Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop cancer cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. Imatinib mesylate may stop the growth of cancer cells by blocking the enzymes necessary for cancer cell growth. Combining more than one chemotherapy drug with imatinib mesylate may kill more cancer cells. Randomized phase II trial to study the effectiveness of combination chemotherapy and imatinib mesylate in treating children who have relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. To assess the feasibility and safety of using an intensified sequential induction regimen to treat children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), who experience an isolated, or combined bone marrow relapse. II. To determine the potential of this regimen to serve, as a backbone, for the future testing of novel therapeutic agents. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. To estimate the remission re-induction rates and four-month event-free survival (EFS) for children, stratified by the duration of first remission. II. To determine the feasibility of measuring minimal residual disease (MRD) quantitatively in all patients at time points throughout re-induction, and to correlate post-remission events with disease burden during induction. III. To use deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) arrays to characterize patterns of gene expression that predict treatment failure, and to compare gene expression profiles at the time of relapse with those at the time of initial diagnosis to gain an understanding of the pathways that may be involved in disease recurrence. IV. To determine the feasibility of combining intensive re-induction therapy with imatinib mesylate (STI571) for children with a relapse of Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+) ALL. OUTLINE: Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 treatment arms. ARM I: Treatment Block 1: Patients receive cytarabine intrathecally (IT) on day 1 and methotrexate IT on days 15 and 29. Patients also receive vincristine intravenously (IV) on days 1, 8, 15, and 22; prednisone orally (PO) twice or thrice daily (BID or TID) on days 1-29; pegaspargase intramuscularly (IM) on days 2, 8, 15, and 22; and doxorubicin IV over 15 minutes on day 1. Ph-positive patients also receive imatinib mesylate PO on days 1-14. Treatment Block 2: Patients receive methotrexate IT on days 1 and 22, cyclophosphamide IV over 30 minutes and etoposide IV over 2 hours on days 1-5, and filgrastim (G-CSF) subcutaneously (SC) beginning on day 6 and continuing until blood counts recover. Patients also receive methotrexate IV over 24 hours on day 22 followed by leucovorin calcium IV every 6 hours on days 24 and 25. Ph-positive patients receive imatinib mesylate PO on days 1-14. Treatment Block 3a (Ph-negative patients): Patients receive cytarabine IV over 3 hours every 12 hours on days 1, 2, 8, and 9, asparaginase IM on days 2 and 9, and G-CSF SC beginning on day 10 and continuing until blood counts recover. Treatment Block 3b (Ph-positive patients): Patients receive cytarabine IV over 3 hours every 12 hours on days 1 and 2, asparaginase IM on day 2, and G-CSF SC beginning on day 3 and continuing until blood counts recover. Patients also receive imatinib mesylate PO on days 1-14. ARM II: Treatment Block 1: Patients receive cytarabine IT on day 1 and then methotrexate, cytarabine and hydrocortisone IT (triple intrathecal therapy; TIT) on days 8, 15, 22, and 29. Vincristine, prednisone, pegaspargase, doxorubicin, and imatinib mesylate are administered as in arm I. Treatment Block 3: Patients receive cytarabine, asparaginase, G-CSF, and imatinib mesylate as in arm I. Treatment Block 2: Patients receive TIT on days 1 and 22. Patients then receive cyclophosphamide, etoposide, G-CSF, methotrexate IV, leucovorin calcium, and imatinib mesylate as in arm I. After each block is completed, disease is assessed. The next block is started on day 36 if blood counts have recovered and marrow during block 1 is at least M2/M3. Patients are removed from protocol therapy if disease progresses, unacceptable toxicity occurs, marrow is M2/M3 at day 15 of the second administered block of treatment, or cerebrospinal fluid blasts persist after 6 weekly doses of TIT. After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up for 4 months. PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 63-126 patients will be accrued for this study within 14 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
126
Given IT
Given IT
Given IV
Given PO
Given IM
Given IV
Given PO
Given IV
Given IV
Given SC
Given IV
Given IM
Given IT
Children's Oncology Group
Arcadia, California, United States
Feasibility assessed by excessive early deaths, induction failures, and early relapses
Time frame: Up to 4 months
Toxicity assessed using CTC version 2.0
Will be tabulated in detail.
Time frame: Up to 4 months
Overall remission reinduction (CR2) rate
Time frame: Up to 4 months
EFS
The Kaplan-Meier method will be used.
Time frame: 4 months
MRD
The percentage of MRD positive patients will be estimated at the end of each block. Cox regression will be utilized to correlate MRD values with EFS.
Time frame: Up to 4 months
Feasibility of combining intensive re-induction therapy with imatinib mesylate
Will be determined using descriptive statistics due to the small sample size.
Time frame: Up to 4 months
Percentage of patients who were able to complete the triple re-induction therapy with imatinib mesylate
Will be estimated.
Time frame: Up to 4 months
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