Authors: Sanjeeva Gunasekera, Geeth Vindula, Ryan Combs, Scott C. Howard
Published: 2020-10-08
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2020.38.29_suppl.17
Source: Full article
17 Background: In Sri Lanka, children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia are treated on the UKALL 2011 protocol, which includes high-dose methotrexate (HDMTX) in high risk patients. Safe delivery of HDMTX is challenging in low resource settings, where deviation from accepted guidelines can occur frequently and result in toxicity, subsequent treatment delays, and in extreme cases, death. The goal of this study was to compare current practices to the treatment and supportive care details described in the protocol to identify the incidence and impact of guideline-discordant care to deliver HDMTX more safely children with cancer in Sri Lanka. Methods: We reviewed medical records to assess guideline concordance in 4 critical aspects of HDMTX delivery: 2 consecutive alkaline urine pH readings in the 2-hour period before starting HDMTX, 24-hour duration of MTX infusion (as opposed to early stop), the first dose of folinic acid administered later than 36 hours from start of HDMTX infusion (no inappropriately early rescue), and the administration of at least 3 folinic acid doses per course (appropriate duration of rescue). We analyzed how each deviation influenced AKI (creatinine increase of 0.3 mg/dL or more), infection, and treatment delays (defined as recovery delayed 7 days or longer from the 14 days expected between courses of HDMTX). Results: We analyzed 309 HDMTX courses in 91 patients younger than 20 years, including 105 girls (34%). In 83 courses (27%) alkaline urine was not documented prior to the start of MTX. Infusion time was less than 24 hours in 239 courses (77%), most of which finished 20-21 hours. In 37 courses (12%), the first folinic acid dose was given inappropriately early, and in 25 courses (8%) less than 3 doses of folinic acid were given. There were 2 episodes of AKI, 43 infections, 11 treatment delays and one death. None of the 4 guideline deviations were significantly associated with AKI or treatment delays. Patient sex was also not associated with any difference in guideline discordance or outcome (p>0.1 in all cases). Conclusions: Significant deviations from HDMTX administration guidelines were common, especially early completion of infusion. However, outcomes were not impacted so quality standards may require adjustment to focus only on extreme deviations likely to impact patient outcomes.