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Adding venetoclax to azacitidine significantly extended survival of patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who were ineligible for standard induction therapy, results of the phase 3 VIALE-A trial showed.

Median overall survival for patients treated with venetoclax (Venclexta) and azacitidine was 14.7 months, compared with 9.6 months for patients who received azacitidine with a placebo, reported Courtney DiNardo, MD, from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

“The combination of [azacitidine] and [venetoclax] was associated with statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in overall survival, response rates, duration of remission, and transfusion independence, representing a true paradigm shift in the treatment of our older patients with AML,” she said in a late-breaking abstract presentation at the virtual annual congress of the European Hematology Association.

Patients with newly diagnosed AML who are aged 75 years and older or have significant comorbidities are often not able to withstand the rigors of standard induction therapy for AML and have instead been treated with low-dose hypomethylating agents or cytarabine, but these therapies typically are associated with inferior outcomes, Dr. DiNardo said.

Venetoclax has shown good single-agent activity against relapsed/refractory AML. Early efficacy results of a phase 1b study, reported at the 2017 EHA Congress, showed that, among 100 patients age 65 years and older with previously untreated AML, the combination of venetoclax with either decitabine or azacitidine was associated with a 69% overall response rate, and that older patients were able to tolerate the regimen.
 

No surprise

The results of the VIALE-A study merely confirm what hematologists/oncologists have known for several years, said Joshua F. Zeidner, MD, from the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center in Chapel Hill.

“Most leukemia clinicians have been using this regimen as a standard of care prior to these results,” he said in an interview. Dr. Zeidner was not involved in the study.

In November 2018, the Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval to venetoclax in combination with either azacitidine or decitabine or low-dose cytarabine in adults with newly diagnosed AML who because of age or comorbidities were ineligible for standard intensive induction regimens. Dr. Zeidner noted, however, that there are still questions about the combination in this population that need further exploration.

Despite being labeled as a “low-intensity” therapy, “I think low intensity is sort of a misnomer here,” he said. “It’s very challenging to give this regimen in the community because of all of the cytopenias, a high degree of transfusion dependence that these patients have, at least in the first few cycles, and all the rigorous laboratory monitoring and drug interactions that are common with venetoclax really lead to a lot of challenges in the community.”

Also still unanswered are questions about how to dose patients with early responses who have potential dose-limiting toxicities such as neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, he said.

It’s also unclear whether patients will require hospitalization during the ramp-up phase of venetoclax, as was done in some clinical trials, because of risk of tumor lysis syndrome. In the VIALE-A study, however, there were only three minor biochemical cases of tumor lysis syndrome in the experimental arm, and none of these cases required dose modification or treatment discontinuation.

“This begets the question whether patients need to be hospitalized at for the initiation of this treatment,” Dr. Zeidner said. Additional studies will also be needed to see whether certain subgroups of patients would be likely to derive particular benefit from venetoclax plus azacitidine, such as patients with IDH1 or IDH2 somatic mutations.
 

 

 

Randomized confirmatory trial

The VIALE-A study was a randomized, placebo-controlled trial designed to put the early promise of the combination to the test.

Investigators enrolled 433 adults with newly diagnosed AML who were ineligible for induction therapy either because they were 75 or older or were younger than 75 but had one or more of the following comorbidities: heart failure requiring treatment or a left ventricular ejection fraction of 50% or less, chronic stable angina, diffusion lung capacity for carbon monoxide of 65% or less or forced expiratory volume in 1 second of 65% or less, or Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status score of 2-3.

After stratification by age, cytogenetic risk, and geographic region, the patients were randomized in a 2:1 fashion to receive azacitidine 75 mg/m2 either subcutaneously or intravenously on days 1-7 of each 28-day cycle, plus either oral venetoclax 400 mg daily following a 3-day ramp up in the first cycle (286 patients) or placebo (145 patients).

The median age in each arm was 76 years. Approximately 75% of patients in each arm had de novo AML.

Approximately half of all patients in each arm has bone marrow blast counts of 50% or greater. Two-thirds of patients had intermediate cytogenetic risk and one-third had poor risk disease. Somatic mutation rates, including mutations in IDH1/2, FLT3, NPM1 and TP53, were roughly comparable between the arms.

As noted before, median overall survival, the primary endpoint, was significantly longer with venetoclax, at 14.7 versus 9.6 months, translating into a hazard ratio for death with venetoclax of 0.66 (P < .001).

Although the numbers were relatively small, an analysis of overall survival by subgroups showed either a significant advantage or trend favoring venetoclax in all subgroups, notably among patients with difficult-to-treat disease, including patients 75 years and older and those with secondary AML, Dr. DiNardo said.

The combined complete response and CR with incomplete recovery (CRi) response rate was 66.4% with venetoclax, compared with 28.3% with azacitidine alone. The median time to a CR/CRi was shorter with the combination at 1.3 versus 2.8 months for azacitidine plus placebo, and the median duration of a CR/CRi response was longer, at 17.5 versus 13.4 months, respectively.

Response rates were also notably higher with venetoclax in all cytogenetic risk, AML subtype, molecular mutation, age, ECOG score, and bone marrow blast subgroups.

Additionally, significantly more patients treated with venetoclax/azacitidine were transfusion independent for a minimum of 8 weeks for platelets or combined red cells and platelets, Dr. DiNardo noted.

Median event-free survival – time from randomization to relapse, death, or treatment failure – was 9.8 months in the venetoclax arm versus 7 months in the placebo arm (HR, 0.63; P < .001).

All patients experienced at least one treatment-emergent adverse event. Grade 3 or greater hematologic adverse events were seen 82% of patients in the venetoclax arm and 68% in the placebo arm. The respective rates of grade 3 or greater neutropenia were 42% versus 29%, and febrile neutropenia were 42% versus 19%. Thrombocytopenia, anemia, and leukopenia rates were also higher among patients who received venetoclax.

Grade 1-2 gastrointestinal events were the most frequent nonhematologic adverse events. There was no increase in early deaths seen with the study combination.

The study was supported by AbbVie and Genentech. Dr. DiNardo disclosed research funding from and advisory board activities for those companies and from others. Dr. Zeidner disclosed serving on an independent review committee for AbbVie and advisory board activity for Genentech and others.

SOURCE: DiNardo C et al. EHA25, Abstract LB2601.

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Adding venetoclax to azacitidine significantly extended survival of patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who were ineligible for standard induction therapy, results of the phase 3 VIALE-A trial showed.

Median overall survival for patients treated with venetoclax (Venclexta) and azacitidine was 14.7 months, compared with 9.6 months for patients who received azacitidine with a placebo, reported Courtney DiNardo, MD, from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

“The combination of [azacitidine] and [venetoclax] was associated with statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in overall survival, response rates, duration of remission, and transfusion independence, representing a true paradigm shift in the treatment of our older patients with AML,” she said in a late-breaking abstract presentation at the virtual annual congress of the European Hematology Association.

Patients with newly diagnosed AML who are aged 75 years and older or have significant comorbidities are often not able to withstand the rigors of standard induction therapy for AML and have instead been treated with low-dose hypomethylating agents or cytarabine, but these therapies typically are associated with inferior outcomes, Dr. DiNardo said.

Venetoclax has shown good single-agent activity against relapsed/refractory AML. Early efficacy results of a phase 1b study, reported at the 2017 EHA Congress, showed that, among 100 patients age 65 years and older with previously untreated AML, the combination of venetoclax with either decitabine or azacitidine was associated with a 69% overall response rate, and that older patients were able to tolerate the regimen.
 

No surprise

The results of the VIALE-A study merely confirm what hematologists/oncologists have known for several years, said Joshua F. Zeidner, MD, from the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center in Chapel Hill.

“Most leukemia clinicians have been using this regimen as a standard of care prior to these results,” he said in an interview. Dr. Zeidner was not involved in the study.

In November 2018, the Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval to venetoclax in combination with either azacitidine or decitabine or low-dose cytarabine in adults with newly diagnosed AML who because of age or comorbidities were ineligible for standard intensive induction regimens. Dr. Zeidner noted, however, that there are still questions about the combination in this population that need further exploration.

Despite being labeled as a “low-intensity” therapy, “I think low intensity is sort of a misnomer here,” he said. “It’s very challenging to give this regimen in the community because of all of the cytopenias, a high degree of transfusion dependence that these patients have, at least in the first few cycles, and all the rigorous laboratory monitoring and drug interactions that are common with venetoclax really lead to a lot of challenges in the community.”

Also still unanswered are questions about how to dose patients with early responses who have potential dose-limiting toxicities such as neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, he said.

It’s also unclear whether patients will require hospitalization during the ramp-up phase of venetoclax, as was done in some clinical trials, because of risk of tumor lysis syndrome. In the VIALE-A study, however, there were only three minor biochemical cases of tumor lysis syndrome in the experimental arm, and none of these cases required dose modification or treatment discontinuation.

“This begets the question whether patients need to be hospitalized at for the initiation of this treatment,” Dr. Zeidner said. Additional studies will also be needed to see whether certain subgroups of patients would be likely to derive particular benefit from venetoclax plus azacitidine, such as patients with IDH1 or IDH2 somatic mutations.
 

 

 

Randomized confirmatory trial

The VIALE-A study was a randomized, placebo-controlled trial designed to put the early promise of the combination to the test.

Investigators enrolled 433 adults with newly diagnosed AML who were ineligible for induction therapy either because they were 75 or older or were younger than 75 but had one or more of the following comorbidities: heart failure requiring treatment or a left ventricular ejection fraction of 50% or less, chronic stable angina, diffusion lung capacity for carbon monoxide of 65% or less or forced expiratory volume in 1 second of 65% or less, or Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status score of 2-3.

After stratification by age, cytogenetic risk, and geographic region, the patients were randomized in a 2:1 fashion to receive azacitidine 75 mg/m2 either subcutaneously or intravenously on days 1-7 of each 28-day cycle, plus either oral venetoclax 400 mg daily following a 3-day ramp up in the first cycle (286 patients) or placebo (145 patients).

The median age in each arm was 76 years. Approximately 75% of patients in each arm had de novo AML.

Approximately half of all patients in each arm has bone marrow blast counts of 50% or greater. Two-thirds of patients had intermediate cytogenetic risk and one-third had poor risk disease. Somatic mutation rates, including mutations in IDH1/2, FLT3, NPM1 and TP53, were roughly comparable between the arms.

As noted before, median overall survival, the primary endpoint, was significantly longer with venetoclax, at 14.7 versus 9.6 months, translating into a hazard ratio for death with venetoclax of 0.66 (P < .001).

Although the numbers were relatively small, an analysis of overall survival by subgroups showed either a significant advantage or trend favoring venetoclax in all subgroups, notably among patients with difficult-to-treat disease, including patients 75 years and older and those with secondary AML, Dr. DiNardo said.

The combined complete response and CR with incomplete recovery (CRi) response rate was 66.4% with venetoclax, compared with 28.3% with azacitidine alone. The median time to a CR/CRi was shorter with the combination at 1.3 versus 2.8 months for azacitidine plus placebo, and the median duration of a CR/CRi response was longer, at 17.5 versus 13.4 months, respectively.

Response rates were also notably higher with venetoclax in all cytogenetic risk, AML subtype, molecular mutation, age, ECOG score, and bone marrow blast subgroups.

Additionally, significantly more patients treated with venetoclax/azacitidine were transfusion independent for a minimum of 8 weeks for platelets or combined red cells and platelets, Dr. DiNardo noted.

Median event-free survival – time from randomization to relapse, death, or treatment failure – was 9.8 months in the venetoclax arm versus 7 months in the placebo arm (HR, 0.63; P < .001).

All patients experienced at least one treatment-emergent adverse event. Grade 3 or greater hematologic adverse events were seen 82% of patients in the venetoclax arm and 68% in the placebo arm. The respective rates of grade 3 or greater neutropenia were 42% versus 29%, and febrile neutropenia were 42% versus 19%. Thrombocytopenia, anemia, and leukopenia rates were also higher among patients who received venetoclax.

Grade 1-2 gastrointestinal events were the most frequent nonhematologic adverse events. There was no increase in early deaths seen with the study combination.

The study was supported by AbbVie and Genentech. Dr. DiNardo disclosed research funding from and advisory board activities for those companies and from others. Dr. Zeidner disclosed serving on an independent review committee for AbbVie and advisory board activity for Genentech and others.

SOURCE: DiNardo C et al. EHA25, Abstract LB2601.

 

Adding venetoclax to azacitidine significantly extended survival of patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who were ineligible for standard induction therapy, results of the phase 3 VIALE-A trial showed.

Median overall survival for patients treated with venetoclax (Venclexta) and azacitidine was 14.7 months, compared with 9.6 months for patients who received azacitidine with a placebo, reported Courtney DiNardo, MD, from the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

“The combination of [azacitidine] and [venetoclax] was associated with statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in overall survival, response rates, duration of remission, and transfusion independence, representing a true paradigm shift in the treatment of our older patients with AML,” she said in a late-breaking abstract presentation at the virtual annual congress of the European Hematology Association.

Patients with newly diagnosed AML who are aged 75 years and older or have significant comorbidities are often not able to withstand the rigors of standard induction therapy for AML and have instead been treated with low-dose hypomethylating agents or cytarabine, but these therapies typically are associated with inferior outcomes, Dr. DiNardo said.

Venetoclax has shown good single-agent activity against relapsed/refractory AML. Early efficacy results of a phase 1b study, reported at the 2017 EHA Congress, showed that, among 100 patients age 65 years and older with previously untreated AML, the combination of venetoclax with either decitabine or azacitidine was associated with a 69% overall response rate, and that older patients were able to tolerate the regimen.
 

No surprise

The results of the VIALE-A study merely confirm what hematologists/oncologists have known for several years, said Joshua F. Zeidner, MD, from the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center in Chapel Hill.

“Most leukemia clinicians have been using this regimen as a standard of care prior to these results,” he said in an interview. Dr. Zeidner was not involved in the study.

In November 2018, the Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approval to venetoclax in combination with either azacitidine or decitabine or low-dose cytarabine in adults with newly diagnosed AML who because of age or comorbidities were ineligible for standard intensive induction regimens. Dr. Zeidner noted, however, that there are still questions about the combination in this population that need further exploration.

Despite being labeled as a “low-intensity” therapy, “I think low intensity is sort of a misnomer here,” he said. “It’s very challenging to give this regimen in the community because of all of the cytopenias, a high degree of transfusion dependence that these patients have, at least in the first few cycles, and all the rigorous laboratory monitoring and drug interactions that are common with venetoclax really lead to a lot of challenges in the community.”

Also still unanswered are questions about how to dose patients with early responses who have potential dose-limiting toxicities such as neutropenia and thrombocytopenia, he said.

It’s also unclear whether patients will require hospitalization during the ramp-up phase of venetoclax, as was done in some clinical trials, because of risk of tumor lysis syndrome. In the VIALE-A study, however, there were only three minor biochemical cases of tumor lysis syndrome in the experimental arm, and none of these cases required dose modification or treatment discontinuation.

“This begets the question whether patients need to be hospitalized at for the initiation of this treatment,” Dr. Zeidner said. Additional studies will also be needed to see whether certain subgroups of patients would be likely to derive particular benefit from venetoclax plus azacitidine, such as patients with IDH1 or IDH2 somatic mutations.
 

 

 

Randomized confirmatory trial

The VIALE-A study was a randomized, placebo-controlled trial designed to put the early promise of the combination to the test.

Investigators enrolled 433 adults with newly diagnosed AML who were ineligible for induction therapy either because they were 75 or older or were younger than 75 but had one or more of the following comorbidities: heart failure requiring treatment or a left ventricular ejection fraction of 50% or less, chronic stable angina, diffusion lung capacity for carbon monoxide of 65% or less or forced expiratory volume in 1 second of 65% or less, or Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status score of 2-3.

After stratification by age, cytogenetic risk, and geographic region, the patients were randomized in a 2:1 fashion to receive azacitidine 75 mg/m2 either subcutaneously or intravenously on days 1-7 of each 28-day cycle, plus either oral venetoclax 400 mg daily following a 3-day ramp up in the first cycle (286 patients) or placebo (145 patients).

The median age in each arm was 76 years. Approximately 75% of patients in each arm had de novo AML.

Approximately half of all patients in each arm has bone marrow blast counts of 50% or greater. Two-thirds of patients had intermediate cytogenetic risk and one-third had poor risk disease. Somatic mutation rates, including mutations in IDH1/2, FLT3, NPM1 and TP53, were roughly comparable between the arms.

As noted before, median overall survival, the primary endpoint, was significantly longer with venetoclax, at 14.7 versus 9.6 months, translating into a hazard ratio for death with venetoclax of 0.66 (P < .001).

Although the numbers were relatively small, an analysis of overall survival by subgroups showed either a significant advantage or trend favoring venetoclax in all subgroups, notably among patients with difficult-to-treat disease, including patients 75 years and older and those with secondary AML, Dr. DiNardo said.

The combined complete response and CR with incomplete recovery (CRi) response rate was 66.4% with venetoclax, compared with 28.3% with azacitidine alone. The median time to a CR/CRi was shorter with the combination at 1.3 versus 2.8 months for azacitidine plus placebo, and the median duration of a CR/CRi response was longer, at 17.5 versus 13.4 months, respectively.

Response rates were also notably higher with venetoclax in all cytogenetic risk, AML subtype, molecular mutation, age, ECOG score, and bone marrow blast subgroups.

Additionally, significantly more patients treated with venetoclax/azacitidine were transfusion independent for a minimum of 8 weeks for platelets or combined red cells and platelets, Dr. DiNardo noted.

Median event-free survival – time from randomization to relapse, death, or treatment failure – was 9.8 months in the venetoclax arm versus 7 months in the placebo arm (HR, 0.63; P < .001).

All patients experienced at least one treatment-emergent adverse event. Grade 3 or greater hematologic adverse events were seen 82% of patients in the venetoclax arm and 68% in the placebo arm. The respective rates of grade 3 or greater neutropenia were 42% versus 29%, and febrile neutropenia were 42% versus 19%. Thrombocytopenia, anemia, and leukopenia rates were also higher among patients who received venetoclax.

Grade 1-2 gastrointestinal events were the most frequent nonhematologic adverse events. There was no increase in early deaths seen with the study combination.

The study was supported by AbbVie and Genentech. Dr. DiNardo disclosed research funding from and advisory board activities for those companies and from others. Dr. Zeidner disclosed serving on an independent review committee for AbbVie and advisory board activity for Genentech and others.

SOURCE: DiNardo C et al. EHA25, Abstract LB2601.

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