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© 2000 American Society for Clinical Oncology Randomized Trial of Filgrastim, Sargramostim, or Sequential Sargramostim and Filgrastim After Myelosuppressive Chemotherapy for the Harvesting of Peripheral-Blood Stem CellsFrom the Clinical Research Division, Response Oncology, Inc, Memphis, TN, and the Clinical Economics Research Unit, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC. Address reprint requests to C. Dean Buckner, MD, 540, 30th Ave S, Seattle, WA 98144; email dbuckner{at}jetcity.com
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of filgrastim, sargramostim, or sequential sargramostim and filgrastim on CD34+ cell yields and morbidity after myelosuppressive mobilization chemotherapy (MC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: One hundred fifty-six patients were randomized to receive filgrastim (n = 51), sargramostim (n = 52), or sargramostim for 5 days followed by filgrastim (n = 53) after MC with either cyclophosphamide and etoposide (n = 75) or paclitaxel and cyclophosphamide (n = 81). RESULTS: Compared with those who received sargramostim, patients who received filgrastim had faster recovery of an absolute neutrophil count of 0.5 x 109/L or greater (a median of 11 v 14 days; P = .0001), with fewer patients requiring RBC transfusions (P = .008), fewer patients with fever (18% v 52%; P = 0.001), fewer hospital admissions (20% v 42%; P = .013), and less intravenous antibiotic therapy (24% v 69%; P = .001). Patients who received filgrastim yielded more CD34+ cells (median, 7.1 v 2.0 x 106/kg/apheresis; P = .0001), and a higher fraction achieved 2.5 x 106 (94% v 78%; P = .021) and 5 x 106 (88% v 53%; P = .001) or more CD34+ cells/kg with fewer aphereses (median, 2 v 3; P = .002) and fewer days of growth-factor treatment (median, 12 v 14; P = .0001). There were no major differences in outcomes between the filgrastim alone and the sequential regimens. After high-dose chemotherapy, patients who had peripheral-blood stem cells (PBSCs) mobilized with filgrastim or the sequential regimen received higher numbers of CD34+ cells and had faster platelet recovery (P = .015), with fewer patients (P = .014) receiving fewer platelet transfusions (P = .001) than patients receiving sargramostim-mobilized PBSCs. CONCLUSION: It was concluded that filgrastim alone or sequential sargramostim and filgrastim were superior to sargramostim alone for the mobilization of CD34+ cells and reduction of toxicities after MC.
AUTOLOGOUS peripheral-blood stem cells (PBSCs) are the preferred source of hematopoietic stem cells for the support of patients receiving high-dose chemotherapy (HDC).1 PBSCs can be collected after the administration of a myeloid growth factor alone1-4 or after the administration of myelosuppressive mobilization chemotherapy (MC) and a myeloid growth factor.5-9 More PBSCs, as measured by CD34+ cell content, are collected after the administration of MC and a growth factor than after treatment with a growth factor alone.1 It is currently common practice to administer disease-specific MC and a myeloid growth factor to facilitate the harvest of PBSCs and to treat the underlying malignancy.1 The two most commonly used myeloid growth factors for the facilitation of PBSC harvests in the United States are recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (filgrastim)2-11 and recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rHuGM-CSF). Sargramostim is a glycosylated form of rHuGM-CSF derived from yeast and marketed in the United States,12-15 and molgramostim is an unglycosylated form of rHuGM-CSF derived from Escherichia coli and only available for experimental use in the United States.16-24 The administration of MC and a myeloid growth factor is associated with variable CD34+ cell yields and morbidity.1 It has not been determined in randomized prospective trials whether there are major differences between myeloid growth factor regimens and CD34+ cell yields and morbidity after MC. There are reports of PBSCs being harvested with MC followed by the administration of filgrastim,4-11,25 sargramostim,14,15,26 or the combination of sargramostim and filgrastim,12 but there have been no prospective, randomized studies comparing the relative effectiveness of these regimens. A prospective randomized trial was performed to compare the effects of filgrastim alone, sargramostim alone, or the sequential administration of sargramostim and filgrastim on CD34+ cell yields, hematologic recovery, morbidity, and resource utilization after the administration of MC.
Study Design This was a randomized, open-label trial of three schedules of myeloid growth factors administered after MC for the collection of CD34+ PBSCs. The MC regimen, cyclophosphamide and etoposide (CE) or paclitaxel and cyclophosphamide (PC), was determined by the primary treatment protocol. The primary treatment protocols for patients with multiple myeloma and malignant lymphoma included only the CE regimen, whereas the protocols for patients with breast cancer included both CE and PC. Patients were stratified by disease, extent of prior therapy, and MC regimen. Patients were randomized in strata and forced to balance in blocks of six. The following three groups of patients were evaluated:
2. Sargramostim alone: daily administration until PBSC harvests were completed. 3. Sargramostim followed by filgrastim: daily administration of sargramostim for 5 days, followed by daily filgrastim until PBSC harvests were completed.
Patient Selection Two of the 158 patients were excluded from the sargramostim group because they erroneously received either filgrastim alone or sargramostim and filgrastim. Thus 156 patients were assessable for toxicity of MC. Six of the 156 randomized patients received CE or PC but did not have PBSC harvested because of early treatment-related death (n = 4) or poor clinical condition (n = 2) from infection or congestive heart failure. Thus 150 patients were assessable for efficiency of PBSC harvests. Nine of the 150 patients who had PBSCs harvested did not proceed to HDC because of inadequate CD34+ cell collections (n = 5) or refusal of further treatment (n = 4). Twenty patients received sequential HDC treatments with the infusion of a fraction of their collected PBSCs after each course of chemotherapy and were not included in the analyses of hematopoietic recovery. Thus 126 patients were assessable for engraftment parameters after a single course of HDC and PBSC infusion.
Treatment Centers
Administration of MC and Myeloid Growth Factors Myeloid growth factor administration was administered subcutaneously beginning on the day after the completion of MC. The regimens evaluated were filgrastim 6 µg/kg/d (Amgen, Thousand Oaks, CA); sargramostim 250 µg/m2/day (Immunex, Seattle, WA); or sargramostim 250 µg/m2/d for 5 days, followed by filgrastim 6 µg/kg/d. All myeloid growth factors were administered daily until the final day of apheresis.
Collection, Cryopreservation, and Infusion of PBSCs Several criteria were used to determine the number of apheresis procedures. Patients would undergo a minimum of four aphereses unless (1) the cumulative yield of CD34+ cells on any day was 5 x 106 cells/kg or more, in which case aphereses were discontinued, or (2) the cumulative yield of CD34+ cells was more than 2.5 x 106 cells/kg but fewer than 5 x 106 cells/kg, in which case one additional apheresis was performed.
High-Dose Chemotherapy
Cell-Dose Criteria for Support of HDC
Supportive Care During MC and HDC With PBSC Support
Definitions
Statistical Analyses
Patient Characteristics Characteristics of the 156 assessable patients who received MC are listed in Table 1. There were no statistically significant differences between the three groups.
Hematopoietic Recovery and Resource Utilization After MC The effects of the growth-factor regimens on hematopoietic recovery and resource utilization after MC are listed in Table 2. Four patients died of treatment-related causes (infection, 2; multiorgan failure, 2) 9 to 15 days after the first dose of MC, without recovery of neutrophils or platelets. Data from these four patients are included in the evaluation of toxicities and resource utilization, but not for hematologic recovery, in Table 2.
Filgrastim versus sargramostim. The median number of days to recovery of an ANC of 0.5 or greater was 3 days shorter for patients who received filgrastim than for patients who received sargramostim (P = .0001). There was no difference in the proportion of patients with a platelet-count nadir of 20 x 109/L or lower between the two groups. The proportion of patients with a hemoglobin nadir of 8.0 mg/dL or lower was 35% for patients who received filgrastim and 54% for patients who received sargramostim (P = .058). More patients who received filgrastim alone had a temperature of 38.5°C or higher on 1 or more days, compared with sargramostim-treated patients (P = .001). Twenty percent of patients in the filgrastim-alone group were admitted to hospitals, compared with 42% in the sargramostim group (P = .001). The incidence of intravenous (IV) antibiotic use was 24% in the filgrastim group and 69% in the sargramostim group (P = .001). The fraction of patients who received RBC transfusions was 22% in the filgrastim-alone group and 46% in the sargramostim group (P = .008). Twenty-five percent of patients in the filgrastim group received platelet transfusions, compared with 42% in the sargramostim group (P = .072). Sargramostim versus sequential sargramostim and filgrastim. The median number of days to recovery of an ANC of 0.5 x 109/L or greater was 14 for patients who received sargramostim and 12 for patients who received the sequential regimen (P = .0001). There was no difference in the proportion of patients with a platelet-count nadir of 20 x 109/L or lower between the two groups. The proportion of patients with a hemoglobin nadir of 8.0 mg/dL was 54% for patients who received sargramostim and 35% for patients who received the sequential regimen (P = .040). A temperature of 38.5°C was observed in 52% of sargramostim-treated patients and 15% of sargramostim and filgrastimtreated patients (P = .001). Forty-two percent of patients in the sargramostim-alone group were admitted to hospitals, compared with 21% in the sequential group (P = .017). The incidence of IV antibiotic use was 69% in the sargramostim group and 25% in the sequential group (P = .001). Forty-two percent of patients in the sargramostim group received platelet transfusions, compared with 26% in the sequential group (P = .086). Filgrastim versus sequential sargramostim and filgrastim. Patients who received sequential sargramostim and filgrastim recovered an ANC of 0.5 x 109/L or greater on a median day of day 12, compared with day 11 for patients who received filgrastim alone (P = .001). There were no other statistically significant differences between patients who received filgrastim or the sequential regimen for any of the end points listed in Table 2.
Toxicities and Hematopoietic Recovery After PC or CE Treatment
CD34+ Cell Harvests and Growth-Factor Administration
Filgrastim versus sargramostim. The median numbers of CD34+ cells collected for patients receiving filgrastim or sargramostim were 12 and 5.4 x 106/kg (P = .0001), respectively, in a median number of two and three apheresis procedures (P = .002), respectively, with a median of 12 and 14 days of growth-factor administration (P = .0001), respectively. Ninety-four percent of patients in the filgrastim group achieved a level of 2.5 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg or higher, compared with 78% for the sargramostim group (P = .021). Eighty-eight percent of patients in the filgrastim group achieved a level of 5.0 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg or higher, compared with 53% for the sargramostim group (P = .001). Second mobilizations were performed in one patient in the filgrastim group and five patients in the sargramostim group (P = .204). Filgrastim versus sequential sargramostim and filgrastim. The only significant difference between these two groups was that the first day of apheresis was on day 12 for the filgrastim group and day 13 for the sequential sargramostim and filgrastim group (P = .008). Sargramostim versus sequential sargramostim and filgrastim. For most end points (listed in Table 3), the sequential administration of sargramostim and filgrastim was significantly superior to sargramostim alone. Second mobilizations were not performed in any patient in the sequential sargramostim and filgrastim group, compared whereas they were performed in five patients in the sargramostim-alone group (P = .018).
CD34+ Cell Yields After PC or CE
Hematologic Recovery After HDC and PBSC Infusion A single course of HDC was administered to 126 patients. Treatment regimens, hematologic recovery, and resource utilization data are listed in Table 6. There were no differences in the HDC regimens administered to the three groups of patients.
Filgrastim versus sargramostim. Patients who received filgrastim-mobilized PBSCs were infused with more CD34+ cells/kg than were patients who received sargramostim-mobilized PBSCs (P = .0001). Patients who received filgrastim-mobilized PBSCs had faster recovery of platelets (P = .003), with fewer receiving platelet (P = .014) and RBC transfusions (P = .031). Filgrastim versus sequential sargramostim and filgrastim. Patients who received filgrastimmobilized PBSCs recovered platelets to a level of 20 x 109/L on day 9, compared with day 11 for patients who received sargramostim and filgrastimmobilized PBSCs (P = .101). Twenty-nine percent of the patients who received the sequential regimen were infused with fewer than 5.0 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg, compared with 14% for patients who received filgrastim alone (P = .087). Sargramostim versus sequential sargramostim and filgrastim. Patients who received sargramostim-mobilized PBSCs were infused with fewer CD34+ cells/kg than were patients who received the sequential regimen (P = .001). Patients who received sargramostim-mobilized PBSCs had slower recovery of platelets, but this difference was not statistically significant (P = .294). Patients who received the sequential regimen were transfused with platelets a median of 1 day less (P = .006).
In this study, one major finding was that patients who received filgrastim after MC yielded more CD34+ cells than did patients who received sargramostim. There were differences in CD34+ cell yields between the two MC regimens, as shown in Tables 4 and 5. Twice as many CD34+ cells were collected after CE as after PC. For patients who received CE, more CD34+ cells were collected after filgrastim or sequential sargramostim and filgrastim than after sargramostim alone. However, 82% of the patients who received sargramostim yielded 2.5 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg or more, and 77% yielded 5.0 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg or more, which were not significantly different from those in patients who received filgrastim alone or sequential sargramostim and filgrastim (Table 4). Thus sargramostim and filgrastim after CE were equally effective for achieving target CD34+ cell numbers. The major differences in achieving target CD34+ cell yields were observed in patients who received PC (Table 5). In general, PC was associated with fewer toxicities and more rapid hematologic recovery than CE. It has previously been observed that more intensive chemotherapy regimens are associated with a better CD34+ cell yield than less intensive regimens, this would probably explain the current observations.1,5,39 There have been no previous randomized trials comparing the prophylactic administration of filgrastim with sargramostim after MC. However, one randomized trial compared filgrastim with molgramostim in 26 patients with Hodgkins disease who received MC.16 Twenty-one patients completed PBSC collections, and there were no differences in CD34+ cell yields or toxicities between the two treatment groups.16 Bregni et al,18 in a nonrandomized trial, compared filgrastim with molgramostim, administered by continuous IV infusion, in 49 patients with malignant lymphoma who received cyclophosphamide 7 g/m2. They found more rapid recovery of neutrophils after filgrastim treatment (P = .01), more rapid recovery of platelets after molgramostim treatment (P = .01), and more CD34+ cells/kg/apheresis after molgramostim treatment, but these differences were not statistically significant (P = .132). They also found no differences in the yields of undifferentiated hematopoietic progenitors as defined by the CD34+/CD33- surface phenotype. Differences between these two studies and the study presented here could be due to differences in the rHuGM-CSF molecule, the myelosuppressive regimens, the dose and schedule of growth-factor administration, or the relatively small number of patients evaluated. Filgrastim has been compared with sargramostim or the combination of sargramostim and filgrastim in healthy individuals.13,40-42 These studies demonstrated that the use of filgrastim alone or sequential sargramostim and filgrastim mobilized more CD34+ cells than did sargramostim alone in healthy persons. These studies also suggested that the use of sequential sargramostim and filgrastim mobilized more primitive hematopoietic cells (CD23+/CD38-/HLA-DR+) than did treatment with either drug alone. The practical significance of these observations for PBSC transplantation is unknown. However, the lack of reports of late graft failure after autologous or allogeneic transplantation with filgrastim-mobilized PBSCs would suggest that the infusion of inadequate quantities of more primitive stem cells is not a major clinical problem. Spitzer et al12 randomized patients to receive filgrastim 10 µg/kg/d or the combination of filgrastim 10 µg/kg/d plus sargramostim 5 µg/kg/d without prior chemotherapy and found no increase in CD34+ cell yields after the combination growth factor administration. These observations are consistent with those of the study presented here, although the schedule of growth-factor administration was concurrent rather than sequential, as in this study. In this study, hematopoietic recovery after a single course of HDC and PBSC infusion was evaluated in 126 patients (Table 6). Patients who had PBSCs mobilized with CE or PC and sargramostim alone received 50% fewer CD34+ cells, compared with patients who received cells harvested after filgrastim or sequential sargramostim and filgrastim mobilization. There was a 3-day faster recovery of platelets in patients who received filgrastim-mobilized PBSCs than in patients who received sargramostim-mobilized PBSCs (day 9 v day 12; P = .015), which was probably due to the large difference in median CD34+ cell dose. This finding lends further support to a number of studies which have shown that infusing 5.0 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg or more is associated with a reduction in time to platelet recovery, with fewer supportive-care requirements.6,29,43,44 Patients who received sequential sargramostim- and filgrastim-mobilized PBSCs did not recover platelets until a median of day 11, compared with day 9 for patients who received comparable median numbers of filgrastim-mobilized CD34+ cells (P = .101). However, this was probably due to the fact that 29% of patients infused with PBSCs mobilized by sequential sargramostim and filgrastim were transfused with fewer than 5 x 106 CD34+ cells/kg, compared with 14% for patients infused with PBSCs mobilized by filgrastim alone (P = .087). As shown in Table 2, patients who received filgrastim or the sequential regimen had a faster recovery of neutrophils to a level of 0.5 x 109/L, compared with patients who received sargramostim alone (P = .0001 and .0001, respectively). The increased incidence of fever in patients who received sargramostim probably accounts for the increased frequency of hospital admissions and IV antibiotic usage. Fever in the sargramostim group was most likely due to the drug itself and not to infection, because the incidence of documented bacteremia was the same for all three groups. The higher incidence of anemia and more frequent RBC transfusions in the sargramostim group was an unexpected finding because neither filgrastim nor sargramostim has a known effect on RBC production. The mechanism by which sargramostim-treated patients were more likely to develop anemia than were patients who received filgrastim or the sequential regimen was not investigated and could only be speculated upon. There were no differences in the frequency of patients with a platelet-count nadir of 20 x 109/L or higher among the three groups. More patients in the sargramostim group received platelet transfusions than did patients who received filgrastim or the sequential regimen, but these differences did not reach statistical significance. There are no randomized trials comparing the effects of prophylactic administration of filgrastim or sargramostim on toxicities and hematologic recovery after MC. However, in one study, filgrastim has been compared with sargramostim in patients with chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression.45 In that study, 181 afebrile patients with an ANC lower than 0.5 x 109/L were randomized to receive filgrastim or sargramostim until neutrophil recovery occurred. There was no statistical difference in the mean number of days it took to reach an ANC of 0.5, but the mean number of days to reach 1.0 or 1.5 x 109/L was 1 day less for the filgrastim group, with the administration of 1 less day of growth factor. There were no statistically significant differences in hospitalization time, mean duration of fever, or mean duration of IV antibiotic usage between patients receiving filgrastim or sargramostim. Only two chemotherapy mobilization regimens, PC and CE, were administered in this study. Because there were differences between the two regimens in terms of toxicity and CD34+ cell yields, these findings may need to be confirmed for other mobilization regimens used to facilitate PBSC harvests. However, the current findings are, in general, consistent with the studies of myeloid growth factors alone, without chemotherapy, for the mobilization of PBSCs.12,13,40-42 If the goal is to harvest large quantities of CD34+ cells with the least morbidity and resource utilization, filgrastim alone administered after MC would appear to be the best currently available myeloid growth factor regimen. Other potential benefits of mobilizing PBSCs with sargramostim or sequential sargramostim and filgrastim, ie, the possible mobilization of more primitive stem cells or dendritic cells,13,40-42 were not addressed in this study.
The following physicians participated in this study (all are affiliated with the Response Oncology Network in the cities listed): Albany, GA: J. Tongol; Albuquerque, NM: B. McAneny, J. Liebmann, V. Vigil; Asheville, NC: J. Puckett; Atlanta, GA: M. Moore, R. Leff; Bayonne, NJ: D. Iyengar; Billings, MT: B. Whittenberger, G. Midence, P. Cobb, R. Santala; Boca Raton, FL: I. Sysel; Clearwater, FL: G. Stanton, J. Hajdenberg, L. Ziegler, T. McLaughlin; Columbia, SC: R. Smith, Jr, W. Babcock; Columbia, MO: D. Schlossman, M. Muscato; Corpus Christi, TX: M. Nash; El Paso, TX: J. Gomez, R. Rivera, R. Portillo; Ft. Smith, AR: J. Wells; Ft Wayne, IN: G.T. Gabrys; Glendale, CA: K. Ucar; Grand Rapids, MI: K. Yost, L. Pawl; Hollywood, FL: A. Rosenberg, F. Wittlin, I. Sysel, R. Cano, W. Rymer; Houma, LA: R. Doria; Houston, TX: E. Rogg; Jackson, MI: G. Shumaker; Kansas City, KS: K. Pendergrass, S. Ethirajan; Knoxville, TN: A. Grossman, J. Foster, R.B. Avery; Lafayette, LA: L. Meza; Little Rock, AR: B. Baltz, L. Mendelsohn; Macon, GA: J. Smith, Jr., K. Deaton, M. Mangum; Memphis, TN: A. Weir, III, E. Weeks, K. Tauer, L. Schwartzberg; Miami, FL: A. Feinberg, A. Larcada, H. Lessner, H. Wallach, M. Troner, P. Kaywin; Mobile, AL: T. Beeker; Nashville, TN: A. Cohen, A. Greco, A. Meluch, C. Penley, J. Hainsworth, J. Strupp, R. Lamar, S. Spigel; Northside (Atlanta), GA: C. Franco; Richmond, VA: D. Trent, L. Lewkow, M. Shwarz; Savannah, GA: A. Bala, J. West, L.E. Robertson; Scranton, PA: F. Laluna, W. Heim; St. Louis, MO: L. White, S. Allen; Syracuse, NY: A. Scalzo, D. Churchill, H. Puc; Tampa, FL: R. Blanco, R. Altemose; Treasure Coast, FL: M. Wertheim, N. Iannotti; Washington, DC: V. Malkovska; Worcester, MA: S. Donohue.
Supported in part by the Community Cancer Research Foundation, Seattle, WA, and the Josep Steiner Foundation, Bern, Switzerland.
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Copyright © 2000 by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Online ISSN: 1527-7755. Print ISSN: 0732-183X
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