Once upon a time, the various committees charged with improving the outcome of children
with acute lymphoblastic leukemia around the world worked in isolation, learning of
each others’ work only at the few internationally attended meetings or in English
language publications. Investigators were jealous of primacy and suspicious of others.
In 1980, the Children’s Cancer Study Group – later the Children’s Cancer Group (CCG)
learned of the work of Professor Hansjörg Riehm, Günter Henze, and the BFM Group in
Germany. We believed the “M” in BFM stood for Munich at that time. The story goes
that my friend Jim Nachman and I came to work about the same time that day but I beat
him by half a step – which was hard because Jim was quick both mentally and physically
– and Edward Baum, our mentor, handed me a Xeroxed copy of the BFM 76/79 protocol
“auf Deutsch.” Thanks to the skill and patience of my high school German teachers,
Herr Huber and Herr Brink, I more or less translated the regimen into English, which
really was not all that hard.
Archie Bleyer asked me to chair the pilot. Between 1981 and 1983, CCSG enrolled 213
patients on the 193p study – a pilot based on BFM 76. We found ourselves giving therapy
in the face of low peripheral counts where past practice required delay. Initially,
we faced a substantial death rate – over 5% in Protocol II or what we call ‘Delayed
Intensification’. Now the death rate is below 0.5%.
CCSG had a practice where every trial was presented to the 30+ principle investigators
at each Group meeting. A majority vote could terminate a study. The day came when
Anna Meadows moved that the study be closed because of unacceptable toxicity. Judith
Chessells added her strong voice. A much younger me with help from Nasrollah Shahidi
had to stand up to these 2 distinguished ladies, both of whom I hold in highest esteem.
It came to a vote and we won but made some changes in Delayed Intensification – limiting
the number of anthracycline doses to three and the weeks of dexamethasone to 3. Outcomes
looked substantially better than past CCSG trials, an impression that was confirmed
in the subsequent randomized CCG-106 and CCG-123 studies.
In early 1988, I had a chance to present our data in Münster (Germany) right next
to the frozen River Aa. Coming from Wisconsin, the temperature was no challenge. Dr.
G. Denman Hammond and I had the last 2 speaking slots. The night before, Dr. Hammond
asked me if I had prepared my remarks. I told him that I had a timed 12 min talk,
memorized like a Bar Mitzvah speech. He told me that he would work on his remarks
when he got back to his room. Dr. Hammond spoke first. He talked and he talked. About
30 min later, Prof. Riehm stood up and waved his arms. “Eine halbe Stunde!” he called.
Dr. Hammond looked at him curiously, waved back, and spoke a second 30 min. I had
the opportunity to address an empty auditorium.
In 1988, the ALL Strategy Group, chaired by Michael Trigg, was formulating plans for
the second generation of BFM-based studies. The results from David Tubergen’s CCG-105
study were not final but in those innocent days, we were allowed to see preliminary
results that suggested that post induction intensification was more important than
intensified induction. Jim Nachman and our ALL Strategy Group constructed our Augmented
BFM regimen – introducing longer and stronger post induction intensification. The
success of Jim’s study is well known. The current COG studies, AALL1131 and AALL0932,
represent the sixth generation of BFM-based studies.
In 1990, the Medical Research Council of Great Britain hosted a working group meeting
in Oxford for the meta-analysis project. I represented CCSG. Our friends in the Pediatric
Oncology Group were suspicious that too close collaboration might foster group-think
and squelch creativity. We teased that they feared that others might steal their secrets
while we in CCSG feared we had no secrets worth stealing. Again, I had my timed 12 min
talk, which thanks to interruptions and intensive cross examination by the expert
attendees took more than 2 h to complete. Our obligation to our patients requires
us to know the best and strive to do better.
In the 1990’s, Jim Nachman was the first CCSG member to attend the I-BFM Meetings,
many more joined later on. Jim’s endless cheerful energy and eagerness to fly any
place any time built trust and communication among pediatric investigators world-wide.
Jim Nachman, Giuseppe Masera, Martin Schrappe, Ching-Hon Pui and I had lunch at the
Hotel Victoria in Montevideo at the XXVIIth meeting of SIOP in Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1995. We launched the productive Ponte-di-Legno
Working Group, which has now had some 13 meetings and laid the groundwork for the
first European- North American clinical collaborations in Ph+ ALL and in novel immunotherapy
(blinatumomab) currently underway.