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EXTRAMEDULLARY RELAPSE AND OCCULT BONE MARROW INVOLVEMENT IN CHILDHOOD ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA: A PHASE III GROUP-WIDE STUDY
RATIONALE: Drugs used in chemotherapy use different ways to stop cancer cells from dividing so they stop growing or die. PURPOSE: Phase III trial to compare the effectiveness of combination chemotherapy in treating children who have relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
OBJECTIVES: I. Improve the outcome in children with first isolated central nervous system (CNS), testicular, or ocular relapse of acute lymphoblastic lymphoma (ALL), and increase the knowledge of the characteristics of extramedullary and subsequent relapses of ALL. II. Quantitate, by current molecular biologic techniques, occult systemic leukemia in cases of conventional isolated extramedullary relapse, and examine the relationship between this assessment and subsequent clinical outcome, particularly overt marrow relapse. III. Quantitate occult systemic leukemia in subsets of extramedullary relapse that include site (CNS, testis, or eye), time of relapse (early or late), initial risk group, immunophenotype, DNA index and karyotype, gender (for CNS and eye), and ethnicity, and assess the response to therapy in patients entered on companion protocol CCG-B958. IV. Compare the relative sensitivities of two quantitative in vitro assays for occult systemic leukemia (fluorescence-activated cell sorter/leukemic progenitor cell clonogenic assay vs. polymerase chain reaction-based clonospecific assay), correlate the assays with clinical outcome, and assess other biologic studies of leukemic cells (e.g., neurotropic potential in the SCID mouse xenograft model and methotrexate sensitivity). V. Determine the event-free survival (EFS) and pattern of failure in children with first isolated CNS, testicular, or ocular relapse after treatment that includes intensive systemic chemotherapy. VI. Correlate EFS in patients with CNS and ocular relapse with sex, and in patients with relapse at all three sites with ethnicity. VII. Evaluate the impact of combined chemotherapy and radiotherapy on health status in survivors at two and four years after extramedullary relapse and study entry. OUTLINE: All patients receive induction chemotherapy over 5 weeks with: etoposide, ifosfamide/mesna, dexamethasone, vincristine, and pegaspargase (if pegaspargase is not available, E. coli asparaginase may be substituted throughout study); then dexamethasone, vincristine, pegaspargase (or E. coli asparaginase), and high-dose methotrexate with leucovorin rescue; and triple intrathecal chemotherapy (TIT). Following induction chemotherapy, all patients receive two 6-week courses of intensification therapy with intermittent TIT; each course consists of dexamethasone, vincristine, high-dose methotrexate/leucovorin, thioguanine, cytarabine, etoposide, and pegaspargase (or E. coli asparaginase) followed by dexamethasone, vincristine, high-dose methotrexate/leucovorin, thioguanine, ifosfamide/mesna, and idarubicin. Patients receive 2 additional courses of intensification chemotherapy followed by four 12-week courses of maintenance chemotherapy with vincristine and methotrexate every 2 weeks and daily oral thioguanine. Total duration of therapy is 78 weeks. Patients with isolated ocular relapse receive local radiotherapy prior to initiation of induction chemotherapy; those who also have CNS leukemia begin TIT with the radiotherapy. Patients with CNS relapse receive craniospinal irradiation during the first month of maintenance therapy, with the dose and fields based on whether they will receive TBI and whether they have had CNS irradiation previously. Patients with testicular relapse receive bilateral testicular irradiation during the first 3 weeks of intensification therapy. Patients are followed every 3 months for 3 years, every 6 months for 3 years, and yearly thereafter, or upon relapse, second malignancy, loss to follow up, or death. All patients undergo quality-of-life assessment at entry and 2 and 4 years after entry. PROJECTED ACCRUAL: Approximately 120 patients will be accrued for this study.
Age
0 - 20 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Long Beach Memorial Medical Center
Long Beach, California, United States
Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, UCLA
Los Angeles, California, United States
Children's Hospital of Orange County
Orange, California, United States
UCSF Cancer Center and Cancer Research Institute
San Francisco, California, United States
Children's Hospital of Denver
Denver, Colorado, United States
Children's National Medical Center
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
University of Chicago Cancer Research Center
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Indiana University Cancer Center
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics
Iowa City, Iowa, United States
Start Date
December 1, 1996
Primary Completion Date
November 1, 2002
Completion Date
April 1, 2006
Last Updated
August 22, 2013
120
ESTIMATED participants
cytarabine
DRUG
dexamethasone
DRUG
etoposide
DRUG
idarubicin
DRUG
ifosfamide
DRUG
leucovorin calcium
DRUG
mesna
DRUG
pegaspargase
DRUG
therapeutic hydrocortisone
DRUG
thioguanine
DRUG
vincristine sulfate
DRUG
low-LET cobalt-60 gamma ray therapy
RADIATION
low-LET electron therapy
RADIATION
low-LET photon therapy
RADIATION
Methotrexate
DRUG
Lead Sponsor
Children's Oncology Group
Collaborators
NCT00106925
NCT07388563
Data Source & Attribution
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