Abstract
In 1980, the French Cooperative Group on Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia started a randomized clinical trial in which 612 good prognosis patients (stage A) received either no treatment (309 patients) or an indefinite course of chlorambucil at the daily dose of 0.1 mg/kg (303 patients). Overall survival appeared to be better in the untreated group (50 deceased patients compared with 62 in the chlorambucil group), but the difference was not significant (P = .21) even after adjusting for both prognostic and imbalanced factors (P = .09). The crude 5-year survival rates were 82% in the untreated group and 75% in the chlorambucil group. The action of chlorambucil appeared to be a complex phenomenon associating beneficial effects consisting in slowing down disease progression to stage B or C (P < 30 × 109/L had a survival that was not significantly different (P = .46) from that of the age- and sex-matched French population. These patients, accounting for about 50% of all chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients, should not be treated unless disease progression is observed. © 199O by The American Society of Hematology.
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CITATION STYLE
Binet, J. L. (1990). Effects of chlorambucil and therapeutic decision in initial forms of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (stage A): Results of a randomized clinical trial on 612 patients. Blood, 75(7), 1414–1421.
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