A phase I/II study of recombinant interferon alpha 2a and hydroxyurea for chronic myelocytic leukemia

1989 
Nine previously untreated patients with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML) were treated with recombinant interferon alpha 2a (rIFN-alpha 2a) and hydroxyurea. Patients received 6×106 U rIFN-alpha 2a daily for the first week and 3×106 U rIFN-alpha 2a daily for the second week. As maintenance treatment starting on day 15, patients received 3×106 U rIFN-alpha 2 a 3 times a week. Simultaneously, hydroxyurea was given, starting at a dose of 40 mg/kg on day one. The maintenance dosage was adjusted to the white blood cell count. Two patients responded with complete hematological remissions but without cytogenetic and molecular-genetic improvements. Seven patients responded with partial hematological remissions. Response to therapy was rapid; normal white blood cell counts were reached after a median of 12 days. The doses of rIFN-alpha 2a and hydroxyurea needed to keep the leucocyte count in the normal range were low (3×106 U rIFN-alpha 2a 3 times per week, 0.5–1.5 g hydroxyurea/day). Acute toxicity of the combination therapy consisted of fever (9 of 9 patients), flulike symptoms (7 of 9 patients), pruritus and/or rash (3 of 9 patients) and evidence of a tumor cell lysis syndrome (1 of 9 patients). The side effects were not dose-limiting. Combination therapy with rIFN-alpha 2a and hydroxyurea for CML is well tolerated and allows quick and effective hematological control of the disease.
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