TO THE EDITOR:

The survival of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) has improved since the 1970s because of continuous fine-tuning of treatment protocols based on a series of randomized clinical trials.1,2  Alas, despite more precise risk stratification and widespread implementation of aggressive treatment protocols, results in adults have not been as promising.3  For example, the 5-year relative survival of adult ALL patients diagnosed from 2002 to 2006 in Germany and the United States of America was 43.4% and 35.5%, respectively.4  Although survival was better in patients aged 15 and 24 years, with 5-year relative survival of 59.2% (Germany) and 54.9% (United States), the lack of curative treatment of many adult patients is disconcerting. Poorer outcomes for adolescent and young adult patients have been attributed to lower rates of enrollment in clinical trials, although there is recent evidence of improved enrollment rates for these patients.5  There is an ongoing shift in the treatment of younger adult ALL patients in high-resource countries with increasing use of pediatric or pediatric-inspired protocols (in Sweden’s Nordic Society for Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Protocol for Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Intermittent Versus Continuous PEG Asparaginase [NOPHO ALL2008] protocol) up to age 45, as well as the introduction of imatinib and later-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors for patients with Philadelphia-positive or Philadelphia-like ALL.6,7 

We read with great interest the Cancer and Leukemia Group B 10403 study recently reported in this journal.8  The authors stated that the “use of a pediatric regimen for young adults with ALL up to age 40 years was feasible and effective, resulting in improved survival rates compared to historical controls.” Their results motivated us to compare, in a population-based setting, temporal trends in relative survival of ALL patients in Sweden and the United States Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database, with emphasis on younger adults.

We identified all patients diagnosed with ALL between 1 January 1980 and 31 December 2015 in the Swedish Cancer Register (Table 1), which is maintained by the National Board of Health and Welfare and was founded in 1958 and covers all of Sweden.9,10  All physicians and pathologists/cytologists are obliged by law to report each occurrence of cancer to the registry. Patients were followed from the date of diagnosis until death, emigration, or end of follow-up (31 December 2017), whichever occurred first. The choice to include patients from 1980 was because coding practices have been consistent since 1980.

Table 1.

Characteristics of patients diagnosed with ALL in the United States (SEER) and Sweden

1980-19861987-19911992-19961997-20012002-2015Total
N%N%N%N%N%N%
Sweden             
 Male 150 56 126 62 113 55 121 54 371 56 881 56 
 Female 120 44 76 38 92 45 105 46 288 44 681 44 
 Total 270 100 202 100 205 100 226 100 659 100 1562 100 
Age, y             
  18-29 57 21 35 17 41 20 43 19 129 20 305 20 
  30-44 51 19 42 21 34 17 44 19 146 22 317 20 
  45-64 69 26 53 26 64 31 71 31 181 27 438 28 
  65-84 93 34 72 36 66 32 68 30 203 31 502 32 
 Total 270 100 202 100 205 100 226 100 659 100 1562 100 
 Median age, y 56  54  53  53  52  53  
Allogeneic stem cell  transplantations, no.             
  Ages 18-45, y 14  20  32  56  182  304  
  Ages 46+, y    21  89  117  
United States (SEER-9)             
 Male 425 62 396 61 383 59 394 58 1381 56 2979 58 
 Female 266 38 248 39 268 41 285 42 1078 44 2145 42 
 Total 691 100 644 100 651 100 679 100 2459 100 5124 100 
 Age group, y             
  18-29 207 30 137 21 161 25 156 23 525 21 1186 23 
  30-44 138 20 144 22 150 23 149 22 499 20 1080 21 
  45-64 168 24 173 27 160 25 216 32 862 35 1579 31 
  65-84 178 26 190 30 180 28 158 23 573 23 1279 25 
 Total 691 100 644 100 651 100 679 100 2459 100 5124 100 
 Median age, y 45  50  46  48  50  49  
 Race             
  White 599 87 555 86 549 84 557 82 1911 78 4171 81 
  Black 43 40 47 44 218 392 
  Other 47 49 54 75 11 314 13 539 11 
  Unknown 16 22 
 Total 691 100 644 100 651 100 679 100 2459 100 5124 100 
1980-19861987-19911992-19961997-20012002-2015Total
N%N%N%N%N%N%
Sweden             
 Male 150 56 126 62 113 55 121 54 371 56 881 56 
 Female 120 44 76 38 92 45 105 46 288 44 681 44 
 Total 270 100 202 100 205 100 226 100 659 100 1562 100 
Age, y             
  18-29 57 21 35 17 41 20 43 19 129 20 305 20 
  30-44 51 19 42 21 34 17 44 19 146 22 317 20 
  45-64 69 26 53 26 64 31 71 31 181 27 438 28 
  65-84 93 34 72 36 66 32 68 30 203 31 502 32 
 Total 270 100 202 100 205 100 226 100 659 100 1562 100 
 Median age, y 56  54  53  53  52  53  
Allogeneic stem cell  transplantations, no.             
  Ages 18-45, y 14  20  32  56  182  304  
  Ages 46+, y    21  89  117  
United States (SEER-9)             
 Male 425 62 396 61 383 59 394 58 1381 56 2979 58 
 Female 266 38 248 39 268 41 285 42 1078 44 2145 42 
 Total 691 100 644 100 651 100 679 100 2459 100 5124 100 
 Age group, y             
  18-29 207 30 137 21 161 25 156 23 525 21 1186 23 
  30-44 138 20 144 22 150 23 149 22 499 20 1080 21 
  45-64 168 24 173 27 160 25 216 32 862 35 1579 31 
  65-84 178 26 190 30 180 28 158 23 573 23 1279 25 
 Total 691 100 644 100 651 100 679 100 2459 100 5124 100 
 Median age, y 45  50  46  48  50  49  
 Race             
  White 599 87 555 86 549 84 557 82 1911 78 4171 81 
  Black 43 40 47 44 218 392 
  Other 47 49 54 75 11 314 13 539 11 
  Unknown 16 22 
 Total 691 100 644 100 651 100 679 100 2459 100 5124 100 

Using a case-listing session in the SEER*Stat software,11  we identified all patients diagnosed with ALL between 1973 and 2015 based on the SEER 9 database of the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program of the United States National Cancer Institute.12  Patients were followed to the end of 2015. The SEER 9 database covered 9.4% of the US population in 201013  and is based on geographical areas selected for their ability to operate and maintain high-quality population-based cancer-reporting systems and for their epidemiologically significant population subgroups. The SEER population is similar to that of the general US population in terms of racial and ethnic makeup, although it may be more affluent than average14  and deliberately oversamples some racial and ethnic minorities including Hispanics, Asians, and Pacific Islanders.13 

Relative survival ratios (RSRs) were estimated as measures of net survival.15,16  An important advantage of the relative survival framework is that it provides a measure of excess mortality associated with a diagnosis of cancer without relying on classification of cause of death. We estimated relative survival using flexible parametric relative survival models.17  For the main analysis, we predicted temporal trends in 1- and 5-year relative survival for patients in age groups 18 to 29, 30 to 44, 45 to 64, and 65 to 84 years. This model was restricted to the first 6 years of follow-up and to patients aged 45 years and older at diagnosis. We restricted follow-up to 6 years, rather than 5, to improve the stability of 5-year survival estimates. Time since diagnosis and year of diagnosis were modeled using natural splines with 6 and 2 degrees of freedom, respectively. The model included an interaction between age and year. All main effects and the interaction were time-dependent (effectively relaxing assumptions of nonproportional excess hazards). Results are presented for both sexes combined, because sex-specific analyses showed similar results. Analyses were performed using Stata release 15.1 (College Station, TX: StataCorp LLC).

There was a male dominance in both the Swedish (56%) and US cohorts (58%; Table 1). Patients diagnosed in the 65 to 84 year age group constituted 32% in Sweden and 25% in the United States, leading to a slightly higher median age at diagnosis in Sweden (Table 1). The number of allogeneic transplants increased 2.3 times in younger (18-45 years) and 3.1 times in older (46+ years) Swedish patients between the last 2 calendar periods. Starting in the mid-1990s, there was a gradual increase in 5-year RS of patients aged 30-44 years in both cohorts; 5-year RSRs were predicted to be 0.67 (95% Confidence Interval [CI], 0.54-0.77; Sweden) and 0.60 (95% CI, 0.51-0.68; SEER) in patients diagnosed in 2015 (Figure 1). The corresponding 5-year RSRs in patients diagnosed in 1990 were 0.26 (95% CI, 0.20-0.33) and 0.25 (95% CI, 0.21-0.28). The steepest increase in relative survival was observed in Swedish patients diagnosed between 2005 and 2015. In 18- to 29-year-old patients, the improvement in 5-year relative survival (RS) started 5 to 10 years earlier and increased faster in Swedish patients, with 5-year RSRs predicted to be 0.71 (95% confidence interval, 0.56-0.81; Sweden) and 0.62 (95% confidence interval, 0.53-0.70; SEER) in patients diagnosed in 2015, respectively. A similar but not so clear pattern observed regarding 1-year RS for both age groups (supplemental Material, available on the Blood Web site). Smaller improvements in RS were observed in age groups 45 to 64 and 65 to 84 years diagnosed in the most recent decade.

Figure 1.

Trends in 5-year relative survival for ALL patients diagnosed in the United States (SEER) and Sweden.

Figure 1.

Trends in 5-year relative survival for ALL patients diagnosed in the United States (SEER) and Sweden.

Close modal

We believe these improvements in survival confirm, importantly, also in a population-based setting, that pediatric-inspired regimens used in young adult ALL patients improve survival.6,18,19  Stock et al8  compared outcomes in patients treated between 2007 and 2012 with historical controls without adjusting for improvements observed over time in the general population. In this analysis, we chose to use RS on population-based cohorts to minimize the effect such biases. The superior cure rate for children has been suggested to be related to differences in disease biology and chemosensitivity as well as better treatment tolerance, physician compliance, and patient adherence in the pediatric patient population.6  In the Nordic countries, NOPHO ALL2008 was introduced for patients aged 1 to 45 years with Philadelphia chromosome negative B-cell precursor or T-lineage ALL.7  The main difference between previous protocols for adults and this pediatric protocol includes extensive use in all risk groups of asparaginase and high-dose methotrexate with coadministration of mercaptopurine. These and RS modifications have clearly contributed to the improved survival observed in the young adult Swedish patients. The next generation of pediatric ALL treatment protocols should be followed closely by physicians also taking care of young adult patients.20 

Technical details of the analyses and code for reproducing the analysis can be found at http://pauldickman.com/all/.

The online version of this article contains a data supplement.

Contribution: M.B., G.E., and P.W.D. designed the study; P.W.D. gathered the data; P.W.D. and G.E. performed the statistical analyses; all authors analyzed and interpreted the data; M.B. and P.W.D. wrote the first draft; and all authors approved the final manuscript.

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Correspondence: Magnus Björkholm, Karolinska University Hospital Solna, SE-17176 Stockholm, Sweden; e-mail: magnus.bjorkholm@sll.se.

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