Increase in PEG-asparaginase clearance as a predictor for inactivation in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Author:

Albertsen Birgitte1ORCID,Dam Merete1ORCID,Centanni Maddalena2,Friberg Lena2,Centanni Daniel2,Karlsson Mats2,Lynggaard Line Stensig1ORCID,Johannsdottir Inga Maria3,Wik Hilde4,Malmros Johan5,Vaitkeviciene Goda6,Griskevicius Laimonas7,Hallböök Helene8,Jonsson Olafur9,Overgaard Ulrik10,Schmiegelow Kjeld11ORCID,Nygaard Stefan12,Heyman Mats13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Aarhus University Hospital

2. Uppsala University

3. Department of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway

4. Oslo University Hospital, Ullevaal

5. Astrid Lindgren Children's Hospital, Karolinska University Hospital and Department of Women’s and Children’s Health, Karolinska Institutet

6. Vilnius University Hospital Santaros Klinikos and VIlnius University

7. Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Clinics

8. Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University

9. Pediatrics

10. Herlev University Hospital

11. Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet

12. Aarhus University

13. Karolinska Institute

Abstract

Abstract Asparaginase is an essential component of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) therapy, yet its associated toxicities often lead to treatment discontinuation, increasing the risk of relapse. Hypersensitivity reactions include clinical allergies, silent inactivation, or allergy-like responses. We hypothesized that even moderate increases in asparaginase clearance are related to later inactivation. We therefore explored mandatory monitoring of asparaginase enzyme activity (AEA) in patients with ALL aged 1–45 years treated according to the ALLTogether pilot protocol in the Nordic and Baltic countries to relate mean AEA to inactivation, to build a pharmacokinetic model to better characterize the pharmacokinetics of PEG-asparaginase and assess whether an increased clearance relates to subsequent inactivation. The study analysed 1 631 real-time AEA samples from 253 patients, identifying inactivation in 18.2% of the patients. This inactivation presented as mild allergy (28.3%), severe allergy (50.0%), or silent inactivation (21.7%). A pharmacokinetic transit compartment model was used to describe AEA-time profiles, revealing that 93% of patients with inactivation exhibited prior increased clearance, whereas 86% of patients without hypersensitivity maintained stable clearance throughout asparaginase treatment. These findings enable prediction of inactivation and options for either dose increments or a shift to alternative asparaginase formulations to optimize ALL treatment strategies.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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