Abstract

e18528 Background: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a hematologic myeloid malignancy that carries a poor prognosis. Standard of care is induction chemotherapy with daunorubicin and cytarabine also known as 7 + 3. Bone marrow aspirates are assessed on day 14 (D14) and day 28 (D28). Achievement of CR (complete remission) is predicative of overall survival (OS ).Morphological review of BM (bone marrow) on D14 remains the standard evaluation for any indication for CR. Methods: Our primary objective was to determine if blast % on the D14 bone marrow aspirate is a prognostic indicator for remission in acute leukemia patients who underwent induction chemotherapy. Institutional review board was approved. A retrospective chart review was conducted at North Shore University Hospital. Adult patients with AML who received standard induction chemotherapy from 2010 to 2015 were included. 150 patients were reviewed and their D14 blast %, initial marrow blast %, gender, age, cytogenetics and initial WBC were assessed. The patients’ D14 blast % biopsies were divided into blast percentiles: < 1%, 1-10%, 10-30%, 30-60% and > 60%. CR was defined as patients having < 5% blasts on their D28 bone marrow or day 63 and corresponding neutrophil count > 1,000 and platelet count > 100,000. Results: Fisher’s exact test was used to compare the proportion of patients who reached CR among the D14 blast % categories. The Wilcoxon test was utilized to compare CR on continuous variables. Results were considered statistically significant if p < 0.05. D14 hemoglobin and D14 platelets were not significantly associated with CR status (p = 0.67, p = 0.33, and p = 0.13, respectively). D14 WBC was significantly associated with CR (p = 0.02), but when both D14 WBC and initial blasts % were included in a multiple logistic model, WBC was no longer a significant predictor of outcome. Only initial blast percent at time of diagnosis was deemed predictive of CR response at day D63 (p = 0.0142). Conclusions: Initial blast > 60% was found to be significantly associated with the greatest CR rate. This study provides evidence of initial blast % being a prognostic factor for CR.

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