Evaluating the Feasibility of an Intensity-Adapted Pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia Treatment Guideline in Malawi
In resource-constrained settings such as Malawi, survival rates for pediatric acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are dismally low compared to high-resource environments. This disparity highlights the urgent need for feasible treatment protocols tailored to the realities of these regions where most children with cancer are treated. In 2023, after reviewing favorable clinical trials results in other resource-limited settings, the Kamuzu Central Hospital (KCH) pediatric cancer unit adopted an evidence-based intensity-adapted clinical practice guideline (CPG) developed by the International Society of Paediatric Oncology (SIOP) as its standard of care for the treatment of pediatric AML, aiming to balance curative intent with manageable toxicity. The current study is a prospective evaluation of outcomes of standard of care in Malawi using the SIOP CPG in a real-world setting. The LEAP study aims to assess the implementation of the SIOP AML guidelines at KCH in an effort to continually improve outcomes in Malawi. The study is an observational-implementation design with a composite effectiveness-implementation outcome called Implementation Success. Implementation Success combines feasibility, the ability of patients to complete all aspects of the CPG, with effectiveness, the ability to maintain historical rates of complete remission of 40% at the treatment center. This prospective cohort study will enroll children under 18 years diagnosed with de novo AML at KCH. Implementation Success will be the primary endpoint, with secondary endpoints including CPG fidelity, long-term survival, adverse events, and hematologic recovery times. Patient-reported outcomes will also be collected to assess the impact of treatment on quality of life. This will be the first prospective study of pediatric AML in sub-Saharan Africa, providing critical data on the management of AML in low-resource settings. By assessing the implementation of a context-adapted CPG, the study will contribute to the global effort to improve pediatric AML outcomes in resource-constrained environments. The findings will serve to guide practitioners in Malawi and similar settings, and the data generated will be invaluable for future clinical decisions and CPG development.
• Age Patients must be \<18 years of age at time of study enrollment.
• Diagnosis
• Patients must be diagnosed with de novo AML according to 2022 WHO 5th Edition classification with or without extramedullary disease. Patients must have one of the following:
⁃ Bone marrow myeloblasts ≥20%. In cases of dry taps due to fibrosis, myeloblast percentage can be estimated from a bone marrow biopsy core specimen. Due to unavailable molecular/cytogenetic diagnostics in Malawi, patients with \<20% bone marrow myeloblasts can be included in the study at the discretion of the treating oncologist with rationale documented.
⁃ In cases where a bone marrow evaluation is not safe/feasible, a peripheral blood sample may be used with a documented absolute myeloblast percentage of ≥1000/μL calculated based on a total white blood cell count and percentage circulating blasts.
• Therapy Patients must begin treatment according to the 2023 KCH AML therapy CPG.