Publication details
Estimation of current cumulative incidence of leukaemia
-free patients and current leukaemia
-free survival in chronic myeloid leukaemia in the era of modern pharmacotherapy
| Basic information | |
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| Original title: | Estimation of current cumulative incidence of leukaemia -free patients and current leukaemia -free survival in chronic myeloid leukaemia in the era of modern pharmacotherapy |
| Authors: | Tomáš Pavlík, Eva Janoušová, Zdeněk Pospíšil, Jan Mužík, Daniela Žáčková, Zdeněk Ráčil, Hana Klamová, Petr Cetkovský, Marek Trněný, Jiří Mayer, Ladislav Dušek |
| Further information | |
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| Citation: | PAVLÍK, Tomáš, Eva JANOUŠOVÁ, Zdeněk POSPÍŠIL, Jan MUŽÍK,
Daniela ŽÁČKOVÁ, Zdeněk RÁČIL, Hana KLAMOVÁ, Petr CETKOVSKÝ,
Marek TRNĚNÝ, Jiří MAYER and Ladislav DUŠEK. Estimation of
current cumulative incidence of leukaemia -free patients and
current leukaemia -free survival in chronic myeloid leukaemia in
the era of modern pharmacotherapy. BMC Medical Research
Methodology, 2011, vol. 11, No 140, p. 1 -12. ISSN 1471 -2288.
doi:10.1186/1471 -2288 -11 -140.Export BibTeX |
| Original language: | English |
| Field: | Oncology and hematology |
| Type: | Article in Periodical |
| Keywords: | chronic myeloid leukaemia; treatment; statistical methods |
The current situation in the treatment of chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) presents a new challenge for attempts to measure the therapeutic results, as the CML patients can experience multiple leukaemia-free periods during the course of their treatment. Traditional measures of treatment efficacy such as leukaemia-free survival and cumulative incidence are unable to cope with multiple events in time, e.g. disease remissions or progressions, and as such are inappropriate for the efficacy assessment of the recent CML treatment. The results have shown a difference between the estimates of the current cumulative incidence function and the common cumulative incidence of leukaemia-free patients, as well as between the estimates of the current leukaemia-free survival and the common leukaemia-free survival. Regarding the currently available follow-up period, both differences have reached the maximum (12.8% and 20.8%, respectively) at 3 years after the start of follow-up.
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