Clinical Trial: Risk-adapted Therapy for Primary Systemic (AL) Amyloidosis

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional




Official Title: Risk-adapted Therapy for AL Amyloidosis

Brief Summary: High-dose melphalan (MEL) with autologous stem cell transplant (SCT) is an effective therapy for systemic AL amyloidosis (AL), but treatment-related mortality (TRM) has historically been high. The investigators performed a phase II trial of risk-adapted SCT followed by adjuvant dexamethasone (dex) and thalidomide (thal) in an attempt to reduce TRM and improve response rates. Patients with newly diagnosed AL involving £2 organ systems were assigned to MEL 100, 140, or 200 mg/m2 with SCT, based on age, renal function and cardiac involvement. Patients with persistent clonal plasma cell disease 3 months post-SCT received 9 months of adjuvant thal/dex (or dex if there was a history of deep vein thrombosis or neuropathy). TRM was 4.4%. Thirty-one patients began adjuvant therapy, with 16 (52%) completing 9 months of treatment and 13 (42%) achieving an improvement in hematological response. By intention-to-treat, overall hematological response rate was 71% (36% complete response) with 44% having organ responses. With a median follow-up of 31 months, 2-year survival was 84% (95% confidence interval: 73%, 94%). Risk-adapted SCT with adjuvant thal/ dex is feasible and results in low TRM and high hematological and organ response rates in AL patients.