We treated 60 relapsed/refractory mixed-phenotype acute leukemia patients (MPAL-1) with increasing the aclarubicin dose in CAG regimen (HD-CAG, cytarabine (10 mg/m(2)/12 h, days 1-14), aclarubicin (5-7 mg/m(2)/day, days 1-14), granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (200 μg/m(2)/day, days 1-14). This was compared to 64 relapsed/refractory MPAL patients (MPAL-2) treated with DOAP regimen (daunorubicin, vincristine/vindesine, cytarabine and prednisone), 113 relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients and 78 acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) patients treated with HD-CAG regimen. After one course, complete remission (CR) and overall response [OR, CR+partial remission (PR)] rates for MPAL-1 exceeded MPAL-2 (CR, 61.02% vs. 28.13%, P=0.000; OR, 72.88% vs. 34.38%, P=0.000), but these data were similar to AML and ALL (P>0.05). In MPAL-1 group, CR and OR rates of T-lymphoid+myeloid immunophenotype were higher than B-lymphoid+myeloid immunophenotype (CR, 81.82% vs. 44.12%, P=0.005; OR, 90.91% vs. 58.82%, P=0.009). The overall survival at 3 years in MPAL-1, MPAL-2, AML and ALL groups were 14.2%±6.8%, 14.1%±6.4%, 17.3%±5.0% and 15.0%±5.3% (P>0.05). Side effects were similar between HD-CAG and DOAP (P>0.05). HD-CAG regimen is efficacious for relapsed/refractory MPAL, especially for T+My patients.
Keywords: CAG regimen; Mixed-phenotype acute leukemia; Refractory; Relapse; Salvage therapy.
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