Abstract

BackgroundDyslipidemia and metabolic syndrome are risk factors for cancer, and clinically aggressive CLL cells are believed to rely on lipid metabolism. Statins promote apoptosis and inhibit CLL cell growth in pre-clinical models, and statin use during salvage therapy for CLL may confer a survival advantage.MethodsTo investigate the prevalence of hyperlipidemia and the effect of statin therapy, lipid profiling was performed on 238 consecutive patients presenting to a specialized CLL clinic between January 2012 and February 2014. Demographics, timing of diagnosis and initiation of chemoimmunotherapy was ascertained from clinical records. Prognostic information was obtained from pathology or flow cytometeric reports. The first lipid profile following CLL diagnosis was recorded. RAI stage was determined from blood counts and radiology or clinical examination at the time of lipid profiling. Patients were grouped according to statin therapy (yes/no) and hyperlipidemia.ResultsOf 281 patients reviewed, 238 were evaluable with a lipid profile. 110 patients (46.2%) were either taking statins at the time of their CLL diagnosis (27.3%) or prescribed a statin during the study period (18.5%) and an additional 11 (4.2%) had a diagnosis of dyslipidemia not on therapy. Of the remaining 117 patients, 18 had LDL ³ 3.5mmol/L, giving a total of 139 patients (58.4%) with abnormal lipid profiles. The statin-exposed group was significantly older (median age 69.5 vs 65, p=0.03) and there were a larger proportion of males (68.6% vs. 53.9%, p=0.02). There were no significant differences in RAI staging, cytogenetics, beta-2-microglobulin levels, or CD38 expression between groups. (Table 1)59.7% of all patients were treatment-free by the end of the study period and there were no differences between statin/no-statin groups. Of those requiring treatment, median time to first treatment (TFT) was 48 (IQR, 24-85.3) months. TFT was significantly longer with statins (57.5 (IQR, 32-77) vs. 36 (IQR, 11-100) months, p<0.02. Initiation of statins following diagnosis of CLL was associated with further prolongation of TFT compared to those on statins at diagnosis (74 (IQR, 62-96) vs. 45 (IQR, 30-64) months, p<0.02). Two cases of spontaneous remission were noted with statin initiation. (Figure 1)ConclusionsThere is an increased prevalence of hyperlipidemia in CLL patients (58.4%) compared to the general population (35-39%). Statin therapy is associated with a prolonged TFT despite a significantly older population and a higher proportion of male patients in this group. CLL patients should be screened for hyperlipidemia and statin therapy may be an adjunct to CLL treatment.Patient Characteristics by Lipid Abnormalities Abstract 5630. Table 1Time to First Treatment (TFT) by Statin UseTotal N (%)No statin N (%)Statin Use/Dyslipidemia N (%)p -valueTotal238117121Male146 (61.3)63 (53.9)83 (68.6)0.02Median age (Q1, Q3)67 (60, 74)65 (58, 73)69 (63, 76)0.01RAI Stage0.64N1178 (74.8%)78 (66.7%)99 (81.8%)MBL73407135361341618232102232081241477Lipid profile (Mean ± Std Dev)HDL (mM)1.23 ± 0.471.33 ± 0.491.14 ± 0.420.001LDL (mM)2.55 ± 1.032.69 ± 0.872.42 ± 1.160.05TC/HDL3.92 ± 1.433.80 ± 1.254.03 ± 1.570.21Non HDL-C (mM)3.22 ± 1.143.29 ± 0.993.14 ± 1.270.29B2M (N = 0.6-2.3 m g/ml)0.52Mean ± Std Dev3.20 ± 2.143.19 ± 2.363.21 ± 1.92CD38 status0.86Unknown74 (31.1%)37 (31.6%)37 (30.6%)CD38+331419CD38-1226260Partial945Cytogenetics20.32Unknown125 (52.5%)61 (52.1%)63 (52.1%)13q-62283511q-1367+122081217p-1275normal24159>1 abnormality2010101stage determined from those untreated at time of lipid profiling2counted in all pertinent groups if more than one abnormalityAbstract 5630. Table 2Time to First Treatment (TFT) by Statin InitiationTotal (N=238)No statin (N=128)Statin Use (N=110)P-valueW&W1 (%)142 (59.7)74 (58.8)68 (61.8)0.53Available TFT data/Total Treated289/9651/5438/42Median TFT (IQR) (mo)48 (24, 83)36 (11, 100)57.5 (32, 77)0.021watch & wait2could not determine TFT for some patients.Abstract 5630. Table 3No statin (N=128)Statin Started (N=43)Statin Previous (N=67)P-valueW&W1 (%)74 (58.8)29 (67.4)39 (58.2)0.55Available TFT data/Total Treated251/5413/1425/28Median TFT (IQR) (mo)36 (11, 100)74 (62, 96)45 (30, 64)0.041watch & wait2could not determine TFT for some [Display omitted] [1]Spaner DE, Lee E, Shi Y, Wen F, Li Y et al. Leukemia 2013; 27:1090-1099.[2]Chae YK, Trinh L, Jain P, Wang X, Rozovski U et al. Blood 2014; 123: 1424-1426. DisclosuresNo relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

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