Key Points
Outcome of Black AYA patients, mainly those aged 18-29 years, was worse than outcome of White patients receiving similar intensive therapy.
The outcome disparity might be in part attributed to differences in cytogenetic and molecular features between Black and White AYA patients.
Abstract
Survival of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is inversely associated with age, but the impact of race on outcomes of adolescent and young adult (AYA; range, 18-39 years) patients is unknown. We compared survival of 89 non-Hispanic Black and 566 non-Hispanic White AYA patients with AML treated on frontline Cancer and Leukemia Group B/Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology protocols. Samples of 327 patients (50 Black and 277 White) were analyzed via targeted sequencing. Integrated genomic profiling was performed on select longitudinal samples. Black patients had worse outcomes, especially those aged 18 to 29 years, who had a higher early death rate (16% vs 3%; P=.002), lower complete remission rate (66% vs 83%; P=.01), and decreased overall survival (OS; 5-year rates: 22% vs 51%; P<.001) compared with White patients. Survival disparities persisted across cytogenetic groups: Black patients aged 18 to 29 years with non–core-binding factor (CBF)-AML had worse OS than White patients (5-year rates: 12% vs 44%; P<.001), including patients with cytogenetically normal AML (13% vs 50%; P<.003). Genetic features differed, including lower frequencies of normal karyotypes and NPM1 and biallelic CEBPA mutations, and higher frequencies of CBF rearrangements and ASXL1, BCOR, and KRAS mutations in Black patients. Integrated genomic analysis identified both known and novel somatic variants, and relative clonal stability at relapse. Reduced response rates to induction chemotherapy and leukemic clone persistence suggest a need for different treatment intensities and/or modalities in Black AYA patients with AML. Higher early death rates suggest a delay in diagnosis and treatment, calling for systematic changes to patient care.
Introduction
Outcomes of younger patients with cancer are generally better than those of older patients, which is also true for adolescent and young adult (AYA; aged 18-39) patients1 with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) compared with older AML populations.2-5 Moreover, some cancer types have demonstrated a unique biology in AYA patients that can influence response to treatment,6-9 but, to our knowledge, this has not been adequately studied in AML. Differences in outcome exist between racial populations in AML as well, with Black patients having shorter disease-free (DFS) and overall survival (OS) than White patients.10 It remains unclear whether these survival disparities exist specifically in AYA patients, and whether there are associations with genetic characteristics of AML. Herein, we sought to compare outcomes between Black and White AYA patients with AML receiving similar treatment on Cancer and Leukemia Group B (CALGB)/Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology (Alliance) protocols, and to delineate the molecular landscapes of Black and White AYA patients with AML and their potential associations with treatment outcomes.
Methods
Patients and treatment
We identified 816 AYA patients with de novo AML (excluding acute promyelocytic leukemia) with approved cytogenetic results11 who were enrolled on CALGB/Alliance treatment protocols between 1983 and 2016, including 714 self-reported White and 102 Black patients. Importantly, we were able to almost double the number of AYA patients analyzed compared with our previous study,10 including patients that underwent allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) in first complete remission (CR). Thirteen percent of Black and 21% of White patients were excluded from the analyses because of inadequate treatment, off-protocol treatment, or unknown follow-up, resulting in 566 White and 89 Black AYA patients with AML eligible for analysis in our study (Figure 1A).
All patients received intensive induction treatment, followed by intensive consolidation chemotherapy or autologous HSCT. Details regarding treatment trials are provided in the supplemental Methods. For determination of DFS and OS, patients who received off-protocol allogeneic HSCT in first CR were considered as a separate group. All patients provided study-specific written informed consent to participate in treatment studies, which were approved by the institutional review board of each participating institution. The institutional review board of the Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program approved this study.
Mutational profiling
Viable cryopreserved bone marrow (BM) or blood cells were stored for future analyses prior to starting treatment. Mutational profiling was performed centrally at The Ohio State University12 (see supplemental methods for experimental details).
Integrated genomic profiling
Four Black AYA patients with AML, for whom diagnosis and relapse samples were available, underwent integrated mutational and transcriptional profiling. This included whole-exome hybrid capture and next-generation sequencing with chromosomal tiling probes (250-fold coverage) of leukemic and matched germline tissue for detection of single nucleotide variants and small insertions and deletions,13 including both AML-associated and novel somatic mutations. Clonality analysis enabled evaluation of clonal hierarchies in individual patients, and copy number alterations were also assessed. Ribo-depleted, paired-end 151-bp RNA sequencing (60-80 million reads per sample) was performed on diagnosis and relapse materials, followed by identification of fusion genes (known and novel),14 and gene-expression profiling via outlier analyses.
Definition of clinical endpoints
Early death was defined as patient’s death within 30 days of starting therapy, irrespective of cause. CR required an absolute neutrophil count ≥1.5 × 109/L, a platelet count >100 × 109/L, no leukemic blasts in the blood or BM, cellularity >20% with maturation of all cell lines, no Auer rods, <5% BM blast cells, and no evidence of extramedullary leukemia, all of which had persisted for at least 1 month. Relapse was defined by ≥5% BM blasts, circulating leukemic blasts, or the development of extramedullary leukemia.15 DFS was measured from the date of CR until the date of relapse or death; patients alive and relapse-free at last follow-up were censored. OS was measured from the date on study until the date of death, and patients alive at last follow-up were censored.
Statistical analysis
Demographic and clinical features of Black and White patients were compared using the Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables and Wilcoxon rank sum test for continuous variables. Continuous variables were summarized using the median and range. Estimated probabilities of DFS and OS were calculated using the Kaplan-Meier method, and the log-rank test evaluated differences between survival distributions. A limited backward selection technique was used to build the final multivariable models for achievement of CR, DFS, and OS.16 We used logistic regression for modeling CR, and Cox proportional hazards regression for modeling DFS and OS for univariable and multivariable outcome analyses and then adjusted P values to control for per-family error rate.16 Analyses were performed by the Alliance Statistics and Data Center on a database locked on February 11, 2021, using SAS 9.4 and TIBCO Spotfire S+ 8.2.
Results
Clinical and cytogenetic characteristics of Black and White AYA patients with AML
A comparison of clinical characteristics of AYA patients with AML by race revealed almost identical age and sex distribution, and no significant differences between clinical features at diagnosis (supplemental Table 1).
Forty percent of White patients were cytogenetically normal at diagnosis, whereas only 19% of Black patients were (P < .001; Figure 1B; supplemental Table 2). The abnormal karyotypes contained chromosome rearrangements associated with core-binding factor (CBF) AML in 37% of Black and only 22% of White patients (P = .005). Specifically, Black patients harbored t(8;21)(q22;q22)/RUNX1::RUNX1T1 more commonly than White patients (22% vs 10%; P = .002), whereas the incidence of inv(16)(p13.1q22)/CBFB::MYH11 or t(16;16)(p13.1;q22)/CBFB::MYH11 was similar (15% vs 12%, P = .49). The frequencies of other recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities, such as rearrangements of 11q23/KMT2A, t(6;9)(p23;q34), complex karyotype, or sole trisomy 8, did not differ significantly between Black and White patients (Figure 1B; supplemental Table 2).
Molecular characteristics
With respect to known pathogenic AML-associated gene variants, we detected notable differences in the patterns of altered genes. Black patients had a higher incidence of ASXL1 (12% vs 1%; P < .001), KRAS (16% vs 5%; P = .01), ZRSR2 (6% vs 0.4%; P = .01), BCOR (8% vs 2%; P = .05), and CALR (8% vs 2%; P = .05) variants, whereas White patients carried NPM1 (29% vs 4%; P < .001) and biallelic CEBPA (17% vs 3%; P = .02) variants more frequently (Figure 1C; supplemental Table 3). Analysis of families of variants by gene function revealed that the Black AYA patients had higher numbers of variants affecting genes involved in chromatin remodeling (20% vs 5%; P < .001; supplemental Table 3).
To gain insights into the genetic features of Black AYA patients with AML, and to explore whether race-specific molecular features at diagnosis or relapse might help explain the observed survival disparities, we performed integrated genomic profiling of 4 Black AYA patients. We identified 84 variants with a variant allele fraction ≥2% in 79 genes at diagnosis or relapse (supplemental Table 4). Although the only genes found mutated in 2 or more patients were the known AML-associated genes, FLT3, NPM1, and NRAS, almost one-third of the genes mutated in single patients (n = 27 genes, 34%) have not been described thus far in the combined hallmark AML sequencing studies.17-19
All 4 patients exhibited relatively high clonal stability at relapse, with the original dominant leukemic clone persisting at relapse in every patient, albeit with either expansion of preexisting smaller clones or emergence of additional novel subclones at relapse (Figure 2A-B; supplemental Figure 1). Similarly, the expression profiles of patients also showed relatively high stability, with consistent individual outlier gene expression identified in each pretreatment and relapse patient sample (supplemental Figure 2). Notably, measurable residual disease was detectable in both NPM1-mutated patients at the time of morphologic CR, after consolidation treatment in 1 patient, and after completion of induction but prior to consolidation in the second.
Copy number analyses revealed additional involvement of AML-associated genes, including subclonal loss of heterozygosity of chromosome 1 containing the NRAS locus (1p13.2) in patient 1, resulting in a clonal population with a homozygous NRAS mutation (Figure 2B). Patients 2 and 4, both of whom had cytogenetically normal AML (CN-AML), harbored a uniparental disomy of chromosome 13,20 which contains the FLT3 locus (13q12.2). Patient 4 harbored a FLT3-ITD at diagnosis and gained the chromosome 13 UPD at relapse, which is consistent with a biologic mechanism of increasing the mutant copies of FLT3 (ie, high FLT3-ITD allelic ratio).
Outcomes of Black and White AYA patients with AML treated on CALGB/Alliance protocols
Within the entire patient cohort, Black patients had worse outcomes than White patients (Table 1), including a higher early death rate (defined as death within 30 days of protocol enrollment; 11% vs 2%; P < .001), a trend toward lower CR rate (73% vs 82%; P = .06), and shorter OS (5-year rates, 32% vs 46%; P = .002), but not DFS (5-year rates, 32% vs 40%; P = .25; Figure 3A-B). There were no significant differences in pretreatment clinical, demographic, or molecular characteristics between Black and White AYA patients who died early (supplemental Table 5).
We also separately assessed outcomes of 2 age subsets separated by a decade within the AYA population, namely, patients aged 18 to 29 years and those aged 30 to 39 years (Table 1). We found that the survival difference between Black and White patients occurred mostly in the younger subset, wherein Black patients had a dramatically higher early death rate (16% vs 3%; P = .002). There was no significant difference with respect to the day of early death between Black and White patients (median day post study enrollment, day 14 vs day 11), and no enrichment of patients experiencing early death in any study protocol, time frame, or study site. Black patients aged 18 to 29 years also had a lower CR rate (66% vs 83%; P = .01), and a race-associated OS gap of almost 9 years: the median OS of Black patients was 1.3 years, whereas White patients had a median OS of 10.2 years (P < .001). In contrast, there were no significant differences in the OS between Black and White patients who were 30 to 39 years of age, nor in DFS in either age subset (Table 1; Figure 3C-D).
Next, we performed a multivariable analysis to determine whether Black race represented an independent prognosticator for outcome in AYA patients with AML. Indeed, after adjustment for white blood cell counts and the presence of CBF-AML, Black race was a significant predictor of both shorter DFS (P = .04) and shorter OS (P < .001; Table 2; supplemental Figure 4).
Allogeneic HSCT in first CR of AYA patients with AML
Fifteen percent (n = 85) of White AYA and only 4.5% (n = 4) of Black AYA patients with AML received an allogeneic HSCT in first CR, for whom we next performed a dedicated outcome analysis. White patients who underwent allogeneic HSCT had longer DFS than did Black patients who did not undergo this intensive regimen (P = .01; Figure 4A). Despite notable Kaplan-Meier curve separation, there was no statistically significant difference in OS among the treatment groups (P = .21; Figure 4B). In our multivariable analysis, Black race remained significant in a model for OS that included both patients treated postremission with chemotherapy or autologous HSCT and those who received an allogeneic HSCT in first CR (P < .001; Table 1).
Comparison of outcomes of AYA Black and White patients with CBF-AML and those with other karyotypes
As a relatively large proportion of Black patients harbored chromosome rearrangements that define CBF-AML, we analyzed the outcomes of patients in this subset (n = 155). Black patients with CBF-AML tended to have a higher rate of early death (12% vs 3%; P = .06) and lower CR rate (85% vs 95%; P = .06) and had a shorter OS (5-year rates, 54% vs 70%; P = .05), but not DFS, compared with White patients (Figure 5A-B; supplemental Table 6). Our comparison of presenting clinical features between Black and White AYA patients with CBF-AML, including Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, revealed no obvious differences that could explain the higher rate of early deaths in the Black AYA patients (supplemental Table 7). With respect to specific subtypes of CBF-AML, DFS or OS did not differ significantly between Black and White patients with CBF-AML harboring t(8;21) (supplemental Figure 3A-B), whereas OS, but not DFS, of Black patients with CBF-AML with inv(16)/t(16;16) aged 18 to 29 years was shorter than that of both 18- to 29- and 30- to 39-year-old White AYA patients (Figure 5C-D).
Of note, there were no significant differences in distributions of secondary cytogenetic abnormalities co-occurring with t(8;21) or inv(16)/t(16;16) nor of known mutations, including in the KIT gene, between Black and White patients with CBF-AML that could explain the observed survival disparities (supplemental Tables 2 and 3). In addition, all 4 Black patients with CBF-AML with RNAseq data available had detectable CBFB::MYH11 or RUNX1::RUNX1T1 fusions that were previously reported in the literature (supplemental Table 8), making it unlikely that differences in precise location of chromosomal breakpoints could be the reasons for the frequency or survival differences.
We also analyzed outcomes of AYA patients aged 18 to 29 years who were diagnosed with non–CBF-AML and those with CN-AML. The outcome of younger Black AYA patients with non–CBF-AML was dramatically poor and worse than that of White patients (DFS, 5-year rates: 14% vs 34%, P < .001; OS, 5-year rates: 12% vs 44%, P < .001; Figure 5E-F). Although Black AYA patients aged 18 to 29 years with CBF-AML had better survival than Black patients with non–CBF-AML, the survival of Black patients with CBF-AML was similar to that of White patients with non–CBF-AML. Similarly, Black patients with CN-AML had very poor outcomes. Not a single 18- to 29-year-old Black patient with CN-AML was disease-free 5 years after diagnosis (5-year rates: 0% vs 43%), and only 1 of 9 patients was alive (5-year rates: 13% vs 50%, P = .003; supplemental Figure 3C-D; supplemental Table 9).
Discussion
We show that the outcome of Black AYA patients was inferior to that of White patients in a large cohort of 655 AYA patients with AML, all of whom received similar intensive therapy on frontline Alliance/CALGB treatment protocols. Strikingly, this survival disparity occurred exclusively among the younger AYA patients (aged 18-29 years), whereas Black and White patients aged 30 to 39 years had similar outcomes. Specifically, 18- to 29-year-old Black patients with AML had alarmingly high early death rates within the first 30 days of study enrollment, indicating possible delays in diagnosis and care, and a low CR rate of only 66% that suggests inherently different responses to induction therapy. These features contributed to these very young adult Black patients having a median survival nearly 9 years shorter than White patients in the same age group. The race-associated survival disparity was present across different cytogenetic subgroups, including patients with CBF-AML. However, despite inferior survival of Black patients with CBF-AML compared with Whites, the prognosis of Black patients with CBF-AML was still relatively favorable, because the 5-year OS rate of 18- to 29-year-old Black patients with non–CBF-AML was only 12% vs 54% in Black patients with CBF-AML. In fact, the high proportion of CBF-AML among Black vs White AYA patients with AML likely resulted in the longer OS of all young Black patients with AML when analyzed together and compared with that of all young White patients.
We show that ∼40% of Black AYA patients harbor a CBF-AML–defining chromosomal abnormality, indicative of a distinct disease biology in this population that requires further attention and exploration. Notably, a high incidence of CBF-AML–defining rearrangements, and specifically of t(8;21), was previously reported in adult Black patients with AML.21 Our data suggest that this might be mostly driven by AYA patients. Interestingly, a high frequency of t(8;21) in Black patients with AML has also recently been reported in pediatric AML, with 21.3% of Black vs 10.9% of non-Hispanic White patients harboring the t(8;21) translocation.22
We observed differences in the frequencies of AML-associated mutations, with Black AYA patients harboring more often mutations in the ASXL123-25 and BCOR26-28 genes, which have been reported to confer worse outcomes, and carrying less frequently prognostically favorable NPM1 mutations26,29 and biallelic mutations in the CEBPA gene.26,30,31 Although the lower frequency of those 2 favorable risk markers we report herein may be considered as possible contributors to the inferior treatment outcome of Black AYA patients as compared with the outcome of White AYA patients, the previous notion of poor survival specifically of NPM1-mutated/FLT3-ITDlow/no younger Black patients with AML may instead raise the possibility of differences in the disease biology of favorable risk AML between Black and White patients with AML.
Our pilot exome-sequencing data indicate that common AML mutations are also found in Black patients. However, almost one-third of the detected variants were found in genes thus far not associated with AML, indicating the need for larger studies in this population to assess frequencies of these gene mutations and their associations with disease. Importantly, the integrated genomic profiling of pretreatment and relapse samples demonstrated relatively high clonal stability and persistence of the driver clone, suggesting the need for more intense treatment or an alternate approach for successful eradication of the leukemic clone. Although the interpretation of these findings is limited by the small number of studied patients, it highlights the need of large-scale sequencing studies to appreciate possible ancestry-associated differences in genetic findings and associated genomic response.
Our study is limited by relatively small sample sizes of the particular molecular subgroups. Furthermore, in view of the observed differences in the early death rates, the incompleteness of records with causes of patients’ early death and sociodemographic features precluded more in-depth analyses that could potentially help explain this alarming disparity, thus making further large studies necessary. On the other hand, the strength of our study lies in the fact that proportions of Black and White patients we analyzed mirror closely the ancestry composition of the general US population.32
Reasons for the racial disparities in outcomes are undoubtedly multifaceted, as previously demonstrated.1,33-35 The high early death rates might suggest treatment delays or inferior care as well as comorbidities that could reflect cultural biases and structural racism but could also be indicative of a more aggressive disease biology. Likewise, lower CR rates may indicate chemoresistant disease or could point to a pharmacogenomic etiology based on alternate drug metabolism resulting in lower target exposure and may warrant dedicated follow-up studies. For the youngest Black patients, the median DFS of 1.2 years is essentially equal to the median OS of 1.3 years in this group, suggesting that the initial treatment outcome was paramount to OS. This result encompasses not only early deaths and primary refractory disease but also lack of successful salvage upon relapse. Based on our data, even Black AYA patients aged 18 to 29 years with favorable risk genetics have a considerable risk of relapse with current standard of care treatment, and consolidation type and/or intensity may need to be reconsidered for this patient population, especially because there was no difference in the numbers of consolidation cycles received between Black and White patients. The detection of MRD in the 2 NPM1-mutated cases at the time of morphologic CR further supports the routine use of MRD assessment, in line with current guidelines.36-41
We believe that these and other data10,21 justify further prospective studies of Black AYA patients with AML, including evaluation of alternate frontline and/or consolidation treatments, collection of the Social Determinants of Health to try to assess nonclinical reasons for poor outcomes, as well as careful consideration and enhanced monitoring for the individual Black AYA patients with AML being treated in the clinic today.
Acknowledgments
The authors are grateful to the patients who consented to participate in these clinical trials and the families who supported them, Christopher Manring, and the CALGB/Alliance Leukemia Tissue Bank at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, Columbus, Ohio, for sample processing and storage services, and Lisa J. Sterling for data management.
Research reported in this publication was supported by an allocation of computing resources from The Ohio Supercomputer Center and Shared Resources (Leukemia Tissue Bank) and in part by the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute under Award Numbers U10CA180821, U10CA180882, and U24CA196171 (to the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology), UG1CA189824, UG1CA233338, P50 CA140158, UG1CA233331, U10CA180867, R35CA197734, UG1CA189850, and 5P30CA016058, the Coleman Leukemia Research Foundation, ASH Junior Faculty Scholar and ASH Bridge Award (A.-K.E.), the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Translational Research Grant (A.-K.E.), The Leukemia Research Foundation (A.-K.E.), the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Foundation Young Investigator Award (J.S.B.), the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology Scholar Award (J.S.B.), The D. Warren Brown Foundation, Pelotonia (A.-K.E. and A.S.M.). Support to Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology and Alliance Foundation Trials programs is listed at https://acknowledgments.alliancefound.org. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00048958, #NCT00899223, and #NCT00900224.
The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Celebrating the life and accomplishments of Clara D. Bloomfield (1942-2020), who died unexpectedly on March 1, 2020.
Authorship
Contribution: A.-K.E., K.T.L., J.C.B., and E.R.M. contributed to the study design; K.T.L., D.N., K.M., E.R.M., E.D.P., J.C.B., and A.-K.E. contributed to the data interpretation; K.T.L., K.M., and A.-K.E. wrote the manuscript; A.-K.E., K.E.M., A.S.M., I.B., J.S.B., C.C.O., A.H., H.D., and S.O. performed laboratory-based research; B.J.K., K.E.M., C.J.W., S.L., S.W., G.W., and J.S.B. performed genomic data analysis; D.N. and J.K. performed statistical analysis; A.J.C., K.M., W.B., B.L.P., J.E.K., J.O.M., R.J.M., R.A.L., R.M.S., and J.C.B. were involved directly or Indirectly in the care of patients and/or sample procurement; and all authors read and agreed on the final version of the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: J.S.B. consults for KITE, INNATE, AbbVie, and AstraZeneca; and receives honoraria from KITE, INNATE, AbbVie, and AstraZeneca. A.S.M. received research funding from Leukemia and Lymphoma Society's Beat AML clinical study, Aptevo, Daiichi Sankyo, Glycomemetics, Kartos Pharmaceuticals, Xencor, and Genentech; and consults for Aptevo, Abbvie, BMS, Glycomemetics, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Kura Oncology, and Syndax Pharmaceuticals. C.J.W. is currently employed by Karyopharm Therapeutics; and is a current holder of individual stocks and stock options in a privately held company. W.B. received research funding from Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Celyad Oncology, Forma Therapeutics, Nkarta, and Xencor; and received honoraria from Abbvie, AmerisourceBergen, and Syndax. R.A.L. received research funding from Astellas, Cellectis, Gilead, Novartis, and Rafael Pharmaceuticals; and consults for AbbVie, CVS/Caremark, Epizyme, and Takeda. R.M.S. consults for AbbVie, Agios, Aprea, Arog, Boston Pharmaceuticals, Bristol Myers Squibb, Celgene, Foghorn Therapeutics, GlaxoSmithKline, Innate, Janssen, Jazz, Macrogenics, Novartis, Onconova, and Takeda; received research funding from AbbVie, Agios, Arog, and Novartis; and serves on the advisory committee or Board of Directors for Actinium, Amgen, Astellas, BerGen Bio, Elevate Bio, Gemoab, Syndax, Syntrix/ACI, and Syros. E.D.P. received research funding from Merck and Pfizer. J.C.B. consults for Astellas, AstraZeneca, Novartis, Pharmacyclics, Syndax, and Trillium; receives honoraria from Astellas, AstraZeneca, Novartis, Pharmacyclics, Syndax, and Trillium; is a Chairman of the Scientific Advisory Board of Vincerx Pharmaceuticals and a member of advisory committee of Newave; and is a current equity holder of Vincerx Pharmaceuticals. A.-K.E. is a spouse of C.J.W., who is currently employed by Karyopharm Therapeutics. The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Ann-Kathrin Eisfeld, The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, 460 West 12th Ave, Room 850, Columbus, OH 43210-1228; e-mail: ann.kathrin.eisfeld@osumc.edu; Krzysztof Mrózek, The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, OSU Medical Center, Room 351, 650 Ackerman Rd, Columbus, OH 43202; e-mail: krzysztof.mrozek@osumc.edu; and Karilyn T. Larkin, The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, 320 West 10th Ave, Columbus, OH 43210-1228; e-mail: karilyn.larkin@osumc.edu.
References
Author notes
Presented in abstract form at the 63th annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology, Atlanta, GA, 11 December 2021.
Patient data used in survival analysis was obtained from Alliance Statistics and Data Center. Individual participant data will not be shared. For other data sharing, contact the corresponding author: ann-kathrin.eisfeld@osumc.edu.
The full-text version of this article contains a data supplement.
Clara D. Bloomfield died on 1 March 2020.