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All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) combined to anthracycline-based chemotherapy is the reference treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). Whereas, in high-risk patients, cytarabine (AraC) is often considered useful in combination with anthracycline to prevent relapse, its usefulness in standard-risk APL is uncertain. In APL 2000 trial, patients with standard-risk APL [i.e., with baseline white blood cell (WBC) count <10,000/mm(3) ] were randomized between treatment with ATRA with Daunorubicin (DNR) and AraC (AraC group) and ATRA with DNR but without AraC (no AraC group). All patients subsequently received combined maintenance treatment. The trial had been prematurely terminated due to significantly more relapses in the no AraC group (J Clin Oncol, (24) 2006, 5703-10), but follow-up was still relatively short. With long-term follow-up (median 103 months), the 7-year cumulative incidence of relapses was 28.6% in the no AraC group, compared to 12.9% in the AraC group (P = 0.0065). In standard-risk APL, at least when the anthracycline used is DNR, avoiding AraC may lead to an increased risk of relapse suggesting that the need for AraC is regimen-dependent.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajh.23451 | DOI Listing |
RMD Open
September 2025
Department of Rheumatology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Objective: This population-based study aimed to determine timing and incidence of arterial and venous thromboembolic events (TE) and antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) relative to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) onset and assess relationships between TE, APS and anti-phospholipid antibodies (aPL) during follow-up.
Methods: We included all medical-record confirmed new-onset SLE patients in Southeast Norway (population 2.9 million) 2000-2017 who fulfilled the 2019 European Alliance of Rheumatology Associations/American College of Rheumatology classification criteria.
Eur J Cancer
June 2025
Professor of Child, Adolescent & Young Adult Oncology, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland; Children's Health Ireland, University of Dublin, Trinity College, Ireland.
Background: While cancer survival has steadily improved over time for adolescents and young adults (AYAs), previous studies have shown poorer survival in AYAs compared to children with leukaemia and lymphomas. In this study, we provided updated European 5-year relative survival (RS) estimates for AYAs with haematologic malignancies compared to children and assessed improvements in survival over time.
Methods: We used the EUROCARE-6 database, with population-based cancer registries data from 29 European countries.
Ann Surg
May 2025
Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, Dell Medical School, University of Texas, Austin, TX.
Objective: To assess trends in patients' decisions to decline cancer surgery in the United States by race and ethnicity.
Background: Racial and ethnic differences in declining potentially curative cancer surgery are suggested to be due to systemic inequities in health care access and mistrust of health care systems, among other factors. Despite ongoing national efforts to address these inequities, it is unknown whether differences in rates of declined cancer surgery have improved.
J Thromb Thrombolysis
June 2024
Department of Hematology, Peking University People's Hospital, Beijing, 100044, China.
Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) stands out as a distinctive form of acute leukemia, exhibiting a higher occurrence of thrombotic events when contrasted with other leukemia subtypes. Since thrombosis is a relatively rare but unfavorable condition with poor prognostic implications, it is crucial to determine the risk factors for thrombotic events in APL(thrombosis in large venous or arterial from onset to differentiation therapy in 30d). We performed a retrospective study involving 950 APL patients between January 2000 and October 2022, from which 123 were excluded by younger than 16 years of age, 95 were excluded by incomplete data, and 6 were excluded by thrombosis related to CVC or PICC.
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March 2024
A*STAR Skin Research Labs (A*SRL), Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), 31 Biopolis Way, Nanos, Singapore 138669, Republic of Singapore.
We present a robust, cost-effective (<2000 USD), and portable optical diffuse speckle pulsatile flowmetry (DSPF) device with a flexible handheld probe for deep tissue blood flow measurement in the human foot as well as a first-in-man observational clinical study using the proposed optical device for tissue ischemia assessment and peripheral artery disease (PAD) diagnosis. Blood flow in tissue is inherently pulsatile in nature. However, most conventional methods cannot measure deep tissue-level pulsatile blood flow noninvasively.
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