American Society of Hematology (ASH): ASH 2011

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Blinatumomab Induces Complete Remissions in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

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Blinatumomab Induces Complete Remissions in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

SAN DIEGO – The novel antibody blinatumomab induced high complete remission rates in adults with relapsed B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia in early clinical trials, according to Dr. Max S. Topp.

In a phase II study with a dose-finding phase, 9 of 12 patients who received blinatumomab 5 mcg/m2 per day for 1 week, followed by a 15-mcg dose on subsequent weeks, had either a complete remission (CR) or a CR with partial hematologic recovery (CRh), Dr. Topp of the University of Würzburg (Germany) said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

"We have exceptionally high rates of hematological complete remissions in these patients, and it ought to be noted that every patient has achieved MRD [minimal residual disease] negativity," said Dr. Topp.

At a median follow-up of 9.7 months, the median overall survival had not been reached, he added.

Blinatumomab is a bispecific T-cell engager designed to direct cytotoxic T cells to cancer cells expressing the CD19 receptor. It has shown good activity in a phase I clinical trial in patients with relapsed non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and in a study of patients with B-ALL who were positive for MRD (J. Clin. Oncol. 2011;29:2493-8).

The MT 103-206 trial was an open-label, multicenter phase II trial of blinatumomab in patients with relapsed/refractory B-precursor ALL, or Philadelphia chromosome–positive ALL (Ph+ALL) who were ineligible for tyrosine kinase inhibitors or who were in relapse following an allogeneic stem cell transplant.

The trial had a dose-finding run-in phase, with four patient cohorts. Dr. Topp focused on cohorts 2a and 3, in which patients received the selected dose schedule: an initial dose of 5 mcg/m2 IV daily for the 1st week of cycle 1, followed by 15 mcg/m2 per day for weeks 2-4 of every 4-week cycle, and every subsequent cycle. Patients had 2 weeks off between each cycle.

Patients who had a CR or CRh within the first two treatment cycles underwent consolidation with three additional cycles of blinatumonab and allogeneic stem cell transplant.

At the selected dose, the most common clinical adverse events were fever in 67%, headache in 33%, and tremor in 33%. Most of the events occurred during the first cycle, and no patients had to permanently discontinue therapy because of adverse events.

Among all cohorts (totaling 25 patients), there were 17 who had a CR or CRh: 5 of 7 patients who received a 15-mcg dose throughout treatment (cohort 1); 3 of 6 patients who received escalating doses of 5-, 15-, and 30-mcg doses (cohort 2b); and 9 of 12 patients in cohorts 2a and 3 combined. All patients with a CR or CRh were also MRD negative, defined as an MRD less than 104 measured by polymerase chain reaction evaluation of individual rearrangement of immunoglobulin or T-cell receptor genes by a central laboratory.

Dr. Topp explained that there were high response rates among all patient subgroups, including patients with Ph+ALL, and those with the t(4,11) translocation.

As of early November 2011, 6 of 17 patients with complete responses had relapses. One of four patients who had undergone allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant had a medullary relapse; this patient was CD19 negative. A total of 5 of 13 patients had a relapse prior to transplant – 2 medullary relapses (1 CD19-negative and 1 positive) and 3 extramedullary relapses (1 CD19 negative and 2 positive).

One patient who had a medullary relapse but retained CD19 expression was retreated with blinatumomab and had a CRh of 7 months’ duration; the patient achieved a second, ongoing CRh after more blinatumomab.

The median duration of complete hematologic remission was 7.1 months (218 days) among 18 patients (12 responders) in cohorts 1, 2a, and 2b.

Asked in an interview whether an agent targeted against CD19 might work in combination with an anti-CD20 agent such as rituximab (Rituxan), Dr. Alan S. Wayne, a leukemia specialist and session comoderator who was not involved in the study, said that CD20 is not as attractive a target in ALL as it is in lymphoma or other hematologic malignancies.

"The question of CD20 in ALL is a little challenging, because the expression is less universal and even within individual cases across blasts," said Dr. Wayne, who is also head of the hematologic disease division of the pediatric oncology branch at the National Cancer Institute.

He noted, however, that there is evidence to suggest that pretreatment of patients with steroids may increase CD20 expression.

"This is an exciting new era for combining agents with a variety of different mechanisms of action, and also toxicity profiles. One could imagine, for example, [using] steroid to increase CD20 expression, rituximab, and then another CD19- or CD22-targeting agent," he said.

 

 

The MT 103-206 trial was supported by Micromet. Dr. Topp and coauthors Dr. Ralf Bargou and Dr. Nicola Goekbuget disclosed consulting for and/or receiving honoraria from the company. Three other coauthors are employees of the company. Dr. Wayne reported no relevant financial disclosures.

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SAN DIEGO – The novel antibody blinatumomab induced high complete remission rates in adults with relapsed B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia in early clinical trials, according to Dr. Max S. Topp.

In a phase II study with a dose-finding phase, 9 of 12 patients who received blinatumomab 5 mcg/m2 per day for 1 week, followed by a 15-mcg dose on subsequent weeks, had either a complete remission (CR) or a CR with partial hematologic recovery (CRh), Dr. Topp of the University of Würzburg (Germany) said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

"We have exceptionally high rates of hematological complete remissions in these patients, and it ought to be noted that every patient has achieved MRD [minimal residual disease] negativity," said Dr. Topp.

At a median follow-up of 9.7 months, the median overall survival had not been reached, he added.

Blinatumomab is a bispecific T-cell engager designed to direct cytotoxic T cells to cancer cells expressing the CD19 receptor. It has shown good activity in a phase I clinical trial in patients with relapsed non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and in a study of patients with B-ALL who were positive for MRD (J. Clin. Oncol. 2011;29:2493-8).

The MT 103-206 trial was an open-label, multicenter phase II trial of blinatumomab in patients with relapsed/refractory B-precursor ALL, or Philadelphia chromosome–positive ALL (Ph+ALL) who were ineligible for tyrosine kinase inhibitors or who were in relapse following an allogeneic stem cell transplant.

The trial had a dose-finding run-in phase, with four patient cohorts. Dr. Topp focused on cohorts 2a and 3, in which patients received the selected dose schedule: an initial dose of 5 mcg/m2 IV daily for the 1st week of cycle 1, followed by 15 mcg/m2 per day for weeks 2-4 of every 4-week cycle, and every subsequent cycle. Patients had 2 weeks off between each cycle.

Patients who had a CR or CRh within the first two treatment cycles underwent consolidation with three additional cycles of blinatumonab and allogeneic stem cell transplant.

At the selected dose, the most common clinical adverse events were fever in 67%, headache in 33%, and tremor in 33%. Most of the events occurred during the first cycle, and no patients had to permanently discontinue therapy because of adverse events.

Among all cohorts (totaling 25 patients), there were 17 who had a CR or CRh: 5 of 7 patients who received a 15-mcg dose throughout treatment (cohort 1); 3 of 6 patients who received escalating doses of 5-, 15-, and 30-mcg doses (cohort 2b); and 9 of 12 patients in cohorts 2a and 3 combined. All patients with a CR or CRh were also MRD negative, defined as an MRD less than 104 measured by polymerase chain reaction evaluation of individual rearrangement of immunoglobulin or T-cell receptor genes by a central laboratory.

Dr. Topp explained that there were high response rates among all patient subgroups, including patients with Ph+ALL, and those with the t(4,11) translocation.

As of early November 2011, 6 of 17 patients with complete responses had relapses. One of four patients who had undergone allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant had a medullary relapse; this patient was CD19 negative. A total of 5 of 13 patients had a relapse prior to transplant – 2 medullary relapses (1 CD19-negative and 1 positive) and 3 extramedullary relapses (1 CD19 negative and 2 positive).

One patient who had a medullary relapse but retained CD19 expression was retreated with blinatumomab and had a CRh of 7 months’ duration; the patient achieved a second, ongoing CRh after more blinatumomab.

The median duration of complete hematologic remission was 7.1 months (218 days) among 18 patients (12 responders) in cohorts 1, 2a, and 2b.

Asked in an interview whether an agent targeted against CD19 might work in combination with an anti-CD20 agent such as rituximab (Rituxan), Dr. Alan S. Wayne, a leukemia specialist and session comoderator who was not involved in the study, said that CD20 is not as attractive a target in ALL as it is in lymphoma or other hematologic malignancies.

"The question of CD20 in ALL is a little challenging, because the expression is less universal and even within individual cases across blasts," said Dr. Wayne, who is also head of the hematologic disease division of the pediatric oncology branch at the National Cancer Institute.

He noted, however, that there is evidence to suggest that pretreatment of patients with steroids may increase CD20 expression.

"This is an exciting new era for combining agents with a variety of different mechanisms of action, and also toxicity profiles. One could imagine, for example, [using] steroid to increase CD20 expression, rituximab, and then another CD19- or CD22-targeting agent," he said.

 

 

The MT 103-206 trial was supported by Micromet. Dr. Topp and coauthors Dr. Ralf Bargou and Dr. Nicola Goekbuget disclosed consulting for and/or receiving honoraria from the company. Three other coauthors are employees of the company. Dr. Wayne reported no relevant financial disclosures.

SAN DIEGO – The novel antibody blinatumomab induced high complete remission rates in adults with relapsed B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia in early clinical trials, according to Dr. Max S. Topp.

In a phase II study with a dose-finding phase, 9 of 12 patients who received blinatumomab 5 mcg/m2 per day for 1 week, followed by a 15-mcg dose on subsequent weeks, had either a complete remission (CR) or a CR with partial hematologic recovery (CRh), Dr. Topp of the University of Würzburg (Germany) said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

"We have exceptionally high rates of hematological complete remissions in these patients, and it ought to be noted that every patient has achieved MRD [minimal residual disease] negativity," said Dr. Topp.

At a median follow-up of 9.7 months, the median overall survival had not been reached, he added.

Blinatumomab is a bispecific T-cell engager designed to direct cytotoxic T cells to cancer cells expressing the CD19 receptor. It has shown good activity in a phase I clinical trial in patients with relapsed non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and in a study of patients with B-ALL who were positive for MRD (J. Clin. Oncol. 2011;29:2493-8).

The MT 103-206 trial was an open-label, multicenter phase II trial of blinatumomab in patients with relapsed/refractory B-precursor ALL, or Philadelphia chromosome–positive ALL (Ph+ALL) who were ineligible for tyrosine kinase inhibitors or who were in relapse following an allogeneic stem cell transplant.

The trial had a dose-finding run-in phase, with four patient cohorts. Dr. Topp focused on cohorts 2a and 3, in which patients received the selected dose schedule: an initial dose of 5 mcg/m2 IV daily for the 1st week of cycle 1, followed by 15 mcg/m2 per day for weeks 2-4 of every 4-week cycle, and every subsequent cycle. Patients had 2 weeks off between each cycle.

Patients who had a CR or CRh within the first two treatment cycles underwent consolidation with three additional cycles of blinatumonab and allogeneic stem cell transplant.

At the selected dose, the most common clinical adverse events were fever in 67%, headache in 33%, and tremor in 33%. Most of the events occurred during the first cycle, and no patients had to permanently discontinue therapy because of adverse events.

Among all cohorts (totaling 25 patients), there were 17 who had a CR or CRh: 5 of 7 patients who received a 15-mcg dose throughout treatment (cohort 1); 3 of 6 patients who received escalating doses of 5-, 15-, and 30-mcg doses (cohort 2b); and 9 of 12 patients in cohorts 2a and 3 combined. All patients with a CR or CRh were also MRD negative, defined as an MRD less than 104 measured by polymerase chain reaction evaluation of individual rearrangement of immunoglobulin or T-cell receptor genes by a central laboratory.

Dr. Topp explained that there were high response rates among all patient subgroups, including patients with Ph+ALL, and those with the t(4,11) translocation.

As of early November 2011, 6 of 17 patients with complete responses had relapses. One of four patients who had undergone allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant had a medullary relapse; this patient was CD19 negative. A total of 5 of 13 patients had a relapse prior to transplant – 2 medullary relapses (1 CD19-negative and 1 positive) and 3 extramedullary relapses (1 CD19 negative and 2 positive).

One patient who had a medullary relapse but retained CD19 expression was retreated with blinatumomab and had a CRh of 7 months’ duration; the patient achieved a second, ongoing CRh after more blinatumomab.

The median duration of complete hematologic remission was 7.1 months (218 days) among 18 patients (12 responders) in cohorts 1, 2a, and 2b.

Asked in an interview whether an agent targeted against CD19 might work in combination with an anti-CD20 agent such as rituximab (Rituxan), Dr. Alan S. Wayne, a leukemia specialist and session comoderator who was not involved in the study, said that CD20 is not as attractive a target in ALL as it is in lymphoma or other hematologic malignancies.

"The question of CD20 in ALL is a little challenging, because the expression is less universal and even within individual cases across blasts," said Dr. Wayne, who is also head of the hematologic disease division of the pediatric oncology branch at the National Cancer Institute.

He noted, however, that there is evidence to suggest that pretreatment of patients with steroids may increase CD20 expression.

"This is an exciting new era for combining agents with a variety of different mechanisms of action, and also toxicity profiles. One could imagine, for example, [using] steroid to increase CD20 expression, rituximab, and then another CD19- or CD22-targeting agent," he said.

 

 

The MT 103-206 trial was supported by Micromet. Dr. Topp and coauthors Dr. Ralf Bargou and Dr. Nicola Goekbuget disclosed consulting for and/or receiving honoraria from the company. Three other coauthors are employees of the company. Dr. Wayne reported no relevant financial disclosures.

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Blinatumomab Induces Complete Remissions in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
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Blinatumomab Induces Complete Remissions in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

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Major Finding: A total of 9 of 12 patients with relapsed B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia who received blinatumomab 5 mcg/m2 per day for 1 week, followed by a 15-mcg dose on subsequent weeks, had either a complete remission or a complete response with partial hematologic recovery,

Data Source: Open-label phase II trial with a dose-finding phase.

Disclosures: The MT 103-206 trial was supported by Micromet. Dr. Topp and coauthors Dr. Ralf Bargou and Dr. Nicola Goekbuget disclosed consulting for and/or receiving honoraria from the company. Three other coauthors are employees of the company. Dr. Wayne reported no relevant financial disclosures.

Less May Be More in Treating High-Risk Myeloma

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Less May Be More in Treating High-Risk Myeloma

SAN DIEGO – A provocative analysis suggests that a sequence of bortezomib and lenalidomide provides a better survival advantage than regimens with three or more agents in patients with multiple myeloma and high-risk cytogenetics.*

"While the limitations of this retrospective study limit drawing definitive conclusions, it appears that poor cytogenetics and biology trump treatment intensification," Dr. Rachid Baz and his colleagues stated in a poster presentation at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Rachid Baz

The investigators reported on 208 patients with multiple myeloma who received bortezomib (Velcade) and lenalidomide (Revlimid), nonconcurrently between January 2004 and August 2010 at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Tampa. The patients were stratified by treatment into six groups: lenalidomide with or without dexamethasone (lenalidomide A) or lenalidomide in combination with two or more agents (lenalidomide B); bortezomib with or with dexamethasone (bortezomib A) or bortezomib in combination with two or more agents (bortezomib B); and finally, only doublets or single agents (nonintensive therapy) or three or more agents in combination (intensive therapy).

No differences were observed between the lenalidomide A and B, bortezomib A and B, or intensive and nonintensive therapy groups in the baseline characteristics of age, International Staging System (ISS) and Durie/Salmon stage, beta2microglobulin or renal function, presence of poor-risk cytogenetics, and frequency of high-dose therapy.

Poor-risk cytogenetics, an increasingly fluid term in the context of growing success with novel myeloma agents, included deletions 13q and 17p, translocations, (4;14) and (14;16) or hypodiploidy.

Lenalidomide A patients had a trend toward improved median overall survival at 72 months, compared with 57 months for the lenalidomide B group receiving more complex regimens (P = .07), reported Dr. Baz, with Moffitt’s hematologic malignancies and experimental therapeutics departments.

Median overall survival, the study’s primary end point, however, was significantly improved in the bortezomib A group at 72 months vs. 45 months in the bortezomib B group (P = .02).

Similarly, the nonintensive therapy group lived significantly longer for 74 months vs. 57 months for the intensive therapy group (P = .03).

Notably, patients with high-risk cytogenetics had significantly worse survival if they received intensive therapy rather than nonintensive therapy (median 44 months vs. 72 months; P = .01), he noted. In contrast, patients without high-risk cytogenetics had similar overall survival regardless of whether they belonged to the intensive therapy or nonintensive therapy groups (median 76 months vs. 75 months).

On multivariate analysis that adjusted for known covariates linked to myeloma survival such as ISS stage and high-dose therapy, the only features predictive of poor outcome were renal failure at baseline and intensive therapy.

Dr. Baz said the investigators were surprised by the counterintuitive results and that they could be due to bias from an unidentified confounding factor. For example, it’s possible that high-risk patients who appeared more ill were more likely to be given more intensive therapy by the practicing physician and may have had poor outcomes nonetheless, whereas high-risk patients who appeared more stable were more likely to be given less intensive therapy, but did well because of more indolent disease characteristics.

A potential biologic explanation for the finding might be related to genomic instabilities more commonly seen in high-risk myeloma.

"Patients with high-risk disease have myeloma cells that are more likely to acquire drug resistance faster," he said in an interview. "As a result, if you expose those myeloma cells to many drugs at once, they may acquire resistance to them faster and you get less mileage than if you spread out the drugs."

Dr. Baz said further study at the molecular level is needed to see how drug resistance develops in myeloma in the context of combination therapy with three or four drugs versus treatment with one or two drugs.

"I think the finding is hypothesis generating," he said. "It doesn’t change my practice with the patients I see today, but it needs more study."

Baseline characteristics of the non-intensive and intensive therapy groups were: age (58.9 years, 58.5 years), heavy chain IgG (60%, 63%), light chain Kappa (58%, 67%), ISS stage II (40%, 38%), ISS III (24%, 33%), Durie/Salmon stage III (75%, 85%), creatinine at least 2.0 mg/dL (12%, 13%), presence of bone disease (67%, 80%), poor-risk cytogenetics (43%, 36%), prior high-dose therapy (64%, 66%), and thalidomide use (59%, 47%).

The only significant difference between two groups was the presence of more males in the intensive group (73% vs. 52%; P = .01).

Dr. Baz reported research funding from Celgene and membership on an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee and research funding from Millennium Pharmaceuticals. His coauthors reported similar relationships with Celgene, Millennium, Novartis, and Allergan. 

 

 

*CLARIFICATION 1/23/12 The status of bortezomib and lenalidomide in treatment for multiple myeloma was clarified in this sentence.

Body

"This is an intriguing observation," Dr. Martha Q. Lacy said in a separate interview. "The author points out that it is a retrospective study, and results could be confounded by a number of variables, so I agree that one cannot take this as the definitive word on this subject. This should be studied in well-designed prospective studies. It also underscores the need to design trials with overall survival as the primary end point.

"Increasingly, myeloma studies have used remission rates and progression-free survival as primary end points," she said. "If studies are not designed with overall survival as the end point, we risk missing potentially critical insights into the best treatment strategies."

Dr. Lacy is with the hematology division at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

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Body

"This is an intriguing observation," Dr. Martha Q. Lacy said in a separate interview. "The author points out that it is a retrospective study, and results could be confounded by a number of variables, so I agree that one cannot take this as the definitive word on this subject. This should be studied in well-designed prospective studies. It also underscores the need to design trials with overall survival as the primary end point.

"Increasingly, myeloma studies have used remission rates and progression-free survival as primary end points," she said. "If studies are not designed with overall survival as the end point, we risk missing potentially critical insights into the best treatment strategies."

Dr. Lacy is with the hematology division at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Body

"This is an intriguing observation," Dr. Martha Q. Lacy said in a separate interview. "The author points out that it is a retrospective study, and results could be confounded by a number of variables, so I agree that one cannot take this as the definitive word on this subject. This should be studied in well-designed prospective studies. It also underscores the need to design trials with overall survival as the primary end point.

"Increasingly, myeloma studies have used remission rates and progression-free survival as primary end points," she said. "If studies are not designed with overall survival as the end point, we risk missing potentially critical insights into the best treatment strategies."

Dr. Lacy is with the hematology division at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Title
Begin With the End Point in Mind
Begin With the End Point in Mind

SAN DIEGO – A provocative analysis suggests that a sequence of bortezomib and lenalidomide provides a better survival advantage than regimens with three or more agents in patients with multiple myeloma and high-risk cytogenetics.*

"While the limitations of this retrospective study limit drawing definitive conclusions, it appears that poor cytogenetics and biology trump treatment intensification," Dr. Rachid Baz and his colleagues stated in a poster presentation at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Rachid Baz

The investigators reported on 208 patients with multiple myeloma who received bortezomib (Velcade) and lenalidomide (Revlimid), nonconcurrently between January 2004 and August 2010 at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Tampa. The patients were stratified by treatment into six groups: lenalidomide with or without dexamethasone (lenalidomide A) or lenalidomide in combination with two or more agents (lenalidomide B); bortezomib with or with dexamethasone (bortezomib A) or bortezomib in combination with two or more agents (bortezomib B); and finally, only doublets or single agents (nonintensive therapy) or three or more agents in combination (intensive therapy).

No differences were observed between the lenalidomide A and B, bortezomib A and B, or intensive and nonintensive therapy groups in the baseline characteristics of age, International Staging System (ISS) and Durie/Salmon stage, beta2microglobulin or renal function, presence of poor-risk cytogenetics, and frequency of high-dose therapy.

Poor-risk cytogenetics, an increasingly fluid term in the context of growing success with novel myeloma agents, included deletions 13q and 17p, translocations, (4;14) and (14;16) or hypodiploidy.

Lenalidomide A patients had a trend toward improved median overall survival at 72 months, compared with 57 months for the lenalidomide B group receiving more complex regimens (P = .07), reported Dr. Baz, with Moffitt’s hematologic malignancies and experimental therapeutics departments.

Median overall survival, the study’s primary end point, however, was significantly improved in the bortezomib A group at 72 months vs. 45 months in the bortezomib B group (P = .02).

Similarly, the nonintensive therapy group lived significantly longer for 74 months vs. 57 months for the intensive therapy group (P = .03).

Notably, patients with high-risk cytogenetics had significantly worse survival if they received intensive therapy rather than nonintensive therapy (median 44 months vs. 72 months; P = .01), he noted. In contrast, patients without high-risk cytogenetics had similar overall survival regardless of whether they belonged to the intensive therapy or nonintensive therapy groups (median 76 months vs. 75 months).

On multivariate analysis that adjusted for known covariates linked to myeloma survival such as ISS stage and high-dose therapy, the only features predictive of poor outcome were renal failure at baseline and intensive therapy.

Dr. Baz said the investigators were surprised by the counterintuitive results and that they could be due to bias from an unidentified confounding factor. For example, it’s possible that high-risk patients who appeared more ill were more likely to be given more intensive therapy by the practicing physician and may have had poor outcomes nonetheless, whereas high-risk patients who appeared more stable were more likely to be given less intensive therapy, but did well because of more indolent disease characteristics.

A potential biologic explanation for the finding might be related to genomic instabilities more commonly seen in high-risk myeloma.

"Patients with high-risk disease have myeloma cells that are more likely to acquire drug resistance faster," he said in an interview. "As a result, if you expose those myeloma cells to many drugs at once, they may acquire resistance to them faster and you get less mileage than if you spread out the drugs."

Dr. Baz said further study at the molecular level is needed to see how drug resistance develops in myeloma in the context of combination therapy with three or four drugs versus treatment with one or two drugs.

"I think the finding is hypothesis generating," he said. "It doesn’t change my practice with the patients I see today, but it needs more study."

Baseline characteristics of the non-intensive and intensive therapy groups were: age (58.9 years, 58.5 years), heavy chain IgG (60%, 63%), light chain Kappa (58%, 67%), ISS stage II (40%, 38%), ISS III (24%, 33%), Durie/Salmon stage III (75%, 85%), creatinine at least 2.0 mg/dL (12%, 13%), presence of bone disease (67%, 80%), poor-risk cytogenetics (43%, 36%), prior high-dose therapy (64%, 66%), and thalidomide use (59%, 47%).

The only significant difference between two groups was the presence of more males in the intensive group (73% vs. 52%; P = .01).

Dr. Baz reported research funding from Celgene and membership on an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee and research funding from Millennium Pharmaceuticals. His coauthors reported similar relationships with Celgene, Millennium, Novartis, and Allergan. 

 

 

*CLARIFICATION 1/23/12 The status of bortezomib and lenalidomide in treatment for multiple myeloma was clarified in this sentence.

SAN DIEGO – A provocative analysis suggests that a sequence of bortezomib and lenalidomide provides a better survival advantage than regimens with three or more agents in patients with multiple myeloma and high-risk cytogenetics.*

"While the limitations of this retrospective study limit drawing definitive conclusions, it appears that poor cytogenetics and biology trump treatment intensification," Dr. Rachid Baz and his colleagues stated in a poster presentation at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Rachid Baz

The investigators reported on 208 patients with multiple myeloma who received bortezomib (Velcade) and lenalidomide (Revlimid), nonconcurrently between January 2004 and August 2010 at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Tampa. The patients were stratified by treatment into six groups: lenalidomide with or without dexamethasone (lenalidomide A) or lenalidomide in combination with two or more agents (lenalidomide B); bortezomib with or with dexamethasone (bortezomib A) or bortezomib in combination with two or more agents (bortezomib B); and finally, only doublets or single agents (nonintensive therapy) or three or more agents in combination (intensive therapy).

No differences were observed between the lenalidomide A and B, bortezomib A and B, or intensive and nonintensive therapy groups in the baseline characteristics of age, International Staging System (ISS) and Durie/Salmon stage, beta2microglobulin or renal function, presence of poor-risk cytogenetics, and frequency of high-dose therapy.

Poor-risk cytogenetics, an increasingly fluid term in the context of growing success with novel myeloma agents, included deletions 13q and 17p, translocations, (4;14) and (14;16) or hypodiploidy.

Lenalidomide A patients had a trend toward improved median overall survival at 72 months, compared with 57 months for the lenalidomide B group receiving more complex regimens (P = .07), reported Dr. Baz, with Moffitt’s hematologic malignancies and experimental therapeutics departments.

Median overall survival, the study’s primary end point, however, was significantly improved in the bortezomib A group at 72 months vs. 45 months in the bortezomib B group (P = .02).

Similarly, the nonintensive therapy group lived significantly longer for 74 months vs. 57 months for the intensive therapy group (P = .03).

Notably, patients with high-risk cytogenetics had significantly worse survival if they received intensive therapy rather than nonintensive therapy (median 44 months vs. 72 months; P = .01), he noted. In contrast, patients without high-risk cytogenetics had similar overall survival regardless of whether they belonged to the intensive therapy or nonintensive therapy groups (median 76 months vs. 75 months).

On multivariate analysis that adjusted for known covariates linked to myeloma survival such as ISS stage and high-dose therapy, the only features predictive of poor outcome were renal failure at baseline and intensive therapy.

Dr. Baz said the investigators were surprised by the counterintuitive results and that they could be due to bias from an unidentified confounding factor. For example, it’s possible that high-risk patients who appeared more ill were more likely to be given more intensive therapy by the practicing physician and may have had poor outcomes nonetheless, whereas high-risk patients who appeared more stable were more likely to be given less intensive therapy, but did well because of more indolent disease characteristics.

A potential biologic explanation for the finding might be related to genomic instabilities more commonly seen in high-risk myeloma.

"Patients with high-risk disease have myeloma cells that are more likely to acquire drug resistance faster," he said in an interview. "As a result, if you expose those myeloma cells to many drugs at once, they may acquire resistance to them faster and you get less mileage than if you spread out the drugs."

Dr. Baz said further study at the molecular level is needed to see how drug resistance develops in myeloma in the context of combination therapy with three or four drugs versus treatment with one or two drugs.

"I think the finding is hypothesis generating," he said. "It doesn’t change my practice with the patients I see today, but it needs more study."

Baseline characteristics of the non-intensive and intensive therapy groups were: age (58.9 years, 58.5 years), heavy chain IgG (60%, 63%), light chain Kappa (58%, 67%), ISS stage II (40%, 38%), ISS III (24%, 33%), Durie/Salmon stage III (75%, 85%), creatinine at least 2.0 mg/dL (12%, 13%), presence of bone disease (67%, 80%), poor-risk cytogenetics (43%, 36%), prior high-dose therapy (64%, 66%), and thalidomide use (59%, 47%).

The only significant difference between two groups was the presence of more males in the intensive group (73% vs. 52%; P = .01).

Dr. Baz reported research funding from Celgene and membership on an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee and research funding from Millennium Pharmaceuticals. His coauthors reported similar relationships with Celgene, Millennium, Novartis, and Allergan. 

 

 

*CLARIFICATION 1/23/12 The status of bortezomib and lenalidomide in treatment for multiple myeloma was clarified in this sentence.

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Major Finding: Patients with high-risk cytogenetics treated with intensive therapy had a median overall survival of 46 months vs. 71 months if treated with nonintensive therapy (P = .01).

Data Source: Retrospective analysis of 208 patients with multiple myeloma.

Disclosures: Dr. Baz reported research funding from Celgene and membership on an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee and research funding from Millennium Pharmaceuticals. His coauthors reported similar relationships with Celgene, Millennium, Novartis, and Allergan. Dr. Lacy reports research funding from Celgene.

Phase II Results Continue to Support Carfilzomib in Myeloma

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SAN DIEGO – Adding the investigational protease inhibitor carfilzomib to lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone produced responses comparable with those achieved with the best frontline regimens in multiple myeloma, final results from a multicenter phase I/II study indicate.

Nearly all, 94%, of 49 evaluable patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma achieved at least a partial response with the triple combination, and 53% attained a near complete, complete, or stringent complete response (nCR/CR/sCR).

Responses also continued to improve with time, with 79% of patients reaching a nCR/CR/sCR after 12 cycles, Dr. Andrzej J. Jakubowiak reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology on behalf of the Multiple Myeloma Research Consortium. Although the data are still being evaluated, about half of the nCR/CR/sCRs were complete responses.

Dr. Andrzej Jakubowiak

"These response rates appear to compare favorably to the best frontline regimens in myeloma and, I would dare to say, they compare favorably to treatment sequences with transplant," said Dr. Jakubowiak, director of the multiple myeloma program at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center in Ann Arbor.

The combination of carfilzomib, lenalidomide (Revlimid), and dexamethasone previously posted an encouraging overall response rate of 78% and a nCR/CR rate of 40% with a low toxicity profile in the relapsed and/or refractory setting, providing the rationale for two ongoing phase III trials. The ASPIRE trial is evaluating lenalidomide and dexamethasone with or without carfilzomib in relapsed myeloma; the FOCUS trial, to support registration in Europe, is evaluating single-agent carfilzomib in relapsed/refractory myeloma.

Onyx Pharmaceuticals has announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is giving carfilzomib a standard review in the treatment of relapsed and refractory myeloma, with a decision expected by July 27.

An expanded access program is also underway in partnership with the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation for eligible patients in the United States with relapsed and refractory myeloma for whom no satisfactory treatment alternatives are available.

The carfilzomib, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone (CRd) regimen was one of several (including such novel therapies as oral MLN9708 protease inhibitor and the so-called BiRD regimen of clarithromycin [Biaxin] with lenalidomide and dexamethasone) for which impressive results were reported at the ASH meeting. "All of these drugs will find their own place" Dr. Jakubowiak said, but, he added, CRd is "the strongest regimen I’ve used, and I’ve used a variety of these regimens."

He noted that his patients continue to come to the clinic with no complaints of toxicity and that their responses continue to improve, providing further stimulus for those trying to sort through the abundance of novel myeloma therapies.

The current study included 53 patients who were eligible or ineligible for transplant: they received eight cycles of induction therapy with IV carfilzomib 20, 27, or 36 mg/m2; oral lenalidomide 25 mg, and oral dexamethasone at 40 mg for cycles 1-4 and at 20 mg for cycles 5-8, followed by maintenance therapy at the doses tolerated at the end of the eight cycles until disease progression or toxicity. Patients with at least a partial response after four cycles could proceed to stem cell transplant.

Their median age was 59 years, and 60% had advanced myeloma and 33% had unfavorable cytogenetics including deletion 17p.

After a median of 9.5 months follow-up, only one patient progressed and all patients were alive. Of these, 88% of patients remained on treatment, and 24 of 27 patients who began maintenance therapy continued on CRd maintenance, said Dr. Jakubowiak.

Dose modifications were required in 16 patients, and one patient discontinued therapy because of toxicity. Peripheral neuropathy was reported in almost one-quarter of patients, but all cases were grade 1/2. Dyspnea was reported in about one-third of patients, but it was quickly resolving, he noted.

Responses in the 16 patients with unfavorable cytogenetics were similar to all other patients, and included at least a partial response in 100% and nCR/CR/sCR in 56%, Dr. Jakubowiak said.

Dr. Ravi Vij

Dr. Ravi Vij of Washington University, St. Louis, presented final results of single-agent carfilzomib in bortezomib (Velcade)-naive patients in the separate phase II PX-171-004 study in myeloma that had relapsed after one to three lines of therapy.

The trial enrolled 165 patients, with one cohort receiving IV carfilzomib 20 mg/m2 for all 12 cycles and the second cohort given carfilzomib 20 mg/m2 for cycle 1 with escalation to 27 mg/m2 in all subsequent cycles.

A total of 129 patients were bortezomib-naive, including 59 in cohort 1 and 70 in cohort 2. At baseline, 15% had unfavorable cytogenetics, 52% had neuropathy, and two-thirds were refractory to their most recent therapy.

 

 

The overall response rate was 42% in cohort 1 and 52% in cohort 2, Dr. Vij reported. The median time to disease progression was 8.3 months and median duration of response was 13.1 months in cohort 1. Neither end point had been reached in cohort 2.

Dr. Vij noted that the higher response rates in cohort 2 do not appear to be associated with higher side effects. Mild to moderate peripheral neuropathy was reported in 14% of cohort 1 and 19% of cohort 2. Only one case of grade-3 peripheral neuropathy was reported in cohort 1 and none in cohort 2.

The most common adverse events in cohort 1 and cohort 2, respectively, were fatigue (71%, 54%), nausea (54%, 44%), anemia (46%, 39%), dyspnea (49%, 30%), cough (39%, 30%) and pyrexia (36%, 33%). The majority were grade 1/2; adverse events leading to carfilzomib discontinuation occurred in 22% of cohort 1 and 10% of cohort 2, he said.

These data are suggestive of a dose-response relationship and are being further evaluated in the exploratory phase 1b/2 study PX-171-007, Dr. Vij said.

The trials were sponsored by Onyx Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Jakubowiak and his coauthors and Dr. Vij and his coauthors reported financial relationships with several pharmaceutical firms, including Onyx.

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SAN DIEGO – Adding the investigational protease inhibitor carfilzomib to lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone produced responses comparable with those achieved with the best frontline regimens in multiple myeloma, final results from a multicenter phase I/II study indicate.

Nearly all, 94%, of 49 evaluable patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma achieved at least a partial response with the triple combination, and 53% attained a near complete, complete, or stringent complete response (nCR/CR/sCR).

Responses also continued to improve with time, with 79% of patients reaching a nCR/CR/sCR after 12 cycles, Dr. Andrzej J. Jakubowiak reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology on behalf of the Multiple Myeloma Research Consortium. Although the data are still being evaluated, about half of the nCR/CR/sCRs were complete responses.

Dr. Andrzej Jakubowiak

"These response rates appear to compare favorably to the best frontline regimens in myeloma and, I would dare to say, they compare favorably to treatment sequences with transplant," said Dr. Jakubowiak, director of the multiple myeloma program at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center in Ann Arbor.

The combination of carfilzomib, lenalidomide (Revlimid), and dexamethasone previously posted an encouraging overall response rate of 78% and a nCR/CR rate of 40% with a low toxicity profile in the relapsed and/or refractory setting, providing the rationale for two ongoing phase III trials. The ASPIRE trial is evaluating lenalidomide and dexamethasone with or without carfilzomib in relapsed myeloma; the FOCUS trial, to support registration in Europe, is evaluating single-agent carfilzomib in relapsed/refractory myeloma.

Onyx Pharmaceuticals has announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is giving carfilzomib a standard review in the treatment of relapsed and refractory myeloma, with a decision expected by July 27.

An expanded access program is also underway in partnership with the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation for eligible patients in the United States with relapsed and refractory myeloma for whom no satisfactory treatment alternatives are available.

The carfilzomib, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone (CRd) regimen was one of several (including such novel therapies as oral MLN9708 protease inhibitor and the so-called BiRD regimen of clarithromycin [Biaxin] with lenalidomide and dexamethasone) for which impressive results were reported at the ASH meeting. "All of these drugs will find their own place" Dr. Jakubowiak said, but, he added, CRd is "the strongest regimen I’ve used, and I’ve used a variety of these regimens."

He noted that his patients continue to come to the clinic with no complaints of toxicity and that their responses continue to improve, providing further stimulus for those trying to sort through the abundance of novel myeloma therapies.

The current study included 53 patients who were eligible or ineligible for transplant: they received eight cycles of induction therapy with IV carfilzomib 20, 27, or 36 mg/m2; oral lenalidomide 25 mg, and oral dexamethasone at 40 mg for cycles 1-4 and at 20 mg for cycles 5-8, followed by maintenance therapy at the doses tolerated at the end of the eight cycles until disease progression or toxicity. Patients with at least a partial response after four cycles could proceed to stem cell transplant.

Their median age was 59 years, and 60% had advanced myeloma and 33% had unfavorable cytogenetics including deletion 17p.

After a median of 9.5 months follow-up, only one patient progressed and all patients were alive. Of these, 88% of patients remained on treatment, and 24 of 27 patients who began maintenance therapy continued on CRd maintenance, said Dr. Jakubowiak.

Dose modifications were required in 16 patients, and one patient discontinued therapy because of toxicity. Peripheral neuropathy was reported in almost one-quarter of patients, but all cases were grade 1/2. Dyspnea was reported in about one-third of patients, but it was quickly resolving, he noted.

Responses in the 16 patients with unfavorable cytogenetics were similar to all other patients, and included at least a partial response in 100% and nCR/CR/sCR in 56%, Dr. Jakubowiak said.

Dr. Ravi Vij

Dr. Ravi Vij of Washington University, St. Louis, presented final results of single-agent carfilzomib in bortezomib (Velcade)-naive patients in the separate phase II PX-171-004 study in myeloma that had relapsed after one to three lines of therapy.

The trial enrolled 165 patients, with one cohort receiving IV carfilzomib 20 mg/m2 for all 12 cycles and the second cohort given carfilzomib 20 mg/m2 for cycle 1 with escalation to 27 mg/m2 in all subsequent cycles.

A total of 129 patients were bortezomib-naive, including 59 in cohort 1 and 70 in cohort 2. At baseline, 15% had unfavorable cytogenetics, 52% had neuropathy, and two-thirds were refractory to their most recent therapy.

 

 

The overall response rate was 42% in cohort 1 and 52% in cohort 2, Dr. Vij reported. The median time to disease progression was 8.3 months and median duration of response was 13.1 months in cohort 1. Neither end point had been reached in cohort 2.

Dr. Vij noted that the higher response rates in cohort 2 do not appear to be associated with higher side effects. Mild to moderate peripheral neuropathy was reported in 14% of cohort 1 and 19% of cohort 2. Only one case of grade-3 peripheral neuropathy was reported in cohort 1 and none in cohort 2.

The most common adverse events in cohort 1 and cohort 2, respectively, were fatigue (71%, 54%), nausea (54%, 44%), anemia (46%, 39%), dyspnea (49%, 30%), cough (39%, 30%) and pyrexia (36%, 33%). The majority were grade 1/2; adverse events leading to carfilzomib discontinuation occurred in 22% of cohort 1 and 10% of cohort 2, he said.

These data are suggestive of a dose-response relationship and are being further evaluated in the exploratory phase 1b/2 study PX-171-007, Dr. Vij said.

The trials were sponsored by Onyx Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Jakubowiak and his coauthors and Dr. Vij and his coauthors reported financial relationships with several pharmaceutical firms, including Onyx.

SAN DIEGO – Adding the investigational protease inhibitor carfilzomib to lenalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone produced responses comparable with those achieved with the best frontline regimens in multiple myeloma, final results from a multicenter phase I/II study indicate.

Nearly all, 94%, of 49 evaluable patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma achieved at least a partial response with the triple combination, and 53% attained a near complete, complete, or stringent complete response (nCR/CR/sCR).

Responses also continued to improve with time, with 79% of patients reaching a nCR/CR/sCR after 12 cycles, Dr. Andrzej J. Jakubowiak reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology on behalf of the Multiple Myeloma Research Consortium. Although the data are still being evaluated, about half of the nCR/CR/sCRs were complete responses.

Dr. Andrzej Jakubowiak

"These response rates appear to compare favorably to the best frontline regimens in myeloma and, I would dare to say, they compare favorably to treatment sequences with transplant," said Dr. Jakubowiak, director of the multiple myeloma program at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center in Ann Arbor.

The combination of carfilzomib, lenalidomide (Revlimid), and dexamethasone previously posted an encouraging overall response rate of 78% and a nCR/CR rate of 40% with a low toxicity profile in the relapsed and/or refractory setting, providing the rationale for two ongoing phase III trials. The ASPIRE trial is evaluating lenalidomide and dexamethasone with or without carfilzomib in relapsed myeloma; the FOCUS trial, to support registration in Europe, is evaluating single-agent carfilzomib in relapsed/refractory myeloma.

Onyx Pharmaceuticals has announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is giving carfilzomib a standard review in the treatment of relapsed and refractory myeloma, with a decision expected by July 27.

An expanded access program is also underway in partnership with the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation for eligible patients in the United States with relapsed and refractory myeloma for whom no satisfactory treatment alternatives are available.

The carfilzomib, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone (CRd) regimen was one of several (including such novel therapies as oral MLN9708 protease inhibitor and the so-called BiRD regimen of clarithromycin [Biaxin] with lenalidomide and dexamethasone) for which impressive results were reported at the ASH meeting. "All of these drugs will find their own place" Dr. Jakubowiak said, but, he added, CRd is "the strongest regimen I’ve used, and I’ve used a variety of these regimens."

He noted that his patients continue to come to the clinic with no complaints of toxicity and that their responses continue to improve, providing further stimulus for those trying to sort through the abundance of novel myeloma therapies.

The current study included 53 patients who were eligible or ineligible for transplant: they received eight cycles of induction therapy with IV carfilzomib 20, 27, or 36 mg/m2; oral lenalidomide 25 mg, and oral dexamethasone at 40 mg for cycles 1-4 and at 20 mg for cycles 5-8, followed by maintenance therapy at the doses tolerated at the end of the eight cycles until disease progression or toxicity. Patients with at least a partial response after four cycles could proceed to stem cell transplant.

Their median age was 59 years, and 60% had advanced myeloma and 33% had unfavorable cytogenetics including deletion 17p.

After a median of 9.5 months follow-up, only one patient progressed and all patients were alive. Of these, 88% of patients remained on treatment, and 24 of 27 patients who began maintenance therapy continued on CRd maintenance, said Dr. Jakubowiak.

Dose modifications were required in 16 patients, and one patient discontinued therapy because of toxicity. Peripheral neuropathy was reported in almost one-quarter of patients, but all cases were grade 1/2. Dyspnea was reported in about one-third of patients, but it was quickly resolving, he noted.

Responses in the 16 patients with unfavorable cytogenetics were similar to all other patients, and included at least a partial response in 100% and nCR/CR/sCR in 56%, Dr. Jakubowiak said.

Dr. Ravi Vij

Dr. Ravi Vij of Washington University, St. Louis, presented final results of single-agent carfilzomib in bortezomib (Velcade)-naive patients in the separate phase II PX-171-004 study in myeloma that had relapsed after one to three lines of therapy.

The trial enrolled 165 patients, with one cohort receiving IV carfilzomib 20 mg/m2 for all 12 cycles and the second cohort given carfilzomib 20 mg/m2 for cycle 1 with escalation to 27 mg/m2 in all subsequent cycles.

A total of 129 patients were bortezomib-naive, including 59 in cohort 1 and 70 in cohort 2. At baseline, 15% had unfavorable cytogenetics, 52% had neuropathy, and two-thirds were refractory to their most recent therapy.

 

 

The overall response rate was 42% in cohort 1 and 52% in cohort 2, Dr. Vij reported. The median time to disease progression was 8.3 months and median duration of response was 13.1 months in cohort 1. Neither end point had been reached in cohort 2.

Dr. Vij noted that the higher response rates in cohort 2 do not appear to be associated with higher side effects. Mild to moderate peripheral neuropathy was reported in 14% of cohort 1 and 19% of cohort 2. Only one case of grade-3 peripheral neuropathy was reported in cohort 1 and none in cohort 2.

The most common adverse events in cohort 1 and cohort 2, respectively, were fatigue (71%, 54%), nausea (54%, 44%), anemia (46%, 39%), dyspnea (49%, 30%), cough (39%, 30%) and pyrexia (36%, 33%). The majority were grade 1/2; adverse events leading to carfilzomib discontinuation occurred in 22% of cohort 1 and 10% of cohort 2, he said.

These data are suggestive of a dose-response relationship and are being further evaluated in the exploratory phase 1b/2 study PX-171-007, Dr. Vij said.

The trials were sponsored by Onyx Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Jakubowiak and his coauthors and Dr. Vij and his coauthors reported financial relationships with several pharmaceutical firms, including Onyx.

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AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

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Major Finding: Overall response rates reached 94% in newly diagnosed myeloma and 52% in patients with relapsed and/or refractory myeloma.

Data Source: A phase I/II study in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma and a phase II study in relapsed and/or refractory myeloma.

Disclosures: The trials were sponsored by Onyx Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Jakubowiak and his coauthors and Dr. Vij and his coauthors reported financial relationships with several pharmaceutical firms, including Onyx.

Vorinostat Delivers Mixed Results in Multiple Myeloma

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SAN DIEGO – The combination of vorinostat and bortezomib produced mixed results for patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma in two pivotal international trials.

Heavily pretreated patients achieved durable responses and an unprecedented survival advantage in the phase IIB Vantage 095 trial, whereas survival gains were less impressive among pretreated patients who remained sensitive to bortezomib (Velcade) in the phase III Vantage 088 trial. Findings from both trials were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

"I think this kind of combination of the histone deacetylase [HDAC] inhibitor vorinostat and bortezomib offers a very important option in patients who really have no other conventional therapeutic alternatives," said Dr. David S. Siegel, lead author of the Vantage 095 trial and division chief for myeloma at the Hackensack (N.J.) University Medical Center.

Vorinostat (Zolinza) has been approved since 2006 for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, and is under investigation in a variety of other cancers. Phase II trials of vorinostat, lenalidomide (Revlimid), and dexamethasone are underway or planned in myeloma patients who are refractory to lenalidomide-containing regimens or have relapsed on lenalidomide maintenance therapy.

Dr. Siegel said in an interview that vorinostat does not have intrinsic activity, but that HDAC inhibitors resensitize patients by dampening the changes involved in drug resistance. Whether Merck will file for an additional indication for vorinostat based on the current Vantage data is unclear, but Dr. Siegel suggested that the drug could play a key role in overcoming resistance to lenalidomide, bortezomib, and pomalidomide (a promising investigational immunomodulatory drug, or IMiD) as the use of these agents increases.

"It [vorinostat] has sort of been reserved for the last-ditch effort, with extraordinary success ... and no drugs in the myeloma space work in that last-ditch effort better than vorinostat in my hands," he said.

Vantage 095: Refractory Patients

According to final results from the phase IIB Vantage 095 trial involving 142 patients whose disease was described as refractory to basically all available therapies, 17% achieved at least a partial response and 77% achieved disease control.

Responses to vorinostat and bortezomib were sustainable, and in some cases particularly durable, said Dr. Siegel. The median duration of response was 6.3 months. Applying the EBMT (European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation) criteria, the median duration was 7.0 months and the overall response rate 11%.

The 2-year overall survival rate was 32%, and median overall survival was 11.1 months. Dr. Siegel noted that a median of roughly 4.5 months occurred from the time when patients were considered refractory to prior bortezomib and an IMiD to the time when they came on trial. He said the survival benchmark for such dual-refractory patients is 8.8 months.

The doublet was described as generally well tolerated, with 27% of patients completing at least eight cycles. Serious adverse events were reported in 65% of patients, but only 11% of treatment discontinuations resulted from serious adverse events. Neuropathy and febrile neutropenia were reported in 2% and 4%, respectively. One patient died because of an adverse event that was considered possibly or probably drug related.

Patients received oral vorinostat 400 mg/day on days 1-14 plus bortezomib 1.3 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1, 4, 8 and 11 of a 21-day cycle. Patients with progressive disease or no change after four cycles could receive oral dexamethasone 20 mg on the day of and day after each dose of bortezomib.

The trial enrolled patients with relapsed and refractory disease who had received at least two prior lines of therapy, and were refractory to bortezomib and ineligible for or refractory to at least one IMiD. Their median age was 63 years, and 69% had received at least four prior lines of therapy (range, 2-17 lines).

Subgroup analyses revealed that partial responses occurred in 18% of patients who were refractory to a bortezomib regimen and 22% who were refractory to up to two IMiDs. Overall survival was 11.7 months and 11.2 months, respectively. Progression-free survival for the entire cohort was 3.13 months.

Session comoderator Prof. Michele Cavo of the University of Bologna (Italy) said the most important message of the trial was the 11-month median overall survival. "This combination may offer a chance to patients heavily pretreated, almost 100% of them with prior refractoriness to bortezomib and lenalidomide and [other] IMiDs," he said in an interview. "This means that the combination of a histone deacetylase inhibitor with bortezomib may partially overcome prior refractoriness to a proteasome inhibitor or an IMiD."

Clinicians will need to figure out how best to use vorinostat, but Dr. Siegel and Dr. Cavo agreed that its oral administration is a big advantage, particularly for patients with advanced-stage disease, who are often elderly and in pain.

 

 

Vantage 088: In Bortezomib Sensitive

Dr. Meletios Dimopoulos presented data from the randomized phase III Vantage 088 trial involving 637 patients who had progressive disease after one to three prior treatments, but were bortezomib sensitive. Patients were randomized to the same combination regimen that was used in Vantage 095, or to vorinostat 400 mg/day on days 1-14 plus placebo.

The combination of bortezomib plus vorinostat increased the primary end point of progression-free survival from 6.83 months to 7.63 months (hazard ratio, 0.774; P = .01). Although the difference reached statistical significance, the audience questioned the clinical significance of a 25-day advantage, and pointed out that this was the very first salvage line for 45% of patients in the bortezomib/vorinostat arm vs. 40% in the control arm. In addition, median overall survival was not significantly different between the bortezomib/vorinostat and control arms.

Dr. Dimopoulos responded that Vantage 088 was indeed a positive trial because one in five patients benefited from the combination. "If vorinostat is approved for the use of myeloma, it is sure that we will find better ways to use it, as is the case with bortezomib today," he said.

Using EBMT criteria, the combination of vorinostat plus bortezomib significantly improved the overall response (56% vs. 41%) and clinical benefit rates (71% vs. 53%), compared with bortezomib alone (both P less than .0001). Duration of response by EBMT criteria was similar at 8.5 months and 8.4 months, respectively, reported Dr. Dimopoulos of the department of clinical therapeutics at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.

Subgroup analyses revealed no significant differences between the two arms in overall response or progression-free survival based on age, type of melanoma, number of previous lines of therapy, or prior exposure to IMiDs or bortezomib.

At baseline, 46% of the 317 patients in the bortezomib/vorinostat arm and 48% of the 320 patients in the bortezomib/placebo arm were nonresponsive to their last line of therapy.

Dr. Siegel reported receiving research funding and honoraria and serving as a speaker for Millennium Pharmaceuticals and honoraria from Merck. His coauthors reported financial relationships with several firms including Millennium, Merck, and Novartis. Dr. Dimopoulos reported consultancy and honoraria from Celgene and Ortho-Biotech. His coauthors reported relationships with multiple pharmaceutical firms.

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SAN DIEGO – The combination of vorinostat and bortezomib produced mixed results for patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma in two pivotal international trials.

Heavily pretreated patients achieved durable responses and an unprecedented survival advantage in the phase IIB Vantage 095 trial, whereas survival gains were less impressive among pretreated patients who remained sensitive to bortezomib (Velcade) in the phase III Vantage 088 trial. Findings from both trials were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

"I think this kind of combination of the histone deacetylase [HDAC] inhibitor vorinostat and bortezomib offers a very important option in patients who really have no other conventional therapeutic alternatives," said Dr. David S. Siegel, lead author of the Vantage 095 trial and division chief for myeloma at the Hackensack (N.J.) University Medical Center.

Vorinostat (Zolinza) has been approved since 2006 for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, and is under investigation in a variety of other cancers. Phase II trials of vorinostat, lenalidomide (Revlimid), and dexamethasone are underway or planned in myeloma patients who are refractory to lenalidomide-containing regimens or have relapsed on lenalidomide maintenance therapy.

Dr. Siegel said in an interview that vorinostat does not have intrinsic activity, but that HDAC inhibitors resensitize patients by dampening the changes involved in drug resistance. Whether Merck will file for an additional indication for vorinostat based on the current Vantage data is unclear, but Dr. Siegel suggested that the drug could play a key role in overcoming resistance to lenalidomide, bortezomib, and pomalidomide (a promising investigational immunomodulatory drug, or IMiD) as the use of these agents increases.

"It [vorinostat] has sort of been reserved for the last-ditch effort, with extraordinary success ... and no drugs in the myeloma space work in that last-ditch effort better than vorinostat in my hands," he said.

Vantage 095: Refractory Patients

According to final results from the phase IIB Vantage 095 trial involving 142 patients whose disease was described as refractory to basically all available therapies, 17% achieved at least a partial response and 77% achieved disease control.

Responses to vorinostat and bortezomib were sustainable, and in some cases particularly durable, said Dr. Siegel. The median duration of response was 6.3 months. Applying the EBMT (European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation) criteria, the median duration was 7.0 months and the overall response rate 11%.

The 2-year overall survival rate was 32%, and median overall survival was 11.1 months. Dr. Siegel noted that a median of roughly 4.5 months occurred from the time when patients were considered refractory to prior bortezomib and an IMiD to the time when they came on trial. He said the survival benchmark for such dual-refractory patients is 8.8 months.

The doublet was described as generally well tolerated, with 27% of patients completing at least eight cycles. Serious adverse events were reported in 65% of patients, but only 11% of treatment discontinuations resulted from serious adverse events. Neuropathy and febrile neutropenia were reported in 2% and 4%, respectively. One patient died because of an adverse event that was considered possibly or probably drug related.

Patients received oral vorinostat 400 mg/day on days 1-14 plus bortezomib 1.3 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1, 4, 8 and 11 of a 21-day cycle. Patients with progressive disease or no change after four cycles could receive oral dexamethasone 20 mg on the day of and day after each dose of bortezomib.

The trial enrolled patients with relapsed and refractory disease who had received at least two prior lines of therapy, and were refractory to bortezomib and ineligible for or refractory to at least one IMiD. Their median age was 63 years, and 69% had received at least four prior lines of therapy (range, 2-17 lines).

Subgroup analyses revealed that partial responses occurred in 18% of patients who were refractory to a bortezomib regimen and 22% who were refractory to up to two IMiDs. Overall survival was 11.7 months and 11.2 months, respectively. Progression-free survival for the entire cohort was 3.13 months.

Session comoderator Prof. Michele Cavo of the University of Bologna (Italy) said the most important message of the trial was the 11-month median overall survival. "This combination may offer a chance to patients heavily pretreated, almost 100% of them with prior refractoriness to bortezomib and lenalidomide and [other] IMiDs," he said in an interview. "This means that the combination of a histone deacetylase inhibitor with bortezomib may partially overcome prior refractoriness to a proteasome inhibitor or an IMiD."

Clinicians will need to figure out how best to use vorinostat, but Dr. Siegel and Dr. Cavo agreed that its oral administration is a big advantage, particularly for patients with advanced-stage disease, who are often elderly and in pain.

 

 

Vantage 088: In Bortezomib Sensitive

Dr. Meletios Dimopoulos presented data from the randomized phase III Vantage 088 trial involving 637 patients who had progressive disease after one to three prior treatments, but were bortezomib sensitive. Patients were randomized to the same combination regimen that was used in Vantage 095, or to vorinostat 400 mg/day on days 1-14 plus placebo.

The combination of bortezomib plus vorinostat increased the primary end point of progression-free survival from 6.83 months to 7.63 months (hazard ratio, 0.774; P = .01). Although the difference reached statistical significance, the audience questioned the clinical significance of a 25-day advantage, and pointed out that this was the very first salvage line for 45% of patients in the bortezomib/vorinostat arm vs. 40% in the control arm. In addition, median overall survival was not significantly different between the bortezomib/vorinostat and control arms.

Dr. Dimopoulos responded that Vantage 088 was indeed a positive trial because one in five patients benefited from the combination. "If vorinostat is approved for the use of myeloma, it is sure that we will find better ways to use it, as is the case with bortezomib today," he said.

Using EBMT criteria, the combination of vorinostat plus bortezomib significantly improved the overall response (56% vs. 41%) and clinical benefit rates (71% vs. 53%), compared with bortezomib alone (both P less than .0001). Duration of response by EBMT criteria was similar at 8.5 months and 8.4 months, respectively, reported Dr. Dimopoulos of the department of clinical therapeutics at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.

Subgroup analyses revealed no significant differences between the two arms in overall response or progression-free survival based on age, type of melanoma, number of previous lines of therapy, or prior exposure to IMiDs or bortezomib.

At baseline, 46% of the 317 patients in the bortezomib/vorinostat arm and 48% of the 320 patients in the bortezomib/placebo arm were nonresponsive to their last line of therapy.

Dr. Siegel reported receiving research funding and honoraria and serving as a speaker for Millennium Pharmaceuticals and honoraria from Merck. His coauthors reported financial relationships with several firms including Millennium, Merck, and Novartis. Dr. Dimopoulos reported consultancy and honoraria from Celgene and Ortho-Biotech. His coauthors reported relationships with multiple pharmaceutical firms.

SAN DIEGO – The combination of vorinostat and bortezomib produced mixed results for patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma in two pivotal international trials.

Heavily pretreated patients achieved durable responses and an unprecedented survival advantage in the phase IIB Vantage 095 trial, whereas survival gains were less impressive among pretreated patients who remained sensitive to bortezomib (Velcade) in the phase III Vantage 088 trial. Findings from both trials were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

"I think this kind of combination of the histone deacetylase [HDAC] inhibitor vorinostat and bortezomib offers a very important option in patients who really have no other conventional therapeutic alternatives," said Dr. David S. Siegel, lead author of the Vantage 095 trial and division chief for myeloma at the Hackensack (N.J.) University Medical Center.

Vorinostat (Zolinza) has been approved since 2006 for the treatment of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, and is under investigation in a variety of other cancers. Phase II trials of vorinostat, lenalidomide (Revlimid), and dexamethasone are underway or planned in myeloma patients who are refractory to lenalidomide-containing regimens or have relapsed on lenalidomide maintenance therapy.

Dr. Siegel said in an interview that vorinostat does not have intrinsic activity, but that HDAC inhibitors resensitize patients by dampening the changes involved in drug resistance. Whether Merck will file for an additional indication for vorinostat based on the current Vantage data is unclear, but Dr. Siegel suggested that the drug could play a key role in overcoming resistance to lenalidomide, bortezomib, and pomalidomide (a promising investigational immunomodulatory drug, or IMiD) as the use of these agents increases.

"It [vorinostat] has sort of been reserved for the last-ditch effort, with extraordinary success ... and no drugs in the myeloma space work in that last-ditch effort better than vorinostat in my hands," he said.

Vantage 095: Refractory Patients

According to final results from the phase IIB Vantage 095 trial involving 142 patients whose disease was described as refractory to basically all available therapies, 17% achieved at least a partial response and 77% achieved disease control.

Responses to vorinostat and bortezomib were sustainable, and in some cases particularly durable, said Dr. Siegel. The median duration of response was 6.3 months. Applying the EBMT (European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation) criteria, the median duration was 7.0 months and the overall response rate 11%.

The 2-year overall survival rate was 32%, and median overall survival was 11.1 months. Dr. Siegel noted that a median of roughly 4.5 months occurred from the time when patients were considered refractory to prior bortezomib and an IMiD to the time when they came on trial. He said the survival benchmark for such dual-refractory patients is 8.8 months.

The doublet was described as generally well tolerated, with 27% of patients completing at least eight cycles. Serious adverse events were reported in 65% of patients, but only 11% of treatment discontinuations resulted from serious adverse events. Neuropathy and febrile neutropenia were reported in 2% and 4%, respectively. One patient died because of an adverse event that was considered possibly or probably drug related.

Patients received oral vorinostat 400 mg/day on days 1-14 plus bortezomib 1.3 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1, 4, 8 and 11 of a 21-day cycle. Patients with progressive disease or no change after four cycles could receive oral dexamethasone 20 mg on the day of and day after each dose of bortezomib.

The trial enrolled patients with relapsed and refractory disease who had received at least two prior lines of therapy, and were refractory to bortezomib and ineligible for or refractory to at least one IMiD. Their median age was 63 years, and 69% had received at least four prior lines of therapy (range, 2-17 lines).

Subgroup analyses revealed that partial responses occurred in 18% of patients who were refractory to a bortezomib regimen and 22% who were refractory to up to two IMiDs. Overall survival was 11.7 months and 11.2 months, respectively. Progression-free survival for the entire cohort was 3.13 months.

Session comoderator Prof. Michele Cavo of the University of Bologna (Italy) said the most important message of the trial was the 11-month median overall survival. "This combination may offer a chance to patients heavily pretreated, almost 100% of them with prior refractoriness to bortezomib and lenalidomide and [other] IMiDs," he said in an interview. "This means that the combination of a histone deacetylase inhibitor with bortezomib may partially overcome prior refractoriness to a proteasome inhibitor or an IMiD."

Clinicians will need to figure out how best to use vorinostat, but Dr. Siegel and Dr. Cavo agreed that its oral administration is a big advantage, particularly for patients with advanced-stage disease, who are often elderly and in pain.

 

 

Vantage 088: In Bortezomib Sensitive

Dr. Meletios Dimopoulos presented data from the randomized phase III Vantage 088 trial involving 637 patients who had progressive disease after one to three prior treatments, but were bortezomib sensitive. Patients were randomized to the same combination regimen that was used in Vantage 095, or to vorinostat 400 mg/day on days 1-14 plus placebo.

The combination of bortezomib plus vorinostat increased the primary end point of progression-free survival from 6.83 months to 7.63 months (hazard ratio, 0.774; P = .01). Although the difference reached statistical significance, the audience questioned the clinical significance of a 25-day advantage, and pointed out that this was the very first salvage line for 45% of patients in the bortezomib/vorinostat arm vs. 40% in the control arm. In addition, median overall survival was not significantly different between the bortezomib/vorinostat and control arms.

Dr. Dimopoulos responded that Vantage 088 was indeed a positive trial because one in five patients benefited from the combination. "If vorinostat is approved for the use of myeloma, it is sure that we will find better ways to use it, as is the case with bortezomib today," he said.

Using EBMT criteria, the combination of vorinostat plus bortezomib significantly improved the overall response (56% vs. 41%) and clinical benefit rates (71% vs. 53%), compared with bortezomib alone (both P less than .0001). Duration of response by EBMT criteria was similar at 8.5 months and 8.4 months, respectively, reported Dr. Dimopoulos of the department of clinical therapeutics at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.

Subgroup analyses revealed no significant differences between the two arms in overall response or progression-free survival based on age, type of melanoma, number of previous lines of therapy, or prior exposure to IMiDs or bortezomib.

At baseline, 46% of the 317 patients in the bortezomib/vorinostat arm and 48% of the 320 patients in the bortezomib/placebo arm were nonresponsive to their last line of therapy.

Dr. Siegel reported receiving research funding and honoraria and serving as a speaker for Millennium Pharmaceuticals and honoraria from Merck. His coauthors reported financial relationships with several firms including Millennium, Merck, and Novartis. Dr. Dimopoulos reported consultancy and honoraria from Celgene and Ortho-Biotech. His coauthors reported relationships with multiple pharmaceutical firms.

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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

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58-Plus Chromosomes Bode Well in Childhood B-ALL

Confirmation Studies Needed to Fine-Tune Understanding of Modal Chromosomes in Pediatric ALL
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58-Plus Chromosomes Bode Well in Childhood B-ALL

SAN DIEGO – High hyperploidy – 50 or more chromosomes – has been recognized since the 1980s as a favorable prognostic feature in children with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia, but it appears that the best results occur in patients who have 58 or more chromosomes.

Patients with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) who had a modal number of chromosomes (MNC) ranging from 58 to 66 had a 6-year event-free survival rate of 99% in a study reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

In comparison, the event-free survival rate was 80% for patients with MNC 51-53 and 89% for patients with MNC 54-57 (P less than .001), said Dr. Nicole Dastugue from the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire – Hôpital Purpan in Toulouse, France, on behalf of colleagues in the EORTC (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) CLG 58951 trial.

"In our study, the best indicator of excellent outcome was ploidy assessed with karyotype," she said, adding that patients with a DNA index of 1.24 or greater also had good outcomes, with a 94% event-free survival rate at 6 years (P = .03).

The investigators recommended assessing ploidy with both karyotyping and DNA index methods, a combination that can better detect hyperploidy greater than 50 chromosomes, and exclude near-triploidy or duplication of hypoploidy of 30-40 chromosomes, which indicate poor prognosis.

Previous studies have suggested that factors predicting better outcomes in childhood B-ALL included a DNA greater than 1.16, 56 or more chromosomes, triple trisomies (+4,+10,+17), double trisomies (+4,+10), and trisomy 18, Dr. Dastugue said.

She and her colleagues tested the above factors in 541 patients with hyperploidy greater than 50 who were enrolled in the trial, which studied combination chemotherapy plus steroids in children with ALL and lymphoblastic non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Hyperploidy was identified by cytogenetics (karyotype and fluorescent in situ hybridization [FISH]) and/or DNA index via flow cytometry.

Patients were stratified by risk group (very low risk, average risk 1 or 2, and very high risk) according to DNA index, MNC, white blood count, central nervous system and/or gonadal involvement, or presence of very high risk features. Of the 541 patients, MNC could be evaluated in 446 (82%) and DNA index in 490 (91%).

In all, 87 patients were found to have 51-53 chromosomes, 258 had 54-57 chromosomes, and 101 had 58 or more chromosomes. Significant prognostic factors for event-free survival included MNC, DNA index, triple and double trisomies, and minimal residual disease, Dr. Dastugue said.

Among the patients with 58 or more chromosomes, all had a good response to prophase therapy, only three had minimal residual disease after induction chemotherapy, and only one patient experienced a relapse. The investigators could not identify specific patterns of chromosome gains associated with prognosis because all chromosomes except chromosome 1 were found to contribute to trisomies or tetrasomies.

Higher DNA index also was significantly associated with better outcomes, with patients who had a DNA index of 1.24 or greater having a 95% 6-year event-free survival, compared with 83% for DNA index below 1.16 and 90% for DNA index from 1.16 through 1.23 (P = .01), she reported.

Triple trisomies were associated with a 96% 6-year event-free survival rate vs. 86% for no triple trisomies (P = .005). The 6-year event-free survival rate for double trisomies was 94%, compared with 84% for no double trisomies (P = .003).

When the investigators ranked variables based on the presence of 58 or more chromosomes and trisomies, they found that the 6-year event-free survival rate for 58+ chromosomes was 99%, compared with 93% for triple trisomies with lower chromosome numbers and 84% for double trisomies with lower chromosome numbers (P = .04).

This finding implies that the favorable outcomes seen in patients with triple and double trisomies were at least partly due to their frequent association with high MNC, Dr. Dastugue said.

Noting that the investigators had consistently found triple trisomies of chromosomes 4, 10, and 17, session comoderator Dr. Christine J. Harrison of the Northern Institute for Cancer Research at Newcastle University in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, asked whether they had found any other trisomies associated with a favorable prognosis.

Dr. Dastugue said that no trisomies tested were significant predictors of outcome.

The trial was sponsored by the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Harrison reported no relevant conflicts.

Body

High

hyperdiploidy and trisomy of specific chromosomes have been appreciated for

quite some time as favorable biologic characteristics that predict for a successful

outcome to therapy for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The specific

chromosomes (4, 10, and 17), additional copies of which confer a good

prognosis, have been identified and used in risk-adjusted therapy paradigms. The

question of how high is high enough with respect to hyperdiploidy has not been

quantified.

This report from the

EORTC suggests that the important modal chromosome number is 58. Since all but

chromosome 1 were associated with observed trisomies and tetrasomies, however,

no consistent pattern of single chromosome excess appears related to the

prognostic significance of a modal chromosome number of 58 or greater.

Confirmation in larger series of patients and validation in patients exposed to

different therapy regimens is required before these data can be generalized for

treatment stratification decision-making.

Dr. Gregory H. Reaman, an associate editor of The

Oncology Report, is professor of pediatrics at the George Washington University

School of Medicine and Health Sciences and Children’s National Medical Center

in Washington.


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Body

High

hyperdiploidy and trisomy of specific chromosomes have been appreciated for

quite some time as favorable biologic characteristics that predict for a successful

outcome to therapy for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The specific

chromosomes (4, 10, and 17), additional copies of which confer a good

prognosis, have been identified and used in risk-adjusted therapy paradigms. The

question of how high is high enough with respect to hyperdiploidy has not been

quantified.

This report from the

EORTC suggests that the important modal chromosome number is 58. Since all but

chromosome 1 were associated with observed trisomies and tetrasomies, however,

no consistent pattern of single chromosome excess appears related to the

prognostic significance of a modal chromosome number of 58 or greater.

Confirmation in larger series of patients and validation in patients exposed to

different therapy regimens is required before these data can be generalized for

treatment stratification decision-making.

Dr. Gregory H. Reaman, an associate editor of The

Oncology Report, is professor of pediatrics at the George Washington University

School of Medicine and Health Sciences and Children’s National Medical Center

in Washington.


Body

High

hyperdiploidy and trisomy of specific chromosomes have been appreciated for

quite some time as favorable biologic characteristics that predict for a successful

outcome to therapy for children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The specific

chromosomes (4, 10, and 17), additional copies of which confer a good

prognosis, have been identified and used in risk-adjusted therapy paradigms. The

question of how high is high enough with respect to hyperdiploidy has not been

quantified.

This report from the

EORTC suggests that the important modal chromosome number is 58. Since all but

chromosome 1 were associated with observed trisomies and tetrasomies, however,

no consistent pattern of single chromosome excess appears related to the

prognostic significance of a modal chromosome number of 58 or greater.

Confirmation in larger series of patients and validation in patients exposed to

different therapy regimens is required before these data can be generalized for

treatment stratification decision-making.

Dr. Gregory H. Reaman, an associate editor of The

Oncology Report, is professor of pediatrics at the George Washington University

School of Medicine and Health Sciences and Children’s National Medical Center

in Washington.


Title
Confirmation Studies Needed to Fine-Tune Understanding of Modal Chromosomes in Pediatric ALL
Confirmation Studies Needed to Fine-Tune Understanding of Modal Chromosomes in Pediatric ALL

SAN DIEGO – High hyperploidy – 50 or more chromosomes – has been recognized since the 1980s as a favorable prognostic feature in children with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia, but it appears that the best results occur in patients who have 58 or more chromosomes.

Patients with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) who had a modal number of chromosomes (MNC) ranging from 58 to 66 had a 6-year event-free survival rate of 99% in a study reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

In comparison, the event-free survival rate was 80% for patients with MNC 51-53 and 89% for patients with MNC 54-57 (P less than .001), said Dr. Nicole Dastugue from the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire – Hôpital Purpan in Toulouse, France, on behalf of colleagues in the EORTC (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) CLG 58951 trial.

"In our study, the best indicator of excellent outcome was ploidy assessed with karyotype," she said, adding that patients with a DNA index of 1.24 or greater also had good outcomes, with a 94% event-free survival rate at 6 years (P = .03).

The investigators recommended assessing ploidy with both karyotyping and DNA index methods, a combination that can better detect hyperploidy greater than 50 chromosomes, and exclude near-triploidy or duplication of hypoploidy of 30-40 chromosomes, which indicate poor prognosis.

Previous studies have suggested that factors predicting better outcomes in childhood B-ALL included a DNA greater than 1.16, 56 or more chromosomes, triple trisomies (+4,+10,+17), double trisomies (+4,+10), and trisomy 18, Dr. Dastugue said.

She and her colleagues tested the above factors in 541 patients with hyperploidy greater than 50 who were enrolled in the trial, which studied combination chemotherapy plus steroids in children with ALL and lymphoblastic non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Hyperploidy was identified by cytogenetics (karyotype and fluorescent in situ hybridization [FISH]) and/or DNA index via flow cytometry.

Patients were stratified by risk group (very low risk, average risk 1 or 2, and very high risk) according to DNA index, MNC, white blood count, central nervous system and/or gonadal involvement, or presence of very high risk features. Of the 541 patients, MNC could be evaluated in 446 (82%) and DNA index in 490 (91%).

In all, 87 patients were found to have 51-53 chromosomes, 258 had 54-57 chromosomes, and 101 had 58 or more chromosomes. Significant prognostic factors for event-free survival included MNC, DNA index, triple and double trisomies, and minimal residual disease, Dr. Dastugue said.

Among the patients with 58 or more chromosomes, all had a good response to prophase therapy, only three had minimal residual disease after induction chemotherapy, and only one patient experienced a relapse. The investigators could not identify specific patterns of chromosome gains associated with prognosis because all chromosomes except chromosome 1 were found to contribute to trisomies or tetrasomies.

Higher DNA index also was significantly associated with better outcomes, with patients who had a DNA index of 1.24 or greater having a 95% 6-year event-free survival, compared with 83% for DNA index below 1.16 and 90% for DNA index from 1.16 through 1.23 (P = .01), she reported.

Triple trisomies were associated with a 96% 6-year event-free survival rate vs. 86% for no triple trisomies (P = .005). The 6-year event-free survival rate for double trisomies was 94%, compared with 84% for no double trisomies (P = .003).

When the investigators ranked variables based on the presence of 58 or more chromosomes and trisomies, they found that the 6-year event-free survival rate for 58+ chromosomes was 99%, compared with 93% for triple trisomies with lower chromosome numbers and 84% for double trisomies with lower chromosome numbers (P = .04).

This finding implies that the favorable outcomes seen in patients with triple and double trisomies were at least partly due to their frequent association with high MNC, Dr. Dastugue said.

Noting that the investigators had consistently found triple trisomies of chromosomes 4, 10, and 17, session comoderator Dr. Christine J. Harrison of the Northern Institute for Cancer Research at Newcastle University in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, asked whether they had found any other trisomies associated with a favorable prognosis.

Dr. Dastugue said that no trisomies tested were significant predictors of outcome.

The trial was sponsored by the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Harrison reported no relevant conflicts.

SAN DIEGO – High hyperploidy – 50 or more chromosomes – has been recognized since the 1980s as a favorable prognostic feature in children with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia, but it appears that the best results occur in patients who have 58 or more chromosomes.

Patients with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) who had a modal number of chromosomes (MNC) ranging from 58 to 66 had a 6-year event-free survival rate of 99% in a study reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

In comparison, the event-free survival rate was 80% for patients with MNC 51-53 and 89% for patients with MNC 54-57 (P less than .001), said Dr. Nicole Dastugue from the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire – Hôpital Purpan in Toulouse, France, on behalf of colleagues in the EORTC (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) CLG 58951 trial.

"In our study, the best indicator of excellent outcome was ploidy assessed with karyotype," she said, adding that patients with a DNA index of 1.24 or greater also had good outcomes, with a 94% event-free survival rate at 6 years (P = .03).

The investigators recommended assessing ploidy with both karyotyping and DNA index methods, a combination that can better detect hyperploidy greater than 50 chromosomes, and exclude near-triploidy or duplication of hypoploidy of 30-40 chromosomes, which indicate poor prognosis.

Previous studies have suggested that factors predicting better outcomes in childhood B-ALL included a DNA greater than 1.16, 56 or more chromosomes, triple trisomies (+4,+10,+17), double trisomies (+4,+10), and trisomy 18, Dr. Dastugue said.

She and her colleagues tested the above factors in 541 patients with hyperploidy greater than 50 who were enrolled in the trial, which studied combination chemotherapy plus steroids in children with ALL and lymphoblastic non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Hyperploidy was identified by cytogenetics (karyotype and fluorescent in situ hybridization [FISH]) and/or DNA index via flow cytometry.

Patients were stratified by risk group (very low risk, average risk 1 or 2, and very high risk) according to DNA index, MNC, white blood count, central nervous system and/or gonadal involvement, or presence of very high risk features. Of the 541 patients, MNC could be evaluated in 446 (82%) and DNA index in 490 (91%).

In all, 87 patients were found to have 51-53 chromosomes, 258 had 54-57 chromosomes, and 101 had 58 or more chromosomes. Significant prognostic factors for event-free survival included MNC, DNA index, triple and double trisomies, and minimal residual disease, Dr. Dastugue said.

Among the patients with 58 or more chromosomes, all had a good response to prophase therapy, only three had minimal residual disease after induction chemotherapy, and only one patient experienced a relapse. The investigators could not identify specific patterns of chromosome gains associated with prognosis because all chromosomes except chromosome 1 were found to contribute to trisomies or tetrasomies.

Higher DNA index also was significantly associated with better outcomes, with patients who had a DNA index of 1.24 or greater having a 95% 6-year event-free survival, compared with 83% for DNA index below 1.16 and 90% for DNA index from 1.16 through 1.23 (P = .01), she reported.

Triple trisomies were associated with a 96% 6-year event-free survival rate vs. 86% for no triple trisomies (P = .005). The 6-year event-free survival rate for double trisomies was 94%, compared with 84% for no double trisomies (P = .003).

When the investigators ranked variables based on the presence of 58 or more chromosomes and trisomies, they found that the 6-year event-free survival rate for 58+ chromosomes was 99%, compared with 93% for triple trisomies with lower chromosome numbers and 84% for double trisomies with lower chromosome numbers (P = .04).

This finding implies that the favorable outcomes seen in patients with triple and double trisomies were at least partly due to their frequent association with high MNC, Dr. Dastugue said.

Noting that the investigators had consistently found triple trisomies of chromosomes 4, 10, and 17, session comoderator Dr. Christine J. Harrison of the Northern Institute for Cancer Research at Newcastle University in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, asked whether they had found any other trisomies associated with a favorable prognosis.

Dr. Dastugue said that no trisomies tested were significant predictors of outcome.

The trial was sponsored by the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Harrison reported no relevant conflicts.

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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

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Major Finding: Children with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia who had a modal number of chromosomes (MNC) ranging from 58-66 had a 6-year event-free survival rate of 99%, compared with 80% for patients with MNC 51-53 and 89% for patients with MNC 54-57 (P less than .001).

Data Source: Analysis of flow cytometry and cytogenetic findings from the EORTC CLG 58951 trial.

Disclosures: The trial was sponsored by the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Harrison reported no relevant conflicts.

Many Elderly AML Patients Not Receiving Chemotherapy

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Many Elderly AML Patients Not Receiving Chemotherapy

SAN DIEGO – Despite growing use of chemotherapy in elderly patients with acute myeloid leukemia, more than half still did not receive any chemotherapy between 1997 and 2007, according to an analysis of 6,888 cases in a large national database.

Median survival was significantly longer in patients who received chemotherapy than in those given best supportive care only, Yanni F. Yu reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology. In all, 56% of elderly acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients did not receive chemotherapy, however, and median survival as well as chemotherapy use declined with advancing age.

"Older patient with AML generally have a poor outcome," said Ms. Yu, manager of health economics and outcomes research at Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. "If they are not eligible for intensive chemotherapy, the median survival is usually less than 3 months," she noted.

    Yanni F. Yu

Previous studies in the elderly AML population showed that the percentage of chemotherapy treatment increased from 29% in 1991 to 38% in 1999, Ms. Yu said. To determine more current treatment trends in this patient population, she and her associates evaluated data from Medicare patients aged 65 years and older who had a new AML diagnosis between Jan. 1, 1997, and Dec. 31, 2007, recorded in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) cancer registry.

The analysis was limited to fee-for-service Medicare patients who had at least 6 months of pre-AML Medicare Part A and B benefit coverage. The researchers excluded patients who had evidence of another tumor in the SEER registry before the first AML diagnosis and those who had a diagnosis of a solid tumor within 6 months pre-AML in Medicare claims.

Eligible patients were followed from initial AML diagnosis until their date of death or the end of the observation period, which was Dec. 31, 2009.

The researchers evaluated the type of care received, chemotherapy treatment patterns, and mortality and patient survival separately for AML cases diagnosed in three time frames: 1997-1999, 2000-2003, and 2004-2007. They performed multivariate logistic regression to assess predictors of receipt of chemotherapy, including patient demographics, comorbidities, and year of AML diagnosis.

A total of 6,888 patients met the study criteria. Their mean age was 78 years, 48% were women, 88% were white, and 43% received chemotherapy at any point after diagnosis. The use of chemotherapy increased slightly over time, from 40.7% in 1999-2000 to 42.3% in 2000-2003 and 46% in 2004-2007.

More than half of patients (56%) received only best supportive care post diagnosis, although the percentage decreased slightly over time. Among patients receiving best supportive care, rates of hospice care increased from 30.3% in 1997-1999 to 36.4% in 2000-2003 and 42.3% in 2004-2007.

Among patients who received chemotherapy, the use of antibiotics increased substantially over the three time periods (11.1%, 14%, and 29.6%, respectively), as did the use of antifungals (1.3%, 3.1%, and 12.4%), indicating more patients were in need of prophylaxis or treatment for chemotherapy-related infections.

Older AML patients received strikingly less chemotherapy with advancing age. For example, 66.3% of patients aged 65-74 years received chemotherapy, compared with 39.2% of those aged 75-84 years and 14.8% of those aged 85 years and older. The proportions of patients receiving antibiotics and antifungals also decreased with advancing age.

Regression analysis showed a similar association between age and chemotherapy, revealing that the strongest predictor of not receiving chemotherapy was older age, with an odds ratio of 0.12 for being aged 85 years or more and an OR of 0.42 for being aged 75-84 years.

The overall 30-day mortality rate was 20.5%, and the 60-day mortality rate was 42.8%. Median survival among all patients was 2.6 months, and it decreased with advancing age from 4.5 months to 2.4 months to 1.6 months for those aged 65-74 years, 75-84 years, and 85 years and older, respectively.

Furthermore, although nearly all patients had died during follow-up, median survival was much longer in patients receiving chemotherapy than in those receiving best supportive care only. This was true across all age groups, with 8.0 vs. 1.5 months reported in those aged 65-74 years, 5.3 vs. 1.7 months in those 75-84 years, and 3.8 vs. 1.4 months in those 85 years and older.

Ms. Yu acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that results may not be applicable to younger patients or to those covered by a managed care Medicaid plan.

In addition, "Medicare Part D information was not included since information on prescription claims was available only after 2007," she said. "Also, no information was available on the chemotherapy agents or the doses received in the inpatient or outpatient settings. Patient performance status was also unavailable."

 

 

She said that further studies are warranted "to investigate the potential benefit of chemotherapy treatment for elderly patients with AML."

The study was sponsored by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. Ms. Yu disclosed that she is a full-time employee of the company.



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SAN DIEGO – Despite growing use of chemotherapy in elderly patients with acute myeloid leukemia, more than half still did not receive any chemotherapy between 1997 and 2007, according to an analysis of 6,888 cases in a large national database.

Median survival was significantly longer in patients who received chemotherapy than in those given best supportive care only, Yanni F. Yu reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology. In all, 56% of elderly acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients did not receive chemotherapy, however, and median survival as well as chemotherapy use declined with advancing age.

"Older patient with AML generally have a poor outcome," said Ms. Yu, manager of health economics and outcomes research at Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. "If they are not eligible for intensive chemotherapy, the median survival is usually less than 3 months," she noted.

    Yanni F. Yu

Previous studies in the elderly AML population showed that the percentage of chemotherapy treatment increased from 29% in 1991 to 38% in 1999, Ms. Yu said. To determine more current treatment trends in this patient population, she and her associates evaluated data from Medicare patients aged 65 years and older who had a new AML diagnosis between Jan. 1, 1997, and Dec. 31, 2007, recorded in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) cancer registry.

The analysis was limited to fee-for-service Medicare patients who had at least 6 months of pre-AML Medicare Part A and B benefit coverage. The researchers excluded patients who had evidence of another tumor in the SEER registry before the first AML diagnosis and those who had a diagnosis of a solid tumor within 6 months pre-AML in Medicare claims.

Eligible patients were followed from initial AML diagnosis until their date of death or the end of the observation period, which was Dec. 31, 2009.

The researchers evaluated the type of care received, chemotherapy treatment patterns, and mortality and patient survival separately for AML cases diagnosed in three time frames: 1997-1999, 2000-2003, and 2004-2007. They performed multivariate logistic regression to assess predictors of receipt of chemotherapy, including patient demographics, comorbidities, and year of AML diagnosis.

A total of 6,888 patients met the study criteria. Their mean age was 78 years, 48% were women, 88% were white, and 43% received chemotherapy at any point after diagnosis. The use of chemotherapy increased slightly over time, from 40.7% in 1999-2000 to 42.3% in 2000-2003 and 46% in 2004-2007.

More than half of patients (56%) received only best supportive care post diagnosis, although the percentage decreased slightly over time. Among patients receiving best supportive care, rates of hospice care increased from 30.3% in 1997-1999 to 36.4% in 2000-2003 and 42.3% in 2004-2007.

Among patients who received chemotherapy, the use of antibiotics increased substantially over the three time periods (11.1%, 14%, and 29.6%, respectively), as did the use of antifungals (1.3%, 3.1%, and 12.4%), indicating more patients were in need of prophylaxis or treatment for chemotherapy-related infections.

Older AML patients received strikingly less chemotherapy with advancing age. For example, 66.3% of patients aged 65-74 years received chemotherapy, compared with 39.2% of those aged 75-84 years and 14.8% of those aged 85 years and older. The proportions of patients receiving antibiotics and antifungals also decreased with advancing age.

Regression analysis showed a similar association between age and chemotherapy, revealing that the strongest predictor of not receiving chemotherapy was older age, with an odds ratio of 0.12 for being aged 85 years or more and an OR of 0.42 for being aged 75-84 years.

The overall 30-day mortality rate was 20.5%, and the 60-day mortality rate was 42.8%. Median survival among all patients was 2.6 months, and it decreased with advancing age from 4.5 months to 2.4 months to 1.6 months for those aged 65-74 years, 75-84 years, and 85 years and older, respectively.

Furthermore, although nearly all patients had died during follow-up, median survival was much longer in patients receiving chemotherapy than in those receiving best supportive care only. This was true across all age groups, with 8.0 vs. 1.5 months reported in those aged 65-74 years, 5.3 vs. 1.7 months in those 75-84 years, and 3.8 vs. 1.4 months in those 85 years and older.

Ms. Yu acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that results may not be applicable to younger patients or to those covered by a managed care Medicaid plan.

In addition, "Medicare Part D information was not included since information on prescription claims was available only after 2007," she said. "Also, no information was available on the chemotherapy agents or the doses received in the inpatient or outpatient settings. Patient performance status was also unavailable."

 

 

She said that further studies are warranted "to investigate the potential benefit of chemotherapy treatment for elderly patients with AML."

The study was sponsored by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. Ms. Yu disclosed that she is a full-time employee of the company.



SAN DIEGO – Despite growing use of chemotherapy in elderly patients with acute myeloid leukemia, more than half still did not receive any chemotherapy between 1997 and 2007, according to an analysis of 6,888 cases in a large national database.

Median survival was significantly longer in patients who received chemotherapy than in those given best supportive care only, Yanni F. Yu reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology. In all, 56% of elderly acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients did not receive chemotherapy, however, and median survival as well as chemotherapy use declined with advancing age.

"Older patient with AML generally have a poor outcome," said Ms. Yu, manager of health economics and outcomes research at Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. "If they are not eligible for intensive chemotherapy, the median survival is usually less than 3 months," she noted.

    Yanni F. Yu

Previous studies in the elderly AML population showed that the percentage of chemotherapy treatment increased from 29% in 1991 to 38% in 1999, Ms. Yu said. To determine more current treatment trends in this patient population, she and her associates evaluated data from Medicare patients aged 65 years and older who had a new AML diagnosis between Jan. 1, 1997, and Dec. 31, 2007, recorded in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) cancer registry.

The analysis was limited to fee-for-service Medicare patients who had at least 6 months of pre-AML Medicare Part A and B benefit coverage. The researchers excluded patients who had evidence of another tumor in the SEER registry before the first AML diagnosis and those who had a diagnosis of a solid tumor within 6 months pre-AML in Medicare claims.

Eligible patients were followed from initial AML diagnosis until their date of death or the end of the observation period, which was Dec. 31, 2009.

The researchers evaluated the type of care received, chemotherapy treatment patterns, and mortality and patient survival separately for AML cases diagnosed in three time frames: 1997-1999, 2000-2003, and 2004-2007. They performed multivariate logistic regression to assess predictors of receipt of chemotherapy, including patient demographics, comorbidities, and year of AML diagnosis.

A total of 6,888 patients met the study criteria. Their mean age was 78 years, 48% were women, 88% were white, and 43% received chemotherapy at any point after diagnosis. The use of chemotherapy increased slightly over time, from 40.7% in 1999-2000 to 42.3% in 2000-2003 and 46% in 2004-2007.

More than half of patients (56%) received only best supportive care post diagnosis, although the percentage decreased slightly over time. Among patients receiving best supportive care, rates of hospice care increased from 30.3% in 1997-1999 to 36.4% in 2000-2003 and 42.3% in 2004-2007.

Among patients who received chemotherapy, the use of antibiotics increased substantially over the three time periods (11.1%, 14%, and 29.6%, respectively), as did the use of antifungals (1.3%, 3.1%, and 12.4%), indicating more patients were in need of prophylaxis or treatment for chemotherapy-related infections.

Older AML patients received strikingly less chemotherapy with advancing age. For example, 66.3% of patients aged 65-74 years received chemotherapy, compared with 39.2% of those aged 75-84 years and 14.8% of those aged 85 years and older. The proportions of patients receiving antibiotics and antifungals also decreased with advancing age.

Regression analysis showed a similar association between age and chemotherapy, revealing that the strongest predictor of not receiving chemotherapy was older age, with an odds ratio of 0.12 for being aged 85 years or more and an OR of 0.42 for being aged 75-84 years.

The overall 30-day mortality rate was 20.5%, and the 60-day mortality rate was 42.8%. Median survival among all patients was 2.6 months, and it decreased with advancing age from 4.5 months to 2.4 months to 1.6 months for those aged 65-74 years, 75-84 years, and 85 years and older, respectively.

Furthermore, although nearly all patients had died during follow-up, median survival was much longer in patients receiving chemotherapy than in those receiving best supportive care only. This was true across all age groups, with 8.0 vs. 1.5 months reported in those aged 65-74 years, 5.3 vs. 1.7 months in those 75-84 years, and 3.8 vs. 1.4 months in those 85 years and older.

Ms. Yu acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including the fact that results may not be applicable to younger patients or to those covered by a managed care Medicaid plan.

In addition, "Medicare Part D information was not included since information on prescription claims was available only after 2007," she said. "Also, no information was available on the chemotherapy agents or the doses received in the inpatient or outpatient settings. Patient performance status was also unavailable."

 

 

She said that further studies are warranted "to investigate the potential benefit of chemotherapy treatment for elderly patients with AML."

The study was sponsored by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. Ms. Yu disclosed that she is a full-time employee of the company.



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Many Elderly AML Patients Not Receiving Chemotherapy
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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article

Vitals

Major Finding: More than half of elderly patients (56%) with AML received only best supportive care post diagnosis,

Data Source: A study of 6,888 Medicare patients aged 65 years and older who had a new AML diagnosis between Jan. 1, 1997, and Dec. 31, 2007, in the SEER cancer registry.

Disclosures: The study was sponsored by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. Ms. Yu disclosed that she is a full-time employee of the company.

New Genetic Markers May Tailor Leukemia Treatment

Phosphor-Flow Cytometry May Offer Benefits as Screening Tool for Pediatric ALL Subtypes
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New Genetic Markers May Tailor Leukemia Treatment

SAN DIEGO – Novel genetic alterations have been identified in a new subtype of high-risk B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia that could be effectively targeted with existing therapies.

The subtype, termed Ph-like ALL, was first identified by the Children’s Oncology Group in 2009 (N. Engl. J. Med. 2009;360:470-80), and accounts for up to 15% of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases.

"Until this study, the genetic basis of Ph-like ALL was unknown," said Kathryn G. Roberts, Ph.D., lead author of the cooperative research study.

Kathryn G. Roberts

Ph-like ALL is associated with alteration of lymphoid transcription factors, most commonly IKZF1, and has a gene expression profile similar to that of Philadelphia chromosome–positive (Ph+) ALL. Ph+ ALL accounts for just 5% of pediatric ALL cases, but because it is driven by the oncogenic tyrosine kinase, BCR-ABL1, it can be effectively treated with available tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as imatinib (Gleevec).

Ph-like ALL, however, is BCR-ABL negative, so patients with this poor-outcome subtype are currently treated with conventional chemotherapy. Higher doses and intensified regimens are limited by toxicity.

Screening ALL patients at the time of diagnosis could identify those with Ph-like ALL, and determine who may benefit from more-aggressive treatment with targeted therapies, said Dr. Roberts, a postdoctoral pathology fellow at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.

In an effort to better understand the genetic basis of Ph-like ALL, the investigators used next-generation genome sequencing and other techniques to analyze the transcriptome or RNA sequence of 12 patients with Ph-like ALL. Strikingly, 11 of the 12 cases harbored alterations disrupting kinase and cytokine receptor signaling, which provides a treatable target with current drugs, she said. The alterations included novel rearrangements, structural variations, and sequence mutations.

Specifically, the spectrum of alterations included NUP214-ABL1 or RANBP2-ABL1 rearrangements, immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangements involving the cytokine receptor genes CRLF2 and EPOR, and in-frame fusions of EBF1-PDGFRB (platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta), BCR-JAK2 or STRN3-JAK2. In addition, activating mutations within IL7R, and loss of function SH2B3 deletions were also identified.

Importantly, laboratory studies showed that patient samples harboring the ABL1 rearrangement were sensitive to the tyrosine kinase inhibitors imatinib, dasatinib (Sprycel), and XL228, whereas the JAK2-rearranged samples were sensitive to the JAK2 inhibitors XL019 and ruxolitinib (Jakafi), which was recently approved for the treatment of myelofibrosis. Furthermore, mouse cells harboring the EBF1-PDGFRB fusion responded to imatinib, dasatinib, and dovitinib, a specific PDGFRB/FGFR (fibroblast growth factor receptor) inhibitor, Dr. Roberts reported.

The group also screened 231 additional high-risk ALL patients (aged 1 year 2 months to 17 years 6 months) and found that the genetic alterations were present in 40 cases (17%), suggesting that these genetic lesions are "hallmarks of this subtype of ALL," she said.

Dr. Martin Tallman, chief of the leukemia service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, told reporters at a press briefing that the study could potentially change the standard of care, and "provides further evidence that we’re able to target specific leukemias with specific, directed therapy rather than continuing to give relatively indiscriminate chemotherapy."

The diversity of lesions in Ph-like ALL suggests that screening methods to identify patients at diagnosis may be more attractive than transcriptome sequencing, Dr. Roberts noted. Phosphoflow cytometric signaling analysis can be used to detect activation of pathways common to the novel genetic lesions and to identify patients who will most likely respond to targeted therapy. Gene expression profiling is also being investigated as a complimentary approach to identify Ph-like ALL patients.

St. Jude is currently not screening its ALL patients for Ph-like ALL, but the researchers hope to be able to start treating children who have ALL based on their genetic alterations in the next 12 months, she said in an interview.

The researchers are also currently establishing Ph-like ALL animal models and plan to broaden the scope of their testing to include young adolescents and adults. The current study earned the outstanding abstract achievement award for a postdoctoral fellow at the meeting.

Dr. Roberts reported no conflicts of interest. A coauthor, Dr. Steve Hunger, reported that his children own stock in Bristol-Myers Squibb and that he is a member of an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee.

Body

Molecularly targeted approaches to therapy of

childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have been restricted to the less

than 5% of cases associated with the t(9:22) and the BCR-ABL1 fusion. This Philadelphia

chromosome-positive (Ph+) ALL subtype has been historically associated with an

extremely poor prognosis with conventional therapy. Improvements in event-free

survival were achieved only with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.

Recently, however, the incorporation of the BCR-ABL

specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) imatinib (Gleevec) with intensive

chemotherapy has very dramatically improved the outcome of patients without the

requirement for allogeneic transplant. Other TKIs, such as dasatinib (Sprycel),

are under clinical investigation.

Another group of high risk, Ph-like ALL patients was

identified by gene signature patterns and by the alteration of a number of B

cell–associated transcription factors, notably deletions of the IZKF1 (Ikaros)

gene. Gene sequencing has identified a number of other potentially “druggable”

target alterations involved in kinase and cytokine receptor signaling. Notable

gene rearrangements included NUP214-ABL1 and RANBP2-ABL1 as well as

rearrangements between IGH chain genes and cytokine receptor genes CRLF2 and

EPOR. Other unique alterations included fusion of EBF1-PDGFRB, BCR-JAK2, and

activating mutations within IL-7.

Of significant interest is the finding of preclinical

in-vivo responses to TKIs of the ABL1 rearranged blasts; responses to JAK2

inhibitors (XL019 and ruxolitinib [Jakafi]) of JAK2-mutated patient specimens;

and responses to imatinib, dasatinib, and dovitinib in those samples with the

EBPF1-PDGFRB fusions.

Labor-intensive transcriptome sequencing is not a

recommended screening procedure given the diversity of abnormalities seen.

Activation of pathways common to some of these novel genetic lesions can be

detected by phosphor-flow cytometry, making it a potential screening tool to

identify high-risk ALL patients who may benefit from specific, targeted therapy

interventions.

The findings have important ramifications for the 15%

of childhood ALL cases with this Ph-like subtype and possibly to a much larger

proportion of adult patients with ALL.

Dr. Gregory H. Reaman, an

associate editor of The Oncology Report, is professor of pediatrics at the George Washington

University School

of Medicine and Health Sciences and Children’s National

Medical Center

in Washington.

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leukemia, genetic markers, chemotherapy, B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, imatinib, Gleevec, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, imatinib, dasatinib, Sprycel, XL228, JAK2, JAK2 inhibitors, XL019, ruxolitinib, Jakafi, myelofibrosis,EBF1- PDGFRB, dasatinib, dovitinib, PDGFRB/FGFR, fibroblast growth factor receptor
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Body

Molecularly targeted approaches to therapy of

childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have been restricted to the less

than 5% of cases associated with the t(9:22) and the BCR-ABL1 fusion. This Philadelphia

chromosome-positive (Ph+) ALL subtype has been historically associated with an

extremely poor prognosis with conventional therapy. Improvements in event-free

survival were achieved only with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.

Recently, however, the incorporation of the BCR-ABL

specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) imatinib (Gleevec) with intensive

chemotherapy has very dramatically improved the outcome of patients without the

requirement for allogeneic transplant. Other TKIs, such as dasatinib (Sprycel),

are under clinical investigation.

Another group of high risk, Ph-like ALL patients was

identified by gene signature patterns and by the alteration of a number of B

cell–associated transcription factors, notably deletions of the IZKF1 (Ikaros)

gene. Gene sequencing has identified a number of other potentially “druggable”

target alterations involved in kinase and cytokine receptor signaling. Notable

gene rearrangements included NUP214-ABL1 and RANBP2-ABL1 as well as

rearrangements between IGH chain genes and cytokine receptor genes CRLF2 and

EPOR. Other unique alterations included fusion of EBF1-PDGFRB, BCR-JAK2, and

activating mutations within IL-7.

Of significant interest is the finding of preclinical

in-vivo responses to TKIs of the ABL1 rearranged blasts; responses to JAK2

inhibitors (XL019 and ruxolitinib [Jakafi]) of JAK2-mutated patient specimens;

and responses to imatinib, dasatinib, and dovitinib in those samples with the

EBPF1-PDGFRB fusions.

Labor-intensive transcriptome sequencing is not a

recommended screening procedure given the diversity of abnormalities seen.

Activation of pathways common to some of these novel genetic lesions can be

detected by phosphor-flow cytometry, making it a potential screening tool to

identify high-risk ALL patients who may benefit from specific, targeted therapy

interventions.

The findings have important ramifications for the 15%

of childhood ALL cases with this Ph-like subtype and possibly to a much larger

proportion of adult patients with ALL.

Dr. Gregory H. Reaman, an

associate editor of The Oncology Report, is professor of pediatrics at the George Washington

University School

of Medicine and Health Sciences and Children’s National

Medical Center

in Washington.

Body

Molecularly targeted approaches to therapy of

childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have been restricted to the less

than 5% of cases associated with the t(9:22) and the BCR-ABL1 fusion. This Philadelphia

chromosome-positive (Ph+) ALL subtype has been historically associated with an

extremely poor prognosis with conventional therapy. Improvements in event-free

survival were achieved only with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.

Recently, however, the incorporation of the BCR-ABL

specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) imatinib (Gleevec) with intensive

chemotherapy has very dramatically improved the outcome of patients without the

requirement for allogeneic transplant. Other TKIs, such as dasatinib (Sprycel),

are under clinical investigation.

Another group of high risk, Ph-like ALL patients was

identified by gene signature patterns and by the alteration of a number of B

cell–associated transcription factors, notably deletions of the IZKF1 (Ikaros)

gene. Gene sequencing has identified a number of other potentially “druggable”

target alterations involved in kinase and cytokine receptor signaling. Notable

gene rearrangements included NUP214-ABL1 and RANBP2-ABL1 as well as

rearrangements between IGH chain genes and cytokine receptor genes CRLF2 and

EPOR. Other unique alterations included fusion of EBF1-PDGFRB, BCR-JAK2, and

activating mutations within IL-7.

Of significant interest is the finding of preclinical

in-vivo responses to TKIs of the ABL1 rearranged blasts; responses to JAK2

inhibitors (XL019 and ruxolitinib [Jakafi]) of JAK2-mutated patient specimens;

and responses to imatinib, dasatinib, and dovitinib in those samples with the

EBPF1-PDGFRB fusions.

Labor-intensive transcriptome sequencing is not a

recommended screening procedure given the diversity of abnormalities seen.

Activation of pathways common to some of these novel genetic lesions can be

detected by phosphor-flow cytometry, making it a potential screening tool to

identify high-risk ALL patients who may benefit from specific, targeted therapy

interventions.

The findings have important ramifications for the 15%

of childhood ALL cases with this Ph-like subtype and possibly to a much larger

proportion of adult patients with ALL.

Dr. Gregory H. Reaman, an

associate editor of The Oncology Report, is professor of pediatrics at the George Washington

University School

of Medicine and Health Sciences and Children’s National

Medical Center

in Washington.

Title
Phosphor-Flow Cytometry May Offer Benefits as Screening Tool for Pediatric ALL Subtypes
Phosphor-Flow Cytometry May Offer Benefits as Screening Tool for Pediatric ALL Subtypes

SAN DIEGO – Novel genetic alterations have been identified in a new subtype of high-risk B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia that could be effectively targeted with existing therapies.

The subtype, termed Ph-like ALL, was first identified by the Children’s Oncology Group in 2009 (N. Engl. J. Med. 2009;360:470-80), and accounts for up to 15% of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases.

"Until this study, the genetic basis of Ph-like ALL was unknown," said Kathryn G. Roberts, Ph.D., lead author of the cooperative research study.

Kathryn G. Roberts

Ph-like ALL is associated with alteration of lymphoid transcription factors, most commonly IKZF1, and has a gene expression profile similar to that of Philadelphia chromosome–positive (Ph+) ALL. Ph+ ALL accounts for just 5% of pediatric ALL cases, but because it is driven by the oncogenic tyrosine kinase, BCR-ABL1, it can be effectively treated with available tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as imatinib (Gleevec).

Ph-like ALL, however, is BCR-ABL negative, so patients with this poor-outcome subtype are currently treated with conventional chemotherapy. Higher doses and intensified regimens are limited by toxicity.

Screening ALL patients at the time of diagnosis could identify those with Ph-like ALL, and determine who may benefit from more-aggressive treatment with targeted therapies, said Dr. Roberts, a postdoctoral pathology fellow at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.

In an effort to better understand the genetic basis of Ph-like ALL, the investigators used next-generation genome sequencing and other techniques to analyze the transcriptome or RNA sequence of 12 patients with Ph-like ALL. Strikingly, 11 of the 12 cases harbored alterations disrupting kinase and cytokine receptor signaling, which provides a treatable target with current drugs, she said. The alterations included novel rearrangements, structural variations, and sequence mutations.

Specifically, the spectrum of alterations included NUP214-ABL1 or RANBP2-ABL1 rearrangements, immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangements involving the cytokine receptor genes CRLF2 and EPOR, and in-frame fusions of EBF1-PDGFRB (platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta), BCR-JAK2 or STRN3-JAK2. In addition, activating mutations within IL7R, and loss of function SH2B3 deletions were also identified.

Importantly, laboratory studies showed that patient samples harboring the ABL1 rearrangement were sensitive to the tyrosine kinase inhibitors imatinib, dasatinib (Sprycel), and XL228, whereas the JAK2-rearranged samples were sensitive to the JAK2 inhibitors XL019 and ruxolitinib (Jakafi), which was recently approved for the treatment of myelofibrosis. Furthermore, mouse cells harboring the EBF1-PDGFRB fusion responded to imatinib, dasatinib, and dovitinib, a specific PDGFRB/FGFR (fibroblast growth factor receptor) inhibitor, Dr. Roberts reported.

The group also screened 231 additional high-risk ALL patients (aged 1 year 2 months to 17 years 6 months) and found that the genetic alterations were present in 40 cases (17%), suggesting that these genetic lesions are "hallmarks of this subtype of ALL," she said.

Dr. Martin Tallman, chief of the leukemia service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, told reporters at a press briefing that the study could potentially change the standard of care, and "provides further evidence that we’re able to target specific leukemias with specific, directed therapy rather than continuing to give relatively indiscriminate chemotherapy."

The diversity of lesions in Ph-like ALL suggests that screening methods to identify patients at diagnosis may be more attractive than transcriptome sequencing, Dr. Roberts noted. Phosphoflow cytometric signaling analysis can be used to detect activation of pathways common to the novel genetic lesions and to identify patients who will most likely respond to targeted therapy. Gene expression profiling is also being investigated as a complimentary approach to identify Ph-like ALL patients.

St. Jude is currently not screening its ALL patients for Ph-like ALL, but the researchers hope to be able to start treating children who have ALL based on their genetic alterations in the next 12 months, she said in an interview.

The researchers are also currently establishing Ph-like ALL animal models and plan to broaden the scope of their testing to include young adolescents and adults. The current study earned the outstanding abstract achievement award for a postdoctoral fellow at the meeting.

Dr. Roberts reported no conflicts of interest. A coauthor, Dr. Steve Hunger, reported that his children own stock in Bristol-Myers Squibb and that he is a member of an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee.

SAN DIEGO – Novel genetic alterations have been identified in a new subtype of high-risk B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia that could be effectively targeted with existing therapies.

The subtype, termed Ph-like ALL, was first identified by the Children’s Oncology Group in 2009 (N. Engl. J. Med. 2009;360:470-80), and accounts for up to 15% of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases.

"Until this study, the genetic basis of Ph-like ALL was unknown," said Kathryn G. Roberts, Ph.D., lead author of the cooperative research study.

Kathryn G. Roberts

Ph-like ALL is associated with alteration of lymphoid transcription factors, most commonly IKZF1, and has a gene expression profile similar to that of Philadelphia chromosome–positive (Ph+) ALL. Ph+ ALL accounts for just 5% of pediatric ALL cases, but because it is driven by the oncogenic tyrosine kinase, BCR-ABL1, it can be effectively treated with available tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as imatinib (Gleevec).

Ph-like ALL, however, is BCR-ABL negative, so patients with this poor-outcome subtype are currently treated with conventional chemotherapy. Higher doses and intensified regimens are limited by toxicity.

Screening ALL patients at the time of diagnosis could identify those with Ph-like ALL, and determine who may benefit from more-aggressive treatment with targeted therapies, said Dr. Roberts, a postdoctoral pathology fellow at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.

In an effort to better understand the genetic basis of Ph-like ALL, the investigators used next-generation genome sequencing and other techniques to analyze the transcriptome or RNA sequence of 12 patients with Ph-like ALL. Strikingly, 11 of the 12 cases harbored alterations disrupting kinase and cytokine receptor signaling, which provides a treatable target with current drugs, she said. The alterations included novel rearrangements, structural variations, and sequence mutations.

Specifically, the spectrum of alterations included NUP214-ABL1 or RANBP2-ABL1 rearrangements, immunoglobulin heavy chain rearrangements involving the cytokine receptor genes CRLF2 and EPOR, and in-frame fusions of EBF1-PDGFRB (platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta), BCR-JAK2 or STRN3-JAK2. In addition, activating mutations within IL7R, and loss of function SH2B3 deletions were also identified.

Importantly, laboratory studies showed that patient samples harboring the ABL1 rearrangement were sensitive to the tyrosine kinase inhibitors imatinib, dasatinib (Sprycel), and XL228, whereas the JAK2-rearranged samples were sensitive to the JAK2 inhibitors XL019 and ruxolitinib (Jakafi), which was recently approved for the treatment of myelofibrosis. Furthermore, mouse cells harboring the EBF1-PDGFRB fusion responded to imatinib, dasatinib, and dovitinib, a specific PDGFRB/FGFR (fibroblast growth factor receptor) inhibitor, Dr. Roberts reported.

The group also screened 231 additional high-risk ALL patients (aged 1 year 2 months to 17 years 6 months) and found that the genetic alterations were present in 40 cases (17%), suggesting that these genetic lesions are "hallmarks of this subtype of ALL," she said.

Dr. Martin Tallman, chief of the leukemia service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, told reporters at a press briefing that the study could potentially change the standard of care, and "provides further evidence that we’re able to target specific leukemias with specific, directed therapy rather than continuing to give relatively indiscriminate chemotherapy."

The diversity of lesions in Ph-like ALL suggests that screening methods to identify patients at diagnosis may be more attractive than transcriptome sequencing, Dr. Roberts noted. Phosphoflow cytometric signaling analysis can be used to detect activation of pathways common to the novel genetic lesions and to identify patients who will most likely respond to targeted therapy. Gene expression profiling is also being investigated as a complimentary approach to identify Ph-like ALL patients.

St. Jude is currently not screening its ALL patients for Ph-like ALL, but the researchers hope to be able to start treating children who have ALL based on their genetic alterations in the next 12 months, she said in an interview.

The researchers are also currently establishing Ph-like ALL animal models and plan to broaden the scope of their testing to include young adolescents and adults. The current study earned the outstanding abstract achievement award for a postdoctoral fellow at the meeting.

Dr. Roberts reported no conflicts of interest. A coauthor, Dr. Steve Hunger, reported that his children own stock in Bristol-Myers Squibb and that he is a member of an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee.

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Major Finding: Genetic alterations were identified in 11 of 12 patients that can be targeted with existing therapies.

Data Source: Genomic and laboratory studies in patients with Ph-like acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a high-risk subtype of B-cell ALL.

Disclosures: Dr. Roberts reported no conflicts of interest. A coauthor, Dr. Steve Hunger, reported that his children own stock in Bristol-Myers Squibb and that he is a member of an entity’s board of directors or advisory committee.

Pregnant Women With Lymphoma Can Have Good Outcomes

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SAN DIEGO – Women diagnosed with lymphoma during pregnancy stand a good chance of carrying a healthy child to term even when they opt for treatment during the second or third trimester, according to a retrospective multicenter analysis.

Among 82 women diagnosed with either Hodgkin’s or non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma during pregnancy, 48 opted to start therapy during pregnancy rather than defer it until after delivery, investigators reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

All but one woman had a normal birth, the exception being a severe malformation: microcephaly in the fetus of a woman who had received four cycles of CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

The timing of therapy did not appear to affect overall survival, with the 3-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate being 76% among women who underwent treatment during pregnancy, compared with 79% for those who deferred it, said Dr. Andrew M. Evens of the University of Massachusetts in Worcester.

Respective overall survival rates were 92% and 83%, he reported. For the six women who elected to terminate their pregnancies, the 3-year PFS rate and overall survival rate were each 100%.

Among 39 women with Hodgkin’s lymphoma (HL), the 3-year PFS rate was 90%, and overall survival was 95%. Among 33 patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas (NHL), 73% were progression free at 3 years; the overall survival rate was 82%. For 10 women with NHL of T-cell histology, the respective figures were 50% and 90%.

"We conclude that standard chemotherapy – non-antimetabolite chemotherapy – and radiation in select cases, in particular localized disease likely above the diaphragm during the second and third trimester, were associated with expected maternal complications and fetal detriment," Dr. Evens said.

Women with low-risk disease, such as indolent NHL, or a diagnosis late in gestation may be able to defer therapy until after delivery, he added.

Cancers in Pregnancy Uncommon. Cancer diagnoses during pregnancy are uncommon, occurring in about 3,500 women annually in the United States. The estimated prevalence is 1 in 1,000 gestations. Hematologic malignancies, primarily lymphomas, account for about 20% of all cancers diagnosed in pregnancy, Dr. Evens said.

He and his colleagues at nine academic medical centers conducted a descriptive retrospective analysis looking at histology, disease characteristics, therapy received, and maternal and fetal complications among pregnant women diagnosed with lymphomas from 1998 through 2011.

Of the 82 women identified for whom follow-up data were available, 43 (52%) were diagnosed with NHL (83% B-cell and 17% T-cell histologies) and 39 (48%) with HL. The median time of diagnosis was at 24 weeks gestation (range 5-40 weeks).

Six patients (4 with NHL and 2 with HL) decided to terminate the pregnancies to have immediate chemotherapy. Five of these patients were diagnosed in the first trimester and required systemic therapy.

The remaining patient was diagnosed early in the second trimester with lymphoma involving the central nervous system and requiring high-dose methotrexate, an antimetabolite in FDA pregnancy category X (positive evidence of fetal harm from animal or human studies and/or clinical experience; contraindicated). Other antimetabolites are classified in category D (positive evidence of fetal risk, but the benefits may warrant use in pregnant women).

A total of 28 patients (34%) chose to defer therapy, including 15 with HL, 5 with follicular lymphoma, 4 with DLBCL, 3 with T-cell lymphoma, and 1 with Burkitt’s lymphoma. The median gestation time at diagnosis in these patients was 34 weeks (range 6-38).

Of the 48 patients who chose to start therapy during pregnancy, 27 patients with NHL received therapy with CHOP, CHOP plus rituximab (Rituxan), modified hyperCVAD (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, and dexamethasone), or similar regimens.

All but 2 patients with HL received the ABVD regimen (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine), and 4 of these patients also received partial-dose radiation therapy with shielding of the fetus. One patient received AVD (no bleomycin), and 1 received ChlVPP (chlorambucil, vinblastine, procarbazine, and prednisone). Treatments ranged from the 13th to the 33rd week of gestation.

Among the 48 treated patients, gestation reached full term in 73% with delivery at a median of 37 weeks (range 31-40); most of the deliveries occurred at or after 35 weeks. Among the 28 patients who deferred therapy, delivery was at a median of 38 weeks (range 26-40), and 86% of these women were able to carry their pregnancies to term.

"The goal in every patient, whether they received therapy or not, was to try and deliver as close to term as possible," Dr. Evens said.

Among all patients, 72% had vaginal delivery, and 28% had cesarean sections.

 

 

Labor Induced in Nearly Half of Patients. The most common preterm complication was the need for induction of labor in 45%. Preeclampsia occurred in 8%, 5% had spontaneous rupture of membranes, and 4% had gestational diabetes. There were no reported cases of endometritis or chorioamnionitis. There were no significant differences in preterm events between patients who were treated or deferred therapy.

There was one stillbirth, occurring in a 34-year-old woman with double-hit (two-mutation) NHL at 19 weeks after one cycle of R-CHOP.

One woman died before giving birth. She had very-high-risk DLBCL with significant metastases to the liver. She had been diagnosed at week 29 and died at week 32 from encephalopathy, but delivered a healthy infant before her death.

Outcomes for the fetuses of the 76 women who opted to continue their pregnancies included the aforementioned stillbirth and 1 case of microcephaly in a woman who had received four cycles of CHOP for DLBCL.

The median birth weight of neonates was 2,427 g (range 1,005-5,262 g), and there were no differences between the children of women who underwent antepartum chemotherapy or deferred therapy.

Dr. Evens noted that the investigators looked only at acute fetal outcomes, and have not evaluated long-term developmental measures.

The study was funded by the participating centers. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

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SAN DIEGO – Women diagnosed with lymphoma during pregnancy stand a good chance of carrying a healthy child to term even when they opt for treatment during the second or third trimester, according to a retrospective multicenter analysis.

Among 82 women diagnosed with either Hodgkin’s or non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma during pregnancy, 48 opted to start therapy during pregnancy rather than defer it until after delivery, investigators reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

All but one woman had a normal birth, the exception being a severe malformation: microcephaly in the fetus of a woman who had received four cycles of CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

The timing of therapy did not appear to affect overall survival, with the 3-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate being 76% among women who underwent treatment during pregnancy, compared with 79% for those who deferred it, said Dr. Andrew M. Evens of the University of Massachusetts in Worcester.

Respective overall survival rates were 92% and 83%, he reported. For the six women who elected to terminate their pregnancies, the 3-year PFS rate and overall survival rate were each 100%.

Among 39 women with Hodgkin’s lymphoma (HL), the 3-year PFS rate was 90%, and overall survival was 95%. Among 33 patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas (NHL), 73% were progression free at 3 years; the overall survival rate was 82%. For 10 women with NHL of T-cell histology, the respective figures were 50% and 90%.

"We conclude that standard chemotherapy – non-antimetabolite chemotherapy – and radiation in select cases, in particular localized disease likely above the diaphragm during the second and third trimester, were associated with expected maternal complications and fetal detriment," Dr. Evens said.

Women with low-risk disease, such as indolent NHL, or a diagnosis late in gestation may be able to defer therapy until after delivery, he added.

Cancers in Pregnancy Uncommon. Cancer diagnoses during pregnancy are uncommon, occurring in about 3,500 women annually in the United States. The estimated prevalence is 1 in 1,000 gestations. Hematologic malignancies, primarily lymphomas, account for about 20% of all cancers diagnosed in pregnancy, Dr. Evens said.

He and his colleagues at nine academic medical centers conducted a descriptive retrospective analysis looking at histology, disease characteristics, therapy received, and maternal and fetal complications among pregnant women diagnosed with lymphomas from 1998 through 2011.

Of the 82 women identified for whom follow-up data were available, 43 (52%) were diagnosed with NHL (83% B-cell and 17% T-cell histologies) and 39 (48%) with HL. The median time of diagnosis was at 24 weeks gestation (range 5-40 weeks).

Six patients (4 with NHL and 2 with HL) decided to terminate the pregnancies to have immediate chemotherapy. Five of these patients were diagnosed in the first trimester and required systemic therapy.

The remaining patient was diagnosed early in the second trimester with lymphoma involving the central nervous system and requiring high-dose methotrexate, an antimetabolite in FDA pregnancy category X (positive evidence of fetal harm from animal or human studies and/or clinical experience; contraindicated). Other antimetabolites are classified in category D (positive evidence of fetal risk, but the benefits may warrant use in pregnant women).

A total of 28 patients (34%) chose to defer therapy, including 15 with HL, 5 with follicular lymphoma, 4 with DLBCL, 3 with T-cell lymphoma, and 1 with Burkitt’s lymphoma. The median gestation time at diagnosis in these patients was 34 weeks (range 6-38).

Of the 48 patients who chose to start therapy during pregnancy, 27 patients with NHL received therapy with CHOP, CHOP plus rituximab (Rituxan), modified hyperCVAD (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, and dexamethasone), or similar regimens.

All but 2 patients with HL received the ABVD regimen (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine), and 4 of these patients also received partial-dose radiation therapy with shielding of the fetus. One patient received AVD (no bleomycin), and 1 received ChlVPP (chlorambucil, vinblastine, procarbazine, and prednisone). Treatments ranged from the 13th to the 33rd week of gestation.

Among the 48 treated patients, gestation reached full term in 73% with delivery at a median of 37 weeks (range 31-40); most of the deliveries occurred at or after 35 weeks. Among the 28 patients who deferred therapy, delivery was at a median of 38 weeks (range 26-40), and 86% of these women were able to carry their pregnancies to term.

"The goal in every patient, whether they received therapy or not, was to try and deliver as close to term as possible," Dr. Evens said.

Among all patients, 72% had vaginal delivery, and 28% had cesarean sections.

 

 

Labor Induced in Nearly Half of Patients. The most common preterm complication was the need for induction of labor in 45%. Preeclampsia occurred in 8%, 5% had spontaneous rupture of membranes, and 4% had gestational diabetes. There were no reported cases of endometritis or chorioamnionitis. There were no significant differences in preterm events between patients who were treated or deferred therapy.

There was one stillbirth, occurring in a 34-year-old woman with double-hit (two-mutation) NHL at 19 weeks after one cycle of R-CHOP.

One woman died before giving birth. She had very-high-risk DLBCL with significant metastases to the liver. She had been diagnosed at week 29 and died at week 32 from encephalopathy, but delivered a healthy infant before her death.

Outcomes for the fetuses of the 76 women who opted to continue their pregnancies included the aforementioned stillbirth and 1 case of microcephaly in a woman who had received four cycles of CHOP for DLBCL.

The median birth weight of neonates was 2,427 g (range 1,005-5,262 g), and there were no differences between the children of women who underwent antepartum chemotherapy or deferred therapy.

Dr. Evens noted that the investigators looked only at acute fetal outcomes, and have not evaluated long-term developmental measures.

The study was funded by the participating centers. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

SAN DIEGO – Women diagnosed with lymphoma during pregnancy stand a good chance of carrying a healthy child to term even when they opt for treatment during the second or third trimester, according to a retrospective multicenter analysis.

Among 82 women diagnosed with either Hodgkin’s or non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma during pregnancy, 48 opted to start therapy during pregnancy rather than defer it until after delivery, investigators reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

All but one woman had a normal birth, the exception being a severe malformation: microcephaly in the fetus of a woman who had received four cycles of CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

The timing of therapy did not appear to affect overall survival, with the 3-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate being 76% among women who underwent treatment during pregnancy, compared with 79% for those who deferred it, said Dr. Andrew M. Evens of the University of Massachusetts in Worcester.

Respective overall survival rates were 92% and 83%, he reported. For the six women who elected to terminate their pregnancies, the 3-year PFS rate and overall survival rate were each 100%.

Among 39 women with Hodgkin’s lymphoma (HL), the 3-year PFS rate was 90%, and overall survival was 95%. Among 33 patients with B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas (NHL), 73% were progression free at 3 years; the overall survival rate was 82%. For 10 women with NHL of T-cell histology, the respective figures were 50% and 90%.

"We conclude that standard chemotherapy – non-antimetabolite chemotherapy – and radiation in select cases, in particular localized disease likely above the diaphragm during the second and third trimester, were associated with expected maternal complications and fetal detriment," Dr. Evens said.

Women with low-risk disease, such as indolent NHL, or a diagnosis late in gestation may be able to defer therapy until after delivery, he added.

Cancers in Pregnancy Uncommon. Cancer diagnoses during pregnancy are uncommon, occurring in about 3,500 women annually in the United States. The estimated prevalence is 1 in 1,000 gestations. Hematologic malignancies, primarily lymphomas, account for about 20% of all cancers diagnosed in pregnancy, Dr. Evens said.

He and his colleagues at nine academic medical centers conducted a descriptive retrospective analysis looking at histology, disease characteristics, therapy received, and maternal and fetal complications among pregnant women diagnosed with lymphomas from 1998 through 2011.

Of the 82 women identified for whom follow-up data were available, 43 (52%) were diagnosed with NHL (83% B-cell and 17% T-cell histologies) and 39 (48%) with HL. The median time of diagnosis was at 24 weeks gestation (range 5-40 weeks).

Six patients (4 with NHL and 2 with HL) decided to terminate the pregnancies to have immediate chemotherapy. Five of these patients were diagnosed in the first trimester and required systemic therapy.

The remaining patient was diagnosed early in the second trimester with lymphoma involving the central nervous system and requiring high-dose methotrexate, an antimetabolite in FDA pregnancy category X (positive evidence of fetal harm from animal or human studies and/or clinical experience; contraindicated). Other antimetabolites are classified in category D (positive evidence of fetal risk, but the benefits may warrant use in pregnant women).

A total of 28 patients (34%) chose to defer therapy, including 15 with HL, 5 with follicular lymphoma, 4 with DLBCL, 3 with T-cell lymphoma, and 1 with Burkitt’s lymphoma. The median gestation time at diagnosis in these patients was 34 weeks (range 6-38).

Of the 48 patients who chose to start therapy during pregnancy, 27 patients with NHL received therapy with CHOP, CHOP plus rituximab (Rituxan), modified hyperCVAD (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, and dexamethasone), or similar regimens.

All but 2 patients with HL received the ABVD regimen (doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine), and 4 of these patients also received partial-dose radiation therapy with shielding of the fetus. One patient received AVD (no bleomycin), and 1 received ChlVPP (chlorambucil, vinblastine, procarbazine, and prednisone). Treatments ranged from the 13th to the 33rd week of gestation.

Among the 48 treated patients, gestation reached full term in 73% with delivery at a median of 37 weeks (range 31-40); most of the deliveries occurred at or after 35 weeks. Among the 28 patients who deferred therapy, delivery was at a median of 38 weeks (range 26-40), and 86% of these women were able to carry their pregnancies to term.

"The goal in every patient, whether they received therapy or not, was to try and deliver as close to term as possible," Dr. Evens said.

Among all patients, 72% had vaginal delivery, and 28% had cesarean sections.

 

 

Labor Induced in Nearly Half of Patients. The most common preterm complication was the need for induction of labor in 45%. Preeclampsia occurred in 8%, 5% had spontaneous rupture of membranes, and 4% had gestational diabetes. There were no reported cases of endometritis or chorioamnionitis. There were no significant differences in preterm events between patients who were treated or deferred therapy.

There was one stillbirth, occurring in a 34-year-old woman with double-hit (two-mutation) NHL at 19 weeks after one cycle of R-CHOP.

One woman died before giving birth. She had very-high-risk DLBCL with significant metastases to the liver. She had been diagnosed at week 29 and died at week 32 from encephalopathy, but delivered a healthy infant before her death.

Outcomes for the fetuses of the 76 women who opted to continue their pregnancies included the aforementioned stillbirth and 1 case of microcephaly in a woman who had received four cycles of CHOP for DLBCL.

The median birth weight of neonates was 2,427 g (range 1,005-5,262 g), and there were no differences between the children of women who underwent antepartum chemotherapy or deferred therapy.

Dr. Evens noted that the investigators looked only at acute fetal outcomes, and have not evaluated long-term developmental measures.

The study was funded by the participating centers. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

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Major Finding: Among women with lymphomas diagnosed during pregnancy, the 3-year progression-free survival rates were 76% in women who underwent immediate treatment and 79% for those who deferred it until after delivery. Respective overall survival rates were 92% and 83%.

Data Source: Retrospective analysis of 82 cases from nine academic health centers.

Disclosures: The study was funded by the participating centers. The authors reported no relevant conflicts of interest.

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Pomalidomide Elicits Responses When Other Myeloma Regimens Fail

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SAN DIEGO – The potent, next-generation immunomodulatory inhibitor pomalidomide works in at least one-third of patients with relapsed and/or refractory multiple myeloma when nothing else does, a series of studies shows.

MM-002: With Dexamethasone or Alone. One of the most closely watched presentations at the recent American Society of Hematology annual meeting was the one showing phase II results from the phase I/II MM-002 study of pomalidomide with or without low-dose dexamethasone in relapsed and refractory myeloma. The heavily pretreated 221-patient cohort had received a median of five prior regimens (range 2-13), 60% were refractory to lenalidomide (Revlimid) and bortezomib (Velcade), and 99% had received prior dexamethasone.

    Dr. Paul G. Richardson

In all, 34% of patients given pomalidomide plus dexamethasone achieved at least a partial response, compared with 13% of those given pomalidomide alone, said Dr. Paul G. Richardson, clinical director of the Jerome Lipper Center for Multiple Myeloma at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Complete responses were observed in 1% of both groups.

The responses were rapid and the duration of response appeared durable at a median of 8.5 months with single-agent pomalidomide and 7.9 months with the combination. Importantly, stable disease or better was observed in 81% of patients overall, he said.

As observed in the phase I portion of the study, pomalidomide plus dexamethasone was active in the vulnerable population of lenalidomide-refractory patients, with 29% achieving at least a partial response vs. 15% on single-agent pomalidomide. Equally encouraging were similar rates of response in patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib (30% vs. 16%), Dr. Richardson said.

The median time to progression for patients on both drugs was 4.7 months, compared with 2.7 months for those on pomalidomide monotherapy.

Median overall survival reached 16.9 months with both drugs, compared with 14 months with pomalidomide alone. Dr. Richardson pointed out that median overall survival was just 5.4 months for patients with progressive disease as their best response.

Among patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib, the use of pomalidomide and dexamethasone increased the median time to progression from 2.0 months with pomalidomide alone to 3.9 months, and median overall survival from 12.7 months to 13.7 months.

Oral pomalidomide 4 mg/day was administered on a 3-week on, 1-week off schedule with or without dexamethasone 40 mg/week. All patients received daily low-dose aspirin. Notably, 56% of the 108 patients given pomalidomide alone went on to receive dexamethasone due to progression, as per protocol.

During a discussion of the study, Dr. Richardson said the contribution of dexamethasone is critical to the pomalidomide backbone, but that investigators have been struck with how well both regimens are tolerated.

"I’m impressed that it doesn’t have the same muscle cramping and so forth that lenalidomide can sometimes be associated with, and it’s not associated with the diarrhea that can sometimes be a challenge with thalidomide," he said.

Neutropenia was the dominant grade 3-4 adverse event, occurring in 45% of those on single-agent pomalidomide and in 38% on both drugs. Thrombocytopenia was observed in 21% and 19% of patients, respectively. Both adverse events were manageable and required dose reduction in a minimum of patients, Dr. Richardson said.

Importantly, there was no grade 3/4 peripheral neuropathy, an important side effect of treatment with bortezomib, thalidomide, and cisplatin.

On the basis of the findings, pomalidomide is being investigated in phase III trials in the United States and Europe as part of combination treatments including low- and high-dose dexamethasone and bortezomib, he noted.

With Cyclophosphamide and Prednisone. Dr. Antonio Palumbo presented phase II results from a phase I/II study of relapsed or refractory myeloma evaluating continuous pomalidomide 2.5 mg daily in combination with cyclophosphamide 50 mg every other day and prednisone 50 mg every other day. Maintenance therapy with pomalidomide 2.5 mg/day and prednisone 25 mg every other day was given until disease progression.

The 29 evaluable patients had received a median of three prior therapies, and 62% were refractory to lenalidomide.

The most striking findings were the response rates and toxicity, said Dr. Palumbo, chief of the myeloma unit at the University of Torino (Italy).

After a median of four cycles, a partial response or better was observed in 65.5% of patients, at least a very good partial response in 28%, and a complete response in 7%. In the 11 lenalidomide-refractory patients, these response rates reached 81%, 27%, and 9%, respectively, he said.

Responses in the refractory population were described as amazing by an attendee, who asked for a possible explanation. Dr. Palumbo responded that the first explanation is "caution" and that experience shows that a three-drug combination increases efficacy. He went on to say that pomalidomide plus cyclophosphamide and prednisone is a "nice combination with a good risk-benefit ratio."

 

 

Key grade 4 hematologic adverse events were neutropenia (17%) and thrombocytopenia (7%). Grade 3 rash occurred in 10% of patients and grade 3/4 neurologic events in 7%. Despite the use of daily low-dose aspirin, 3% of patients experienced grade 3/4 thromboembolism.

Continuous pomalidomide 2.5 mg/day was identified as the maximum tolerated dose in the phase I portion of the study, and is roughly equivalent to the 4-mg dose given on the 3-week on, 1 week-off schedule, Dr. Palumbo said.

    Dr. Antonio Palumbo

Progression-free and overall survival data are immature after a median follow-up of only 4 months, but appear "interesting," he added.

Final Analysis of IFM 2009-02. The French-led Intergroupe Francophone du Myélome (IFM) 2009-02 trial tested the combination of pomalidomide 4 mg/day on days 1-21 or given continuously throughout the 28-day cycle, with dexamethasone 40 mg/week in patients with relapsed multiple myeloma who were resistant or refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib. The 84 patients had a median of five previous lines of therapy, and three-fourths were refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib.

Considering the duration of response, treatment duration, and similar safety profile, the 3-week on, 1-week off regimen appears superior to the continuous pomalidomide regimen, said Dr. Xavier Leleu of Hospital Huriez, CHRU, in Lille (France).

The median treatment duration was slightly longer at 7.2 months with the 21-day schedule vs. 5.2 months with continuous pomalidomide. The median number of cycles was 8 and 6, respectively.

A partial response or better was observed in 35% of the 21-day group and in 34% of the 28-day group, including very good partial responses in 1% of both groups and stable disease in 44% and 51%, respectively.

The median duration of response was 10.5 months with the 21-day schedule and 7.2 with the continuous schedule, resulting in more patients on the 21-day schedule being responsive at 1 year or more (47.5% vs. 36%), Dr. Leleu said.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) in the entire study was 5.7 months. This compares favorably with a median of 3.8 months in patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib, and a median of 5.7 months in those refractory to lenalidomide as their last line of therapy, he said.

Notably, median PFS was just 3.8 months in patients with stable disease vs. 11.3 months for responders. "Apparently, it [PFS] is significantly lower in patients with stable disease, but if you have patients who are responders, clearly their outcome is really, really good," Dr. Leleu said.

Subgroup analyses revealed poorer PFS in patients with adverse cytogenetics compared with others (2.8 vs. 9.9 months). PFS was also lower in elderly patients than in those under age 65 (4.0 months vs. 6.8 months), although Dr. Leleu said the numbers were small and it was hard to know whether the elderly received all their medication.

Serious adverse events were reported in 33% of patients in the 3-week on, 1-week off regimen and in 41.5% of those on the continuous regimen.

A study is underway evaluating pomalidomide 2 mg daily, but Dr. Leleu said such a regimen would have to be administered carefully. "There is no room for mistakes, because if you don’t treat them in an optimized way, they can escape treatment very quickly," he said. "So if you can manage 4 mg, it is probably better."

Long-Term Outcomes. Finally, Dr. Joseph R. Mikhael and his colleagues evaluated outcomes 4 years after the first Mayo Clinic cohort of relapsed or refractory myeloma patients was treated with continuous pomalidomide 2 mg/day and weekly dexamethasone 40 mg. The patients also received prophylaxis for deep vein thrombosis (DVT) with aspirin, heparin, or warfarin.

The 60 patients were enrolled from November 2007 to August 2008, and had received one to three prior therapies. Those therapies included stem cell transplantation (65%), bortezomib (33%), thalidomide (47%), lenalidomide (35%), immunomodulatory drugs (60%), and radiation (38%).

In all, 32% were high risk according to mSMART criteria, and 78% had International Staging System 2-3 disease.

A median of 11.5 treatment cycles were administered (range 1-47 cycles). All patients also received DVT prophylaxis with aspirin, heparin, or warfarin.

With a median follow-up of 33.6 months, the overall response was 65% (39/60 patients), including 4 stringent complete responses, 4 complete responses, 15 very good partial responses, and 16 partial responses.

Response was no less in patients with high-risk disease at 74% (14/19 patients), according to Dr. Mikhael, a hematologist at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz.

The responses were durable, with a median duration of 21.3 months. At the time of the analysis, 12 patients (20%) remained on therapy. "Pomalidomide and dexamethasone provides a long-term benefit with median progression-free survival of 13 months and a 2-year survival rate of 76%," the authors wrote.

 

 

Overall survival in the whole cohort has not yet been reached.

In patients with high-risk myeloma, PFS was 9.2 months and overall survival 40.4 months. In the 36 patients with prior immunomodulatory drug use, PFS was 11.6 months; overall survival had not yet been reached, but was 23% at 24 months.

Grades 3-4 nonhematologic toxicities occurred in 50% of patients. The most common grade 3 event was fatigue (18%), followed by pneumonia (8%), hyperglycemia (5%), and constipation (5%). One patient had grade 3 neuropathy, and 2% of patients experienced grade 4 pneumonia.

Celgene provided support for the trials. Dr. Richardson and his coauthors reported financial relationships with several pharmaceutical companies, including Celgene and Millennium Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Palumbo and his coauthors reported relationships with several firms, including Celgene. Dr. Leleu and his coauthors reported financial relationships with Celgene and others. Dr. Mikhael reported no conflicts of interest; his coauthors reported research funding and consultancy with several firms, including Celgene, Millennium, and Onyx Pharmaceuticals.

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SAN DIEGO – The potent, next-generation immunomodulatory inhibitor pomalidomide works in at least one-third of patients with relapsed and/or refractory multiple myeloma when nothing else does, a series of studies shows.

MM-002: With Dexamethasone or Alone. One of the most closely watched presentations at the recent American Society of Hematology annual meeting was the one showing phase II results from the phase I/II MM-002 study of pomalidomide with or without low-dose dexamethasone in relapsed and refractory myeloma. The heavily pretreated 221-patient cohort had received a median of five prior regimens (range 2-13), 60% were refractory to lenalidomide (Revlimid) and bortezomib (Velcade), and 99% had received prior dexamethasone.

    Dr. Paul G. Richardson

In all, 34% of patients given pomalidomide plus dexamethasone achieved at least a partial response, compared with 13% of those given pomalidomide alone, said Dr. Paul G. Richardson, clinical director of the Jerome Lipper Center for Multiple Myeloma at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Complete responses were observed in 1% of both groups.

The responses were rapid and the duration of response appeared durable at a median of 8.5 months with single-agent pomalidomide and 7.9 months with the combination. Importantly, stable disease or better was observed in 81% of patients overall, he said.

As observed in the phase I portion of the study, pomalidomide plus dexamethasone was active in the vulnerable population of lenalidomide-refractory patients, with 29% achieving at least a partial response vs. 15% on single-agent pomalidomide. Equally encouraging were similar rates of response in patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib (30% vs. 16%), Dr. Richardson said.

The median time to progression for patients on both drugs was 4.7 months, compared with 2.7 months for those on pomalidomide monotherapy.

Median overall survival reached 16.9 months with both drugs, compared with 14 months with pomalidomide alone. Dr. Richardson pointed out that median overall survival was just 5.4 months for patients with progressive disease as their best response.

Among patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib, the use of pomalidomide and dexamethasone increased the median time to progression from 2.0 months with pomalidomide alone to 3.9 months, and median overall survival from 12.7 months to 13.7 months.

Oral pomalidomide 4 mg/day was administered on a 3-week on, 1-week off schedule with or without dexamethasone 40 mg/week. All patients received daily low-dose aspirin. Notably, 56% of the 108 patients given pomalidomide alone went on to receive dexamethasone due to progression, as per protocol.

During a discussion of the study, Dr. Richardson said the contribution of dexamethasone is critical to the pomalidomide backbone, but that investigators have been struck with how well both regimens are tolerated.

"I’m impressed that it doesn’t have the same muscle cramping and so forth that lenalidomide can sometimes be associated with, and it’s not associated with the diarrhea that can sometimes be a challenge with thalidomide," he said.

Neutropenia was the dominant grade 3-4 adverse event, occurring in 45% of those on single-agent pomalidomide and in 38% on both drugs. Thrombocytopenia was observed in 21% and 19% of patients, respectively. Both adverse events were manageable and required dose reduction in a minimum of patients, Dr. Richardson said.

Importantly, there was no grade 3/4 peripheral neuropathy, an important side effect of treatment with bortezomib, thalidomide, and cisplatin.

On the basis of the findings, pomalidomide is being investigated in phase III trials in the United States and Europe as part of combination treatments including low- and high-dose dexamethasone and bortezomib, he noted.

With Cyclophosphamide and Prednisone. Dr. Antonio Palumbo presented phase II results from a phase I/II study of relapsed or refractory myeloma evaluating continuous pomalidomide 2.5 mg daily in combination with cyclophosphamide 50 mg every other day and prednisone 50 mg every other day. Maintenance therapy with pomalidomide 2.5 mg/day and prednisone 25 mg every other day was given until disease progression.

The 29 evaluable patients had received a median of three prior therapies, and 62% were refractory to lenalidomide.

The most striking findings were the response rates and toxicity, said Dr. Palumbo, chief of the myeloma unit at the University of Torino (Italy).

After a median of four cycles, a partial response or better was observed in 65.5% of patients, at least a very good partial response in 28%, and a complete response in 7%. In the 11 lenalidomide-refractory patients, these response rates reached 81%, 27%, and 9%, respectively, he said.

Responses in the refractory population were described as amazing by an attendee, who asked for a possible explanation. Dr. Palumbo responded that the first explanation is "caution" and that experience shows that a three-drug combination increases efficacy. He went on to say that pomalidomide plus cyclophosphamide and prednisone is a "nice combination with a good risk-benefit ratio."

 

 

Key grade 4 hematologic adverse events were neutropenia (17%) and thrombocytopenia (7%). Grade 3 rash occurred in 10% of patients and grade 3/4 neurologic events in 7%. Despite the use of daily low-dose aspirin, 3% of patients experienced grade 3/4 thromboembolism.

Continuous pomalidomide 2.5 mg/day was identified as the maximum tolerated dose in the phase I portion of the study, and is roughly equivalent to the 4-mg dose given on the 3-week on, 1 week-off schedule, Dr. Palumbo said.

    Dr. Antonio Palumbo

Progression-free and overall survival data are immature after a median follow-up of only 4 months, but appear "interesting," he added.

Final Analysis of IFM 2009-02. The French-led Intergroupe Francophone du Myélome (IFM) 2009-02 trial tested the combination of pomalidomide 4 mg/day on days 1-21 or given continuously throughout the 28-day cycle, with dexamethasone 40 mg/week in patients with relapsed multiple myeloma who were resistant or refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib. The 84 patients had a median of five previous lines of therapy, and three-fourths were refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib.

Considering the duration of response, treatment duration, and similar safety profile, the 3-week on, 1-week off regimen appears superior to the continuous pomalidomide regimen, said Dr. Xavier Leleu of Hospital Huriez, CHRU, in Lille (France).

The median treatment duration was slightly longer at 7.2 months with the 21-day schedule vs. 5.2 months with continuous pomalidomide. The median number of cycles was 8 and 6, respectively.

A partial response or better was observed in 35% of the 21-day group and in 34% of the 28-day group, including very good partial responses in 1% of both groups and stable disease in 44% and 51%, respectively.

The median duration of response was 10.5 months with the 21-day schedule and 7.2 with the continuous schedule, resulting in more patients on the 21-day schedule being responsive at 1 year or more (47.5% vs. 36%), Dr. Leleu said.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) in the entire study was 5.7 months. This compares favorably with a median of 3.8 months in patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib, and a median of 5.7 months in those refractory to lenalidomide as their last line of therapy, he said.

Notably, median PFS was just 3.8 months in patients with stable disease vs. 11.3 months for responders. "Apparently, it [PFS] is significantly lower in patients with stable disease, but if you have patients who are responders, clearly their outcome is really, really good," Dr. Leleu said.

Subgroup analyses revealed poorer PFS in patients with adverse cytogenetics compared with others (2.8 vs. 9.9 months). PFS was also lower in elderly patients than in those under age 65 (4.0 months vs. 6.8 months), although Dr. Leleu said the numbers were small and it was hard to know whether the elderly received all their medication.

Serious adverse events were reported in 33% of patients in the 3-week on, 1-week off regimen and in 41.5% of those on the continuous regimen.

A study is underway evaluating pomalidomide 2 mg daily, but Dr. Leleu said such a regimen would have to be administered carefully. "There is no room for mistakes, because if you don’t treat them in an optimized way, they can escape treatment very quickly," he said. "So if you can manage 4 mg, it is probably better."

Long-Term Outcomes. Finally, Dr. Joseph R. Mikhael and his colleagues evaluated outcomes 4 years after the first Mayo Clinic cohort of relapsed or refractory myeloma patients was treated with continuous pomalidomide 2 mg/day and weekly dexamethasone 40 mg. The patients also received prophylaxis for deep vein thrombosis (DVT) with aspirin, heparin, or warfarin.

The 60 patients were enrolled from November 2007 to August 2008, and had received one to three prior therapies. Those therapies included stem cell transplantation (65%), bortezomib (33%), thalidomide (47%), lenalidomide (35%), immunomodulatory drugs (60%), and radiation (38%).

In all, 32% were high risk according to mSMART criteria, and 78% had International Staging System 2-3 disease.

A median of 11.5 treatment cycles were administered (range 1-47 cycles). All patients also received DVT prophylaxis with aspirin, heparin, or warfarin.

With a median follow-up of 33.6 months, the overall response was 65% (39/60 patients), including 4 stringent complete responses, 4 complete responses, 15 very good partial responses, and 16 partial responses.

Response was no less in patients with high-risk disease at 74% (14/19 patients), according to Dr. Mikhael, a hematologist at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz.

The responses were durable, with a median duration of 21.3 months. At the time of the analysis, 12 patients (20%) remained on therapy. "Pomalidomide and dexamethasone provides a long-term benefit with median progression-free survival of 13 months and a 2-year survival rate of 76%," the authors wrote.

 

 

Overall survival in the whole cohort has not yet been reached.

In patients with high-risk myeloma, PFS was 9.2 months and overall survival 40.4 months. In the 36 patients with prior immunomodulatory drug use, PFS was 11.6 months; overall survival had not yet been reached, but was 23% at 24 months.

Grades 3-4 nonhematologic toxicities occurred in 50% of patients. The most common grade 3 event was fatigue (18%), followed by pneumonia (8%), hyperglycemia (5%), and constipation (5%). One patient had grade 3 neuropathy, and 2% of patients experienced grade 4 pneumonia.

Celgene provided support for the trials. Dr. Richardson and his coauthors reported financial relationships with several pharmaceutical companies, including Celgene and Millennium Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Palumbo and his coauthors reported relationships with several firms, including Celgene. Dr. Leleu and his coauthors reported financial relationships with Celgene and others. Dr. Mikhael reported no conflicts of interest; his coauthors reported research funding and consultancy with several firms, including Celgene, Millennium, and Onyx Pharmaceuticals.

SAN DIEGO – The potent, next-generation immunomodulatory inhibitor pomalidomide works in at least one-third of patients with relapsed and/or refractory multiple myeloma when nothing else does, a series of studies shows.

MM-002: With Dexamethasone or Alone. One of the most closely watched presentations at the recent American Society of Hematology annual meeting was the one showing phase II results from the phase I/II MM-002 study of pomalidomide with or without low-dose dexamethasone in relapsed and refractory myeloma. The heavily pretreated 221-patient cohort had received a median of five prior regimens (range 2-13), 60% were refractory to lenalidomide (Revlimid) and bortezomib (Velcade), and 99% had received prior dexamethasone.

    Dr. Paul G. Richardson

In all, 34% of patients given pomalidomide plus dexamethasone achieved at least a partial response, compared with 13% of those given pomalidomide alone, said Dr. Paul G. Richardson, clinical director of the Jerome Lipper Center for Multiple Myeloma at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Complete responses were observed in 1% of both groups.

The responses were rapid and the duration of response appeared durable at a median of 8.5 months with single-agent pomalidomide and 7.9 months with the combination. Importantly, stable disease or better was observed in 81% of patients overall, he said.

As observed in the phase I portion of the study, pomalidomide plus dexamethasone was active in the vulnerable population of lenalidomide-refractory patients, with 29% achieving at least a partial response vs. 15% on single-agent pomalidomide. Equally encouraging were similar rates of response in patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib (30% vs. 16%), Dr. Richardson said.

The median time to progression for patients on both drugs was 4.7 months, compared with 2.7 months for those on pomalidomide monotherapy.

Median overall survival reached 16.9 months with both drugs, compared with 14 months with pomalidomide alone. Dr. Richardson pointed out that median overall survival was just 5.4 months for patients with progressive disease as their best response.

Among patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib, the use of pomalidomide and dexamethasone increased the median time to progression from 2.0 months with pomalidomide alone to 3.9 months, and median overall survival from 12.7 months to 13.7 months.

Oral pomalidomide 4 mg/day was administered on a 3-week on, 1-week off schedule with or without dexamethasone 40 mg/week. All patients received daily low-dose aspirin. Notably, 56% of the 108 patients given pomalidomide alone went on to receive dexamethasone due to progression, as per protocol.

During a discussion of the study, Dr. Richardson said the contribution of dexamethasone is critical to the pomalidomide backbone, but that investigators have been struck with how well both regimens are tolerated.

"I’m impressed that it doesn’t have the same muscle cramping and so forth that lenalidomide can sometimes be associated with, and it’s not associated with the diarrhea that can sometimes be a challenge with thalidomide," he said.

Neutropenia was the dominant grade 3-4 adverse event, occurring in 45% of those on single-agent pomalidomide and in 38% on both drugs. Thrombocytopenia was observed in 21% and 19% of patients, respectively. Both adverse events were manageable and required dose reduction in a minimum of patients, Dr. Richardson said.

Importantly, there was no grade 3/4 peripheral neuropathy, an important side effect of treatment with bortezomib, thalidomide, and cisplatin.

On the basis of the findings, pomalidomide is being investigated in phase III trials in the United States and Europe as part of combination treatments including low- and high-dose dexamethasone and bortezomib, he noted.

With Cyclophosphamide and Prednisone. Dr. Antonio Palumbo presented phase II results from a phase I/II study of relapsed or refractory myeloma evaluating continuous pomalidomide 2.5 mg daily in combination with cyclophosphamide 50 mg every other day and prednisone 50 mg every other day. Maintenance therapy with pomalidomide 2.5 mg/day and prednisone 25 mg every other day was given until disease progression.

The 29 evaluable patients had received a median of three prior therapies, and 62% were refractory to lenalidomide.

The most striking findings were the response rates and toxicity, said Dr. Palumbo, chief of the myeloma unit at the University of Torino (Italy).

After a median of four cycles, a partial response or better was observed in 65.5% of patients, at least a very good partial response in 28%, and a complete response in 7%. In the 11 lenalidomide-refractory patients, these response rates reached 81%, 27%, and 9%, respectively, he said.

Responses in the refractory population were described as amazing by an attendee, who asked for a possible explanation. Dr. Palumbo responded that the first explanation is "caution" and that experience shows that a three-drug combination increases efficacy. He went on to say that pomalidomide plus cyclophosphamide and prednisone is a "nice combination with a good risk-benefit ratio."

 

 

Key grade 4 hematologic adverse events were neutropenia (17%) and thrombocytopenia (7%). Grade 3 rash occurred in 10% of patients and grade 3/4 neurologic events in 7%. Despite the use of daily low-dose aspirin, 3% of patients experienced grade 3/4 thromboembolism.

Continuous pomalidomide 2.5 mg/day was identified as the maximum tolerated dose in the phase I portion of the study, and is roughly equivalent to the 4-mg dose given on the 3-week on, 1 week-off schedule, Dr. Palumbo said.

    Dr. Antonio Palumbo

Progression-free and overall survival data are immature after a median follow-up of only 4 months, but appear "interesting," he added.

Final Analysis of IFM 2009-02. The French-led Intergroupe Francophone du Myélome (IFM) 2009-02 trial tested the combination of pomalidomide 4 mg/day on days 1-21 or given continuously throughout the 28-day cycle, with dexamethasone 40 mg/week in patients with relapsed multiple myeloma who were resistant or refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib. The 84 patients had a median of five previous lines of therapy, and three-fourths were refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib.

Considering the duration of response, treatment duration, and similar safety profile, the 3-week on, 1-week off regimen appears superior to the continuous pomalidomide regimen, said Dr. Xavier Leleu of Hospital Huriez, CHRU, in Lille (France).

The median treatment duration was slightly longer at 7.2 months with the 21-day schedule vs. 5.2 months with continuous pomalidomide. The median number of cycles was 8 and 6, respectively.

A partial response or better was observed in 35% of the 21-day group and in 34% of the 28-day group, including very good partial responses in 1% of both groups and stable disease in 44% and 51%, respectively.

The median duration of response was 10.5 months with the 21-day schedule and 7.2 with the continuous schedule, resulting in more patients on the 21-day schedule being responsive at 1 year or more (47.5% vs. 36%), Dr. Leleu said.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) in the entire study was 5.7 months. This compares favorably with a median of 3.8 months in patients refractory to lenalidomide and bortezomib, and a median of 5.7 months in those refractory to lenalidomide as their last line of therapy, he said.

Notably, median PFS was just 3.8 months in patients with stable disease vs. 11.3 months for responders. "Apparently, it [PFS] is significantly lower in patients with stable disease, but if you have patients who are responders, clearly their outcome is really, really good," Dr. Leleu said.

Subgroup analyses revealed poorer PFS in patients with adverse cytogenetics compared with others (2.8 vs. 9.9 months). PFS was also lower in elderly patients than in those under age 65 (4.0 months vs. 6.8 months), although Dr. Leleu said the numbers were small and it was hard to know whether the elderly received all their medication.

Serious adverse events were reported in 33% of patients in the 3-week on, 1-week off regimen and in 41.5% of those on the continuous regimen.

A study is underway evaluating pomalidomide 2 mg daily, but Dr. Leleu said such a regimen would have to be administered carefully. "There is no room for mistakes, because if you don’t treat them in an optimized way, they can escape treatment very quickly," he said. "So if you can manage 4 mg, it is probably better."

Long-Term Outcomes. Finally, Dr. Joseph R. Mikhael and his colleagues evaluated outcomes 4 years after the first Mayo Clinic cohort of relapsed or refractory myeloma patients was treated with continuous pomalidomide 2 mg/day and weekly dexamethasone 40 mg. The patients also received prophylaxis for deep vein thrombosis (DVT) with aspirin, heparin, or warfarin.

The 60 patients were enrolled from November 2007 to August 2008, and had received one to three prior therapies. Those therapies included stem cell transplantation (65%), bortezomib (33%), thalidomide (47%), lenalidomide (35%), immunomodulatory drugs (60%), and radiation (38%).

In all, 32% were high risk according to mSMART criteria, and 78% had International Staging System 2-3 disease.

A median of 11.5 treatment cycles were administered (range 1-47 cycles). All patients also received DVT prophylaxis with aspirin, heparin, or warfarin.

With a median follow-up of 33.6 months, the overall response was 65% (39/60 patients), including 4 stringent complete responses, 4 complete responses, 15 very good partial responses, and 16 partial responses.

Response was no less in patients with high-risk disease at 74% (14/19 patients), according to Dr. Mikhael, a hematologist at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz.

The responses were durable, with a median duration of 21.3 months. At the time of the analysis, 12 patients (20%) remained on therapy. "Pomalidomide and dexamethasone provides a long-term benefit with median progression-free survival of 13 months and a 2-year survival rate of 76%," the authors wrote.

 

 

Overall survival in the whole cohort has not yet been reached.

In patients with high-risk myeloma, PFS was 9.2 months and overall survival 40.4 months. In the 36 patients with prior immunomodulatory drug use, PFS was 11.6 months; overall survival had not yet been reached, but was 23% at 24 months.

Grades 3-4 nonhematologic toxicities occurred in 50% of patients. The most common grade 3 event was fatigue (18%), followed by pneumonia (8%), hyperglycemia (5%), and constipation (5%). One patient had grade 3 neuropathy, and 2% of patients experienced grade 4 pneumonia.

Celgene provided support for the trials. Dr. Richardson and his coauthors reported financial relationships with several pharmaceutical companies, including Celgene and Millennium Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Palumbo and his coauthors reported relationships with several firms, including Celgene. Dr. Leleu and his coauthors reported financial relationships with Celgene and others. Dr. Mikhael reported no conflicts of interest; his coauthors reported research funding and consultancy with several firms, including Celgene, Millennium, and Onyx Pharmaceuticals.

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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

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New Scoring System Devised for Youth With Hodgkin's Lymphoma

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New Scoring System Devised for Youth With Hodgkin's Lymphoma

SAN DIEGO – A simple scoring system identified a subset of young patients with Hodgkin’s lymphoma who are predicted to have an event-free survival rate of less than 80%.

The system, known as the Childhood Hodgkin International Prognostic Score (CHIPS), found that four factors were predictive of worse event-free survival: stage IV disease, large mediastinal adenopathy, albumin level of less than 3.5 g/dL, and fever, Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz reported during a poster session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz

She and her associates with the Children’s Oncology Group evaluated 1,721 patients with intermediate risk Hodgkin’s lymphoma who were younger than age 21 and treated on AHOD0031: a phase III study of dose-intensive therapy.

The current study involved tailoring treatment by early response in 770 patients who were randomized or assigned to receive the same treatment (four cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vincristine, etoposide, prednisone and cyclophosphamide (ABVE-PC) and 21 Gy involved field radiotherapy (IFRT).

According to Dr. Schwartz, director of the division of pediatric hematology/oncology at Hasbro Children’s Hospital, Providence, R.I., rapid early response was defined as a two-dimensional tumor reduction of greater than 60% on CT after two cycles of ABVE-PC. Complete response was defined as a greater than 80% two-dimensional reduction by CT, and resolution of nuclear imaging abnormalities.

Rapid responders who achieved complete response after two additional ABVE-PC treatments were randomized to receive 21 Gy radiation. Slow early responders were randomized to receive dexamethasone, etoposide, cisplatin, and cytarabine (DECA) in addition to the four ABVE-PC treatments and 21 Gy radiation treatment.

Using Cox regression analysis and multivariable predictive modeling, the researchers identified four predictors of event-free survival: stage IV disease (hazard ratio, 1.6), mediastinal adenopathy (HR 1.7), albumin of less than 3.5 g/dL (HR 1.8), and fever (HR 2.5).

Because the hazard ratios were similar, the researchers devised the CHIPS score, which gave one point for each of the four adverse predictors. Using this approach, they determined that the event-free survival rate was 90% for patients with a CHIPS score of 0 or 1, 78% for those with a CHIPS score of 2, and 62% for those with a CHIPS score of 3. (Because the study enrolled only patients with intermediate-risk disease, no one had a CHIPS score of 4.) From this they determined that 22% of an intermediate-risk population can be predicted to have an event-free survival rate of less than 80%.

"Now that we know who’s a good responder to initial chemotherapy, we’re going to try and change their treatment much earlier than we have been able to previously," Dr. Schwartz said in an interview. "The next thing to do is analyze some of the biologic factors that contribute to their response rate."

Studies of CHIPS in additional cohorts of newly diagnosed patients are also planned, she said.

Dr. Schwartz said that she had no relevant financial disclosures to make.

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SAN DIEGO – A simple scoring system identified a subset of young patients with Hodgkin’s lymphoma who are predicted to have an event-free survival rate of less than 80%.

The system, known as the Childhood Hodgkin International Prognostic Score (CHIPS), found that four factors were predictive of worse event-free survival: stage IV disease, large mediastinal adenopathy, albumin level of less than 3.5 g/dL, and fever, Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz reported during a poster session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz

She and her associates with the Children’s Oncology Group evaluated 1,721 patients with intermediate risk Hodgkin’s lymphoma who were younger than age 21 and treated on AHOD0031: a phase III study of dose-intensive therapy.

The current study involved tailoring treatment by early response in 770 patients who were randomized or assigned to receive the same treatment (four cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vincristine, etoposide, prednisone and cyclophosphamide (ABVE-PC) and 21 Gy involved field radiotherapy (IFRT).

According to Dr. Schwartz, director of the division of pediatric hematology/oncology at Hasbro Children’s Hospital, Providence, R.I., rapid early response was defined as a two-dimensional tumor reduction of greater than 60% on CT after two cycles of ABVE-PC. Complete response was defined as a greater than 80% two-dimensional reduction by CT, and resolution of nuclear imaging abnormalities.

Rapid responders who achieved complete response after two additional ABVE-PC treatments were randomized to receive 21 Gy radiation. Slow early responders were randomized to receive dexamethasone, etoposide, cisplatin, and cytarabine (DECA) in addition to the four ABVE-PC treatments and 21 Gy radiation treatment.

Using Cox regression analysis and multivariable predictive modeling, the researchers identified four predictors of event-free survival: stage IV disease (hazard ratio, 1.6), mediastinal adenopathy (HR 1.7), albumin of less than 3.5 g/dL (HR 1.8), and fever (HR 2.5).

Because the hazard ratios were similar, the researchers devised the CHIPS score, which gave one point for each of the four adverse predictors. Using this approach, they determined that the event-free survival rate was 90% for patients with a CHIPS score of 0 or 1, 78% for those with a CHIPS score of 2, and 62% for those with a CHIPS score of 3. (Because the study enrolled only patients with intermediate-risk disease, no one had a CHIPS score of 4.) From this they determined that 22% of an intermediate-risk population can be predicted to have an event-free survival rate of less than 80%.

"Now that we know who’s a good responder to initial chemotherapy, we’re going to try and change their treatment much earlier than we have been able to previously," Dr. Schwartz said in an interview. "The next thing to do is analyze some of the biologic factors that contribute to their response rate."

Studies of CHIPS in additional cohorts of newly diagnosed patients are also planned, she said.

Dr. Schwartz said that she had no relevant financial disclosures to make.

SAN DIEGO – A simple scoring system identified a subset of young patients with Hodgkin’s lymphoma who are predicted to have an event-free survival rate of less than 80%.

The system, known as the Childhood Hodgkin International Prognostic Score (CHIPS), found that four factors were predictive of worse event-free survival: stage IV disease, large mediastinal adenopathy, albumin level of less than 3.5 g/dL, and fever, Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz reported during a poster session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz

She and her associates with the Children’s Oncology Group evaluated 1,721 patients with intermediate risk Hodgkin’s lymphoma who were younger than age 21 and treated on AHOD0031: a phase III study of dose-intensive therapy.

The current study involved tailoring treatment by early response in 770 patients who were randomized or assigned to receive the same treatment (four cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vincristine, etoposide, prednisone and cyclophosphamide (ABVE-PC) and 21 Gy involved field radiotherapy (IFRT).

According to Dr. Schwartz, director of the division of pediatric hematology/oncology at Hasbro Children’s Hospital, Providence, R.I., rapid early response was defined as a two-dimensional tumor reduction of greater than 60% on CT after two cycles of ABVE-PC. Complete response was defined as a greater than 80% two-dimensional reduction by CT, and resolution of nuclear imaging abnormalities.

Rapid responders who achieved complete response after two additional ABVE-PC treatments were randomized to receive 21 Gy radiation. Slow early responders were randomized to receive dexamethasone, etoposide, cisplatin, and cytarabine (DECA) in addition to the four ABVE-PC treatments and 21 Gy radiation treatment.

Using Cox regression analysis and multivariable predictive modeling, the researchers identified four predictors of event-free survival: stage IV disease (hazard ratio, 1.6), mediastinal adenopathy (HR 1.7), albumin of less than 3.5 g/dL (HR 1.8), and fever (HR 2.5).

Because the hazard ratios were similar, the researchers devised the CHIPS score, which gave one point for each of the four adverse predictors. Using this approach, they determined that the event-free survival rate was 90% for patients with a CHIPS score of 0 or 1, 78% for those with a CHIPS score of 2, and 62% for those with a CHIPS score of 3. (Because the study enrolled only patients with intermediate-risk disease, no one had a CHIPS score of 4.) From this they determined that 22% of an intermediate-risk population can be predicted to have an event-free survival rate of less than 80%.

"Now that we know who’s a good responder to initial chemotherapy, we’re going to try and change their treatment much earlier than we have been able to previously," Dr. Schwartz said in an interview. "The next thing to do is analyze some of the biologic factors that contribute to their response rate."

Studies of CHIPS in additional cohorts of newly diagnosed patients are also planned, she said.

Dr. Schwartz said that she had no relevant financial disclosures to make.

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New Scoring System Devised for Youth With Hodgkin's Lymphoma
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New Scoring System Devised for Youth With Hodgkin's Lymphoma
Legacy Keywords
scoring system, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, Childhood Hodgkin International Prognostic Score, CHIPS, stage IV disease, large mediastinal adenopathy, Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz, the American Society of Hematology, the Children’s Oncology Group,
Legacy Keywords
scoring system, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, Childhood Hodgkin International Prognostic Score, CHIPS, stage IV disease, large mediastinal adenopathy, Dr. Cindy L. Schwartz, the American Society of Hematology, the Children’s Oncology Group,
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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY

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Major Finding: Based on new scoring system, 22% of an intermediate-risk population can be predicted to have an event-free survival rate of less than 80%.

Data Source: Application of the Childhood Hodgkin International Prognostic Score (CHIPS) in 770 patients who were randomized or assigned to receive the same treatment.

Disclosures: Dr. Schwartz said that she had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.