurrence of terminal acute leukemia. In conclusion, this study shows that the Ph1-positive CML of childhood exhibits the same course, incidence of blastic crisis, and survival as the disease of adults. It also indicates that treatment with moderate chemotherapy, such as busulfan, has no effect on the duration of survival. Therefore, new therapeutic approaches are urgently needed for the treatment of this disorder in children.

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