Figure 3
Figure 3. Postrelapse survival, by relapse type. Postrelapse survival in patients randomized for postremission therapy. One hundred seventeen of the 164 patients randomized for postremission therapy relapsed. Twenty-seven relapses (23%) were classified as MDS recurrence (18 in the intensive versus 9 in the ambulatory arm; not significantly different). Postrelapse survival was significantly longer in these 27 patients than in other relapsing patients (P = .002 by the log-rank test). The incidence of MDS recurrence was more frequent in patients treated for post-MDS than for de novo AML (44% versus 19%, P = .03). Cumulative incidence of relapse was significantly higher in patients with post-MDS AML (59% versus 44% at 12 months, P = .005 by the Gray test) but due to a longer postrelapse survival their OS was eventually comparable with OS of patients with de novo AML.

Postrelapse survival, by relapse type. Postrelapse survival in patients randomized for postremission therapy. One hundred seventeen of the 164 patients randomized for postremission therapy relapsed. Twenty-seven relapses (23%) were classified as MDS recurrence (18 in the intensive versus 9 in the ambulatory arm; not significantly different). Postrelapse survival was significantly longer in these 27 patients than in other relapsing patients (P = .002 by the log-rank test). The incidence of MDS recurrence was more frequent in patients treated for post-MDS than for de novo AML (44% versus 19%, P = .03). Cumulative incidence of relapse was significantly higher in patients with post-MDS AML (59% versus 44% at 12 months, P = .005 by the Gray test) but due to a longer postrelapse survival their OS was eventually comparable with OS of patients with de novo AML.

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