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Progression free survival was better at 2 years when polatuzumab-vedotin (Polivy) was added to a modified R-CHOP regimen for first-line treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), but there was no difference in overall survival in a phase 3 trial from maker Genentech/Roche.

Two-year progression free survival (PFS) was 76.7% for the 440 patients randomized to polatuzumab-vedotin (PV) add-on, versus 70.2% for the 439 randomized to R-CHOP, which translated to a 27% reduction in the risk of progression, relapse, or death (P = .02). However, overall survival (OS) at 2 years was just under 89% in both arms of the trial, dubbed POLARIX. Toxicity was comparable between the two arms.

The investigators swapped out the vincristine in R-CHOP for PV to avoid overlapping neurotoxic side effects and called their modified regimen “pola-R-CHP.”

“We believe these results support use of pola-R-CHP in the initial management of patients with DLBCL,” senior investigator Gilles Salles, MD, PhD, a hematologic oncologist at Memorial Sloan Cancer Center in New York, said at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting.

The study (ASH 2021 abstract LBA-1), was published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine.
 

Worth the cost?

The investigators reported that the median follow up of 28.2 months may simply have been too short to see if the PFS benefit translates into better overall survival. Also, newer treatments for relapsed/refractory disease might have masked any OS benefit.

With the PFS benefit, however, “what we think we are seeing is a deeper, more profound complete remission that hopefully will translate into [better] overall survival, but it may be a while until that can be demonstrated,” said Jane N. Winter, MD, a hematologic oncologist at Northwestern University, Chicago, who moderated Dr. Salles’ presentation.

“If the improvement in PFS at 2 years represents a true higher cure rate and plateau rather than a simple delay in relapse,” the “results from the POLARIX trial are likely to be practice-changing,” blood cancer specialist Ajay K. Gopal, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, told this news organization when asked for comment.

With additional OS results pending, an audience member at ASH wondered if “the cost of this highly expensive monoclonal antibody drug conjugate is worth the small improvement in PFS.”

“We have to further study this point, but at this moment what is important is to have a treatment with better efficacy and no more toxicity” than R-CHOP, lead investigator Herve Tilly, MD, a hematologic oncologist at the University of Rouen, France, said at the meeting.

Dr. Gopal said the cost concerns are legitimate, but also pointed out that they “may be somewhat offset by the potential reduction in downstream use of expensive cellular therapies.”

The findings support his assertion. With reduced PFS, R-CHOP subjects were more likely than were pola-R-CHP subjects to go on to subsequent lines of therapy (30.3% versus 22.5%).

PV is already approved in the United States for relapsed or refractory DLBCL in combination with bendamustine and rituximab after failure of at least two previous regimens.
 

 

 

Defining a target population

R-CHOP – rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone – has been the first-line standard of care for DLBCL for 2 decades, but it cures only about 60%-70% of patients. Researchers have tried for years to improve the cure rate by adding novel agents and other means, but outcomes haven’t been clinically meaningful, the investigators explained.

Polatuzumab, the antibody component of PV, zeroes in on a ubiquitous target on mature B-cell lymphomas, delivering vedotin, a potent microtubule inhibitor, directly to tumor cells.

Study subjects were treatment naive and a median of 65 years old with intermediate-risk or high-risk DLBCL. About a third had activated B-cell–like DLBCL, and almost two-thirds had baseline International Prognostic Index (IPI) scores between 3 and 5.

Each arm of the trial underwent six treatment cycles, plus two cycles of rituximab monotherapy.

On subgroup analysis, PFS benefit clustered among higher risk patients, namely patients older than 60 years, those with IPI scores between 3 and 5, and patients with the activated B-cell–like subtype.

Younger patients, subjects with lower IPI scores, patients with bulky disease, and those who had germinal-center B-cell–like DLBCL “did not show a clear [PFS] benefit,” the study team said.
 

Ongoing trial in the elderly

Adverse events in POLARIX were in line with the component drugs’ known toxicity profiles, with no new safety signals identified.

The most common grade 3/4 adverse events were neutropenia (28.3% in the pola-R-CHP group and 30.8% in the R-CHOP group), febrile neutropenia (13.8% and 8.0%, respectively), and anemia (12.0% and 8.4%). A bit over 6% of subjects in both arms discontinued because of adverse events.

The higher incidence of febrile neutropenia with pola-R-CHP “did not translate into a higher overall incidence of infection, treatment discontinuation, or dose reductions,” the investigators said.

They noted that patients with lymphoma arising from previously diagnosed indolent lymphoma, those with a primary mediastinal lymphoma, and people older than 80 years were not included in the study. A phase 3 trial in patients 75 years and up is recruiting.

The work was funded by PV maker Genentech/Roche. Many of the investigators disclosed ties to the companies, including Dr. Tilly, an adviser and speaker for Roche, and Dr. Salles, an adviser for Genentech. Three investigators were Genentech employees. Dr. Gopal is a consultant for Genentech/Roche. Dr. Winter did not have any ties to the companies.

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Progression free survival was better at 2 years when polatuzumab-vedotin (Polivy) was added to a modified R-CHOP regimen for first-line treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), but there was no difference in overall survival in a phase 3 trial from maker Genentech/Roche.

Two-year progression free survival (PFS) was 76.7% for the 440 patients randomized to polatuzumab-vedotin (PV) add-on, versus 70.2% for the 439 randomized to R-CHOP, which translated to a 27% reduction in the risk of progression, relapse, or death (P = .02). However, overall survival (OS) at 2 years was just under 89% in both arms of the trial, dubbed POLARIX. Toxicity was comparable between the two arms.

The investigators swapped out the vincristine in R-CHOP for PV to avoid overlapping neurotoxic side effects and called their modified regimen “pola-R-CHP.”

“We believe these results support use of pola-R-CHP in the initial management of patients with DLBCL,” senior investigator Gilles Salles, MD, PhD, a hematologic oncologist at Memorial Sloan Cancer Center in New York, said at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting.

The study (ASH 2021 abstract LBA-1), was published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine.
 

Worth the cost?

The investigators reported that the median follow up of 28.2 months may simply have been too short to see if the PFS benefit translates into better overall survival. Also, newer treatments for relapsed/refractory disease might have masked any OS benefit.

With the PFS benefit, however, “what we think we are seeing is a deeper, more profound complete remission that hopefully will translate into [better] overall survival, but it may be a while until that can be demonstrated,” said Jane N. Winter, MD, a hematologic oncologist at Northwestern University, Chicago, who moderated Dr. Salles’ presentation.

“If the improvement in PFS at 2 years represents a true higher cure rate and plateau rather than a simple delay in relapse,” the “results from the POLARIX trial are likely to be practice-changing,” blood cancer specialist Ajay K. Gopal, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, told this news organization when asked for comment.

With additional OS results pending, an audience member at ASH wondered if “the cost of this highly expensive monoclonal antibody drug conjugate is worth the small improvement in PFS.”

“We have to further study this point, but at this moment what is important is to have a treatment with better efficacy and no more toxicity” than R-CHOP, lead investigator Herve Tilly, MD, a hematologic oncologist at the University of Rouen, France, said at the meeting.

Dr. Gopal said the cost concerns are legitimate, but also pointed out that they “may be somewhat offset by the potential reduction in downstream use of expensive cellular therapies.”

The findings support his assertion. With reduced PFS, R-CHOP subjects were more likely than were pola-R-CHP subjects to go on to subsequent lines of therapy (30.3% versus 22.5%).

PV is already approved in the United States for relapsed or refractory DLBCL in combination with bendamustine and rituximab after failure of at least two previous regimens.
 

 

 

Defining a target population

R-CHOP – rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone – has been the first-line standard of care for DLBCL for 2 decades, but it cures only about 60%-70% of patients. Researchers have tried for years to improve the cure rate by adding novel agents and other means, but outcomes haven’t been clinically meaningful, the investigators explained.

Polatuzumab, the antibody component of PV, zeroes in on a ubiquitous target on mature B-cell lymphomas, delivering vedotin, a potent microtubule inhibitor, directly to tumor cells.

Study subjects were treatment naive and a median of 65 years old with intermediate-risk or high-risk DLBCL. About a third had activated B-cell–like DLBCL, and almost two-thirds had baseline International Prognostic Index (IPI) scores between 3 and 5.

Each arm of the trial underwent six treatment cycles, plus two cycles of rituximab monotherapy.

On subgroup analysis, PFS benefit clustered among higher risk patients, namely patients older than 60 years, those with IPI scores between 3 and 5, and patients with the activated B-cell–like subtype.

Younger patients, subjects with lower IPI scores, patients with bulky disease, and those who had germinal-center B-cell–like DLBCL “did not show a clear [PFS] benefit,” the study team said.
 

Ongoing trial in the elderly

Adverse events in POLARIX were in line with the component drugs’ known toxicity profiles, with no new safety signals identified.

The most common grade 3/4 adverse events were neutropenia (28.3% in the pola-R-CHP group and 30.8% in the R-CHOP group), febrile neutropenia (13.8% and 8.0%, respectively), and anemia (12.0% and 8.4%). A bit over 6% of subjects in both arms discontinued because of adverse events.

The higher incidence of febrile neutropenia with pola-R-CHP “did not translate into a higher overall incidence of infection, treatment discontinuation, or dose reductions,” the investigators said.

They noted that patients with lymphoma arising from previously diagnosed indolent lymphoma, those with a primary mediastinal lymphoma, and people older than 80 years were not included in the study. A phase 3 trial in patients 75 years and up is recruiting.

The work was funded by PV maker Genentech/Roche. Many of the investigators disclosed ties to the companies, including Dr. Tilly, an adviser and speaker for Roche, and Dr. Salles, an adviser for Genentech. Three investigators were Genentech employees. Dr. Gopal is a consultant for Genentech/Roche. Dr. Winter did not have any ties to the companies.

Progression free survival was better at 2 years when polatuzumab-vedotin (Polivy) was added to a modified R-CHOP regimen for first-line treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), but there was no difference in overall survival in a phase 3 trial from maker Genentech/Roche.

Two-year progression free survival (PFS) was 76.7% for the 440 patients randomized to polatuzumab-vedotin (PV) add-on, versus 70.2% for the 439 randomized to R-CHOP, which translated to a 27% reduction in the risk of progression, relapse, or death (P = .02). However, overall survival (OS) at 2 years was just under 89% in both arms of the trial, dubbed POLARIX. Toxicity was comparable between the two arms.

The investigators swapped out the vincristine in R-CHOP for PV to avoid overlapping neurotoxic side effects and called their modified regimen “pola-R-CHP.”

“We believe these results support use of pola-R-CHP in the initial management of patients with DLBCL,” senior investigator Gilles Salles, MD, PhD, a hematologic oncologist at Memorial Sloan Cancer Center in New York, said at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting.

The study (ASH 2021 abstract LBA-1), was published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine.
 

Worth the cost?

The investigators reported that the median follow up of 28.2 months may simply have been too short to see if the PFS benefit translates into better overall survival. Also, newer treatments for relapsed/refractory disease might have masked any OS benefit.

With the PFS benefit, however, “what we think we are seeing is a deeper, more profound complete remission that hopefully will translate into [better] overall survival, but it may be a while until that can be demonstrated,” said Jane N. Winter, MD, a hematologic oncologist at Northwestern University, Chicago, who moderated Dr. Salles’ presentation.

“If the improvement in PFS at 2 years represents a true higher cure rate and plateau rather than a simple delay in relapse,” the “results from the POLARIX trial are likely to be practice-changing,” blood cancer specialist Ajay K. Gopal, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, told this news organization when asked for comment.

With additional OS results pending, an audience member at ASH wondered if “the cost of this highly expensive monoclonal antibody drug conjugate is worth the small improvement in PFS.”

“We have to further study this point, but at this moment what is important is to have a treatment with better efficacy and no more toxicity” than R-CHOP, lead investigator Herve Tilly, MD, a hematologic oncologist at the University of Rouen, France, said at the meeting.

Dr. Gopal said the cost concerns are legitimate, but also pointed out that they “may be somewhat offset by the potential reduction in downstream use of expensive cellular therapies.”

The findings support his assertion. With reduced PFS, R-CHOP subjects were more likely than were pola-R-CHP subjects to go on to subsequent lines of therapy (30.3% versus 22.5%).

PV is already approved in the United States for relapsed or refractory DLBCL in combination with bendamustine and rituximab after failure of at least two previous regimens.
 

 

 

Defining a target population

R-CHOP – rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone – has been the first-line standard of care for DLBCL for 2 decades, but it cures only about 60%-70% of patients. Researchers have tried for years to improve the cure rate by adding novel agents and other means, but outcomes haven’t been clinically meaningful, the investigators explained.

Polatuzumab, the antibody component of PV, zeroes in on a ubiquitous target on mature B-cell lymphomas, delivering vedotin, a potent microtubule inhibitor, directly to tumor cells.

Study subjects were treatment naive and a median of 65 years old with intermediate-risk or high-risk DLBCL. About a third had activated B-cell–like DLBCL, and almost two-thirds had baseline International Prognostic Index (IPI) scores between 3 and 5.

Each arm of the trial underwent six treatment cycles, plus two cycles of rituximab monotherapy.

On subgroup analysis, PFS benefit clustered among higher risk patients, namely patients older than 60 years, those with IPI scores between 3 and 5, and patients with the activated B-cell–like subtype.

Younger patients, subjects with lower IPI scores, patients with bulky disease, and those who had germinal-center B-cell–like DLBCL “did not show a clear [PFS] benefit,” the study team said.
 

Ongoing trial in the elderly

Adverse events in POLARIX were in line with the component drugs’ known toxicity profiles, with no new safety signals identified.

The most common grade 3/4 adverse events were neutropenia (28.3% in the pola-R-CHP group and 30.8% in the R-CHOP group), febrile neutropenia (13.8% and 8.0%, respectively), and anemia (12.0% and 8.4%). A bit over 6% of subjects in both arms discontinued because of adverse events.

The higher incidence of febrile neutropenia with pola-R-CHP “did not translate into a higher overall incidence of infection, treatment discontinuation, or dose reductions,” the investigators said.

They noted that patients with lymphoma arising from previously diagnosed indolent lymphoma, those with a primary mediastinal lymphoma, and people older than 80 years were not included in the study. A phase 3 trial in patients 75 years and up is recruiting.

The work was funded by PV maker Genentech/Roche. Many of the investigators disclosed ties to the companies, including Dr. Tilly, an adviser and speaker for Roche, and Dr. Salles, an adviser for Genentech. Three investigators were Genentech employees. Dr. Gopal is a consultant for Genentech/Roche. Dr. Winter did not have any ties to the companies.

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