Sandbox: HCL therapy
Overview
Medical Therapy
- The mainstay of therapy for hairy cell leukemia patients is chemotherapy.
- Asymptomatic hairy cell leukemia patients, with no indications for therapy, may be managed by observation and close follow-up.
- Indications to initiate medical therapy among patients with hairy cell leukemia include:
- The presence of systemic symptoms such as fever, night sweats, and significant weight loss
- The presence of subcostal abdominal discomfort due to splenomegaly
- A positive history of recurrent infections
- Hemoglobin concentration lower than 12 g/dl
- Platelets count lower than 100,000/mcl
- Absolute neutrophils count lower than 1000/mcl
- Pharmacological agents used for the treatment of hairy cell leukemia patients include:
First Line Therapy
- The preferred pharmacological agent used for the initial management of hairy cell leukemia could be either cladribine or pentostatin.
- Cladribine is administered by a single daily IV infusion for a period of 5-7 days.[1]
- Pentostatin is administered by a single IV infusion every 2 weeks for a period of 3-6 months.
- Common side effects of such agents may include:
- Immune suppression
- Acute kidney failure
- Fatigue
- High fever
- Hairy cell leukemia patients who demonstrate a complete response following initial medical therapy should be followed-up with close observation for any signs of relapse.
- A complete response to medical therapy among patients with hairy cell leukemia is defined by:
- Resolution of the patient's symptoms
- The absence of splenomegaly on physical exam
- Recovery of the patients blood counts to the normal limits
- The absence of malignant leukemic cells on blood smear or bone marrow aspiration
Relapsed Therapy
- The optimal therapy for patients who relapse after a complete response depends on the duration of disease-free period following the initial medical therapy.
- Hairy cell leukemia patients who relapse after one year or more are be managed by the same initial purine analogue ± rituximab.
- Whereas hairy cell leukemia patients who relapse before a period of one year are managed by an alternative purine analogue ± rituximab.
Refractory Therapy
- Hairy cell leukemia patients who do not demonstrate a complete response to medical therapy could be further managed by any of the following agents:
- Rituximab alone
- Interferon alpha alone
- An alternate purine analogue ± rituximab
- Rituximab is administered by a single IV infusion every week for a period of 8 weeks.[1]
- Interferon alpha is administered by a single IV infusion (3 million units) three times a week for a period of 12-18 months.
- The major side effect of rituximab treatment is serum sickness, whereas the major side effects of interferon alpha are flu-like symptoms and depression.
- Patients with progressive hairy cell leukemia who do not demonstrate a complete response to any of the aforementioned medical therapies should be managed with vemurafenib.
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Hairy cell leukemia. Wikipedia (2015) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hairy_cell_leukemia#Pathophysiology Accessed on Ocotber, 19 2015