ASH Publishes Clinical Practice Guidelines for ALL in Adolescents and Young Adults

ASH has published new clinical practice guidelines for frontline and relapsed/refractory ALL management in adolescents and young adults, endorsing pediatric-inspired regimens, asparaginase therapy, and immunotherapy over traditional chemotherapy.

The American Society of Hematology has published clinical practice guidelines on frontline and relapsed/refractory management of acute lymphoblastic leukemia in adolescents and young adults. The guidelines, grounded in evidence-based practice, were developed by pediatric and adult experts in collaboration with patient representatives and published in the Society's peer-reviewed journal Blood Advances.

"Caring for these individuals is complex given the unique challenges associated with their age group, which doesn't align neatly with standard pediatric or adult treatment regimens," said the ASH President. "These guidelines aim to address this gap by outlining best treatment practices and providing vital standardization to clinical approaches to improve patient care."

Both guidelines call for additional research on treating this patient population for ALL, including clinical trials directly comparing immunotherapies and studies to determine whether additional patients can forego transplant without compromising outcomes.

Frontline management guidelines

The guidelines for frontline management consist of 15 recommendations and several good practice statements. Recommendations include endorsement of pediatric-inspired regimens over traditional adult-inspired protocols, asparaginase as a cornerstone of therapy including recommendations addressing administration and supportive care, and re-evaluation of allogeneic transplant in first remission given insufficient evidence to support its routine use.

"These guidelines address many of the challenging nuances to treating ALL in AYAs, including management of chemotherapy effects, psychosocial support, and survivorship, including fertility concerns," said the co-chair of the ASH Guidelines for Frontline Management of ALL in AYAs. "Additionally, they highlight that we're in a period of great progress in terms of new approaches to treating and monitoring this disease."

Relapsed/refractory guidelines

The guidelines for management of relapsed or refractory disease consist of eight recommendations and one research-only recommendation. Recommendations include support of immunotherapy over traditional chemotherapy approaches, allogeneic transplant in patients who achieve remission but with individualized assessment and shared decision-making to determine benefits and risks, and intrathecal chemotherapy for isolated central nervous system relapse.

"There are two huge challenges for treating this population – the speed at which the field is evolving and the need to bridge pediatric and adult oncology approaches to treatment," said the co-chair of the ASH Guidelines for Management of Relapsed and Refractory Disease in AYAs with ALL. "These guidelines meet both challenges, and our hope is that they will spur additional collaboration between adult and pediatric oncologists to effectively treat these patients."

Approximately 20% of total ALL cases occur in AYAs (15 to 39 years of age), yet this age group has historically experienced inferior outcomes, especially when compared to pediatric patients diagnosed with ALL, who are less likely to relapse and have substantially higher survival rates. This difference can be attributed in part to a greater likelihood of high-risk leukemia biology for AYAs, more treatment-related toxicities, and wide variance in approaches to therapy.

Related Entities

Related Articles

References

  1. A genomic and epigenomic lens into the biology of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia - Nature · nature.com
  2. Clinical Quiz: ASH Guidelines for AYA Relapsed/Refractory ALL - Hematology Advisor · hematologyadvisor.com
  3. ASH publishes acute lymphoblastic leukemia clinical practice guidelines for AYA patients · oncology-central.com