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Number of cancer survivors with functional limitations doubled in 20 years

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 06/12/2023 - 11:41

The number of cancer survivors who report functional limitation has more than doubled in 20 years, according to a research letter published in JAMA Oncology.

Vishal Patel, BS, a student at the Dell Medical School at The University of Texas at Austin, and colleagues identified 51,258 cancer survivors from the National Health Interview Survey, representing a weighted population of approximately 178.8 million from 1999 to 2018.

Most survivors were women (60.2%) and were at least 65 years old (55.4%). In 1999, 3.6 million weighted survivors reported functional limitation. In 2018, the number increased to 8.2 million, a 2.25-fold increase.

The number of survivors who reported no limitations also increased, but not by as much. That group grew 1.34-fold during the study period.

For context, “the 70% prevalence of functional limitation among survivors in 2018 is nearly twice that of the general population,” the authors wrote.
 

Patients surveyed on function

Functional limitation was defined as “self-reported difficulty performing any of 12 routine physical or social activities without assistance.” Examples of the activities included difficulty sitting for more than 2 hours, difficulty participating in social activities or difficulty pushing or pulling an object the size of a living room chair.

Over the 2 decades analyzed, the adjusted prevalence of functional limitation was highest among survivors of pancreatic cancer (80.3%) and lung cancer (76.5%). Prevalence was lowest for survivors of melanoma (62.2%), breast (61.8%) and prostate (59.5%) cancers.
 

Not just a result of living longer

Mr. Patel told this publication that one assumption people might make when they read these results is that people are just living longer with cancer and losing functional ability accordingly.

“But, in fact, we found that the youngest [– those less than 65 years–] actually contributed to this trend more than the oldest people, which means it’s not just [happening], because people are getting older,” he said.

Hispanic and Black individuals had disproportionately higher increases in functional limitation; percentage point increases over the 2 decades were 19.5 for Black people, 25.1 for Hispanic people and 12.5 for White people. There may be a couple of reasons for that, Mr. Patel noted.

Those who are Black or Hispanic tend to have less access to cancer survivorship care for reasons including insurance status and historic health care inequities, he noted.

“The other potential reason is that they have had less access to cancer care historically. And if, 20 years ago Black and Hispanic individuals didn’t have access to some chemotherapies, and now they do, maybe it’s the increased access to care that’s causing these functional limitations. Because chemotherapy can sometimes be very toxic. It may be sort of a catch-up toxicity,” he said.
 

Quality of life beyond survivorship

Mr. Patel said the results seem to call for building on improved survival rates by tracking and improving function.

“It’s good to celebrate that there are more survivors. But now that we can keep people alive longer, maybe we can shift gears to improving their quality of life,” he said.

The more-than-doubling of functional limitations over 2 decades “is a very sobering trend,” he noted, while pointing out that the functional limitations applied to 8 million people in the United States – people whose needs are not being met.

There’s no sign of the trend stopping, he continued. “We saw no downward trend, only an upward trend.”

Increasingly, including functionality as an endpoint in cancer trials, in addition to improvements in mortality, is one place to start, he added.

“Our findings suggest an urgent need for care teams to understand and address function, for researchers to evaluate function as a core outcome in trials, and for health systems and policy makers to reimagine survivorship care, recognizing the burden of cancer and its treatment on physical, psychosocial, and cognitive function,” the authors wrote in their paper. Limitations of the study include the potential for recall bias, lack of cancer staging or treatment information, and the subjective perception of function.

A coauthor reported personal fees from Astellas, AstraZeneca, AAA, Blue Earth, Janssen, Lantheus, Myovant, Myriad Genetics, Novartis, Telix, and Sanofi, as well as grants from Pfizer and Bayer during the conduct of the study. No other disclosures were reported.

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The number of cancer survivors who report functional limitation has more than doubled in 20 years, according to a research letter published in JAMA Oncology.

Vishal Patel, BS, a student at the Dell Medical School at The University of Texas at Austin, and colleagues identified 51,258 cancer survivors from the National Health Interview Survey, representing a weighted population of approximately 178.8 million from 1999 to 2018.

Most survivors were women (60.2%) and were at least 65 years old (55.4%). In 1999, 3.6 million weighted survivors reported functional limitation. In 2018, the number increased to 8.2 million, a 2.25-fold increase.

The number of survivors who reported no limitations also increased, but not by as much. That group grew 1.34-fold during the study period.

For context, “the 70% prevalence of functional limitation among survivors in 2018 is nearly twice that of the general population,” the authors wrote.
 

Patients surveyed on function

Functional limitation was defined as “self-reported difficulty performing any of 12 routine physical or social activities without assistance.” Examples of the activities included difficulty sitting for more than 2 hours, difficulty participating in social activities or difficulty pushing or pulling an object the size of a living room chair.

Over the 2 decades analyzed, the adjusted prevalence of functional limitation was highest among survivors of pancreatic cancer (80.3%) and lung cancer (76.5%). Prevalence was lowest for survivors of melanoma (62.2%), breast (61.8%) and prostate (59.5%) cancers.
 

Not just a result of living longer

Mr. Patel told this publication that one assumption people might make when they read these results is that people are just living longer with cancer and losing functional ability accordingly.

“But, in fact, we found that the youngest [– those less than 65 years–] actually contributed to this trend more than the oldest people, which means it’s not just [happening], because people are getting older,” he said.

Hispanic and Black individuals had disproportionately higher increases in functional limitation; percentage point increases over the 2 decades were 19.5 for Black people, 25.1 for Hispanic people and 12.5 for White people. There may be a couple of reasons for that, Mr. Patel noted.

Those who are Black or Hispanic tend to have less access to cancer survivorship care for reasons including insurance status and historic health care inequities, he noted.

“The other potential reason is that they have had less access to cancer care historically. And if, 20 years ago Black and Hispanic individuals didn’t have access to some chemotherapies, and now they do, maybe it’s the increased access to care that’s causing these functional limitations. Because chemotherapy can sometimes be very toxic. It may be sort of a catch-up toxicity,” he said.
 

Quality of life beyond survivorship

Mr. Patel said the results seem to call for building on improved survival rates by tracking and improving function.

“It’s good to celebrate that there are more survivors. But now that we can keep people alive longer, maybe we can shift gears to improving their quality of life,” he said.

The more-than-doubling of functional limitations over 2 decades “is a very sobering trend,” he noted, while pointing out that the functional limitations applied to 8 million people in the United States – people whose needs are not being met.

There’s no sign of the trend stopping, he continued. “We saw no downward trend, only an upward trend.”

Increasingly, including functionality as an endpoint in cancer trials, in addition to improvements in mortality, is one place to start, he added.

“Our findings suggest an urgent need for care teams to understand and address function, for researchers to evaluate function as a core outcome in trials, and for health systems and policy makers to reimagine survivorship care, recognizing the burden of cancer and its treatment on physical, psychosocial, and cognitive function,” the authors wrote in their paper. Limitations of the study include the potential for recall bias, lack of cancer staging or treatment information, and the subjective perception of function.

A coauthor reported personal fees from Astellas, AstraZeneca, AAA, Blue Earth, Janssen, Lantheus, Myovant, Myriad Genetics, Novartis, Telix, and Sanofi, as well as grants from Pfizer and Bayer during the conduct of the study. No other disclosures were reported.

The number of cancer survivors who report functional limitation has more than doubled in 20 years, according to a research letter published in JAMA Oncology.

Vishal Patel, BS, a student at the Dell Medical School at The University of Texas at Austin, and colleagues identified 51,258 cancer survivors from the National Health Interview Survey, representing a weighted population of approximately 178.8 million from 1999 to 2018.

Most survivors were women (60.2%) and were at least 65 years old (55.4%). In 1999, 3.6 million weighted survivors reported functional limitation. In 2018, the number increased to 8.2 million, a 2.25-fold increase.

The number of survivors who reported no limitations also increased, but not by as much. That group grew 1.34-fold during the study period.

For context, “the 70% prevalence of functional limitation among survivors in 2018 is nearly twice that of the general population,” the authors wrote.
 

Patients surveyed on function

Functional limitation was defined as “self-reported difficulty performing any of 12 routine physical or social activities without assistance.” Examples of the activities included difficulty sitting for more than 2 hours, difficulty participating in social activities or difficulty pushing or pulling an object the size of a living room chair.

Over the 2 decades analyzed, the adjusted prevalence of functional limitation was highest among survivors of pancreatic cancer (80.3%) and lung cancer (76.5%). Prevalence was lowest for survivors of melanoma (62.2%), breast (61.8%) and prostate (59.5%) cancers.
 

Not just a result of living longer

Mr. Patel told this publication that one assumption people might make when they read these results is that people are just living longer with cancer and losing functional ability accordingly.

“But, in fact, we found that the youngest [– those less than 65 years–] actually contributed to this trend more than the oldest people, which means it’s not just [happening], because people are getting older,” he said.

Hispanic and Black individuals had disproportionately higher increases in functional limitation; percentage point increases over the 2 decades were 19.5 for Black people, 25.1 for Hispanic people and 12.5 for White people. There may be a couple of reasons for that, Mr. Patel noted.

Those who are Black or Hispanic tend to have less access to cancer survivorship care for reasons including insurance status and historic health care inequities, he noted.

“The other potential reason is that they have had less access to cancer care historically. And if, 20 years ago Black and Hispanic individuals didn’t have access to some chemotherapies, and now they do, maybe it’s the increased access to care that’s causing these functional limitations. Because chemotherapy can sometimes be very toxic. It may be sort of a catch-up toxicity,” he said.
 

Quality of life beyond survivorship

Mr. Patel said the results seem to call for building on improved survival rates by tracking and improving function.

“It’s good to celebrate that there are more survivors. But now that we can keep people alive longer, maybe we can shift gears to improving their quality of life,” he said.

The more-than-doubling of functional limitations over 2 decades “is a very sobering trend,” he noted, while pointing out that the functional limitations applied to 8 million people in the United States – people whose needs are not being met.

There’s no sign of the trend stopping, he continued. “We saw no downward trend, only an upward trend.”

Increasingly, including functionality as an endpoint in cancer trials, in addition to improvements in mortality, is one place to start, he added.

“Our findings suggest an urgent need for care teams to understand and address function, for researchers to evaluate function as a core outcome in trials, and for health systems and policy makers to reimagine survivorship care, recognizing the burden of cancer and its treatment on physical, psychosocial, and cognitive function,” the authors wrote in their paper. Limitations of the study include the potential for recall bias, lack of cancer staging or treatment information, and the subjective perception of function.

A coauthor reported personal fees from Astellas, AstraZeneca, AAA, Blue Earth, Janssen, Lantheus, Myovant, Myriad Genetics, Novartis, Telix, and Sanofi, as well as grants from Pfizer and Bayer during the conduct of the study. No other disclosures were reported.

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“Terrific progress”: Adding blinatumomab for infant leukemia

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Mon, 06/12/2023 - 11:42

 

The immunotherapy blinatumomab improves short-term outcomes when added to standard chemotherapy for infants with KMT2A-rearranged acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Two-year disease-free and overall survival measures, as well as the percentage of children who had complete minimal residual disease (MRD) responses, were substantially higher among the 30 infants in the study than in historical controls treated with the same chemotherapy backbone in an earlier trial, Interfant-06.

“These outcome data are very promising, given the poor survival and lack of improvements in outcomes among infants with KMT2A-rearranged ALL in recent decades,” said the investigators, led by Inge M. van der Sluis, MD, PhD, a hematologist-oncologist at Princess Maxima Center for Pediatric Oncology in Utrecht, the Netherlands.

“The low incidence of relapse after treatment with blinatumomab is remarkable, given that in historical controls relapses occur frequently and early during therapy,” the investigators stated. Although the “follow-up time was relatively short” in the study, “it included the period historically defined” as being at high risk of relapse, they said.

The team suggested that future research should assess whether infants benefit from multiple courses of blinatumomab, rather than the one course used in the study, and whether blinatumomab plus chemotherapy can replace stem cell transplants for high-risk infants.
 

Pediatric community responds

There was excitement on Twitter about the results; a number of pediatric blood cancer specialists were impressed and posted the study on that platform. Comments included, “Wow! After years of stagnation, a huge step forward for infant leukemia” and “great news for infant lymphoblastic leukemia.”

Akshay Sharma, MBBS, a pediatric bone marrow transplant and cellular therapy specialist at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, also posted. He said in an interview that the findings are “very exciting.”

The “outcomes of children diagnosed with leukemia in their infancy, particularly if they have a KMT2A rearrangement, have been dismal. This is terrific progress and a testament to the role that immunotherapy and novel agents will be playing in treatment of several malignant diseases in the decade to come,” he said.

Another poster, Pratik “Tik” Patel, MD, a pediatric hematology/oncology fellow at Emory University in Atlanta, told this news organization that the study “is welcome news to pediatric oncologists” and highlights “the success in incorporating newer immune-based therapeutics upfront in treatment rather than in relapsed/refractory settings.”

The National Cancer Institute–funded Children’s Oncology Group is thinking the same way. The group is launching a large, randomized trial to test if adding blinatumomab to chemotherapy upfront for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoblastic lymphoma improves outcomes in children and young adults aged 1-31 years. Results are due after 2029.
 

Study details

Blinatumomab is an expensive “T-cell engager” that helps cytotoxic CD3+T cells link to and destroy leukemic CD19+ B cells. Past studies have shown that it’s safe and works in older children and adults with B-lineage ALL after intensive chemotherapy, but until now the approach hadn’t been tested in infants, the investigators said.

The 30 subjects in the study were under a year old and newly diagnosed with KMT2A-rearranged ALL. They were treated with the Interfant-06 chemotherapy regimen – cytosine arabinoside and other agents – plus one postinduction course of blinatumomab at 15 micrograms/m2 per day as a 4-week continuous infusion. Eight of nine high-risk patients had allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplants.

Overall survival was 93.3% over a median follow up of 26.3 months, substantially higher than the 65.8% in the Interfant-06 trial. Two-year disease-free survival was 81.6% versus 49.4% in Interfant-06.

Sixteen patients (53%) were MRD negative after blinatumomab infusion and 12 (40%) had low levels of MRD. All of the children who continued chemotherapy went on to become MRD negative.

There were no permanent blinatumomab discontinuations and no treatment related deaths. Serious toxic effects were consistent with those in older patients and included four fevers, four infections, and one case each of hypertension and vomiting.

There were no cases of severe cytokine release syndrome (CRS) because of the low tumor burden of the subjects. Likewise, there were no obvious neurologic adverse events – like CRS, a particular concern with blinatumomab – but “we cannot rule out underreporting of mild neurologic symptoms that may have been unrecognized in infants,” the investigators said.

Patients who relapsed in the study had CNS involvement at relapse. “This underscores the need for adequate intrathecal chemotherapy during the blinatumomab infusion, because the efficacy of blinatumomab for the treatment of CNS leukemia may be limited,” they said.

The work was supported by Amgen, the maker of blinatumomab, as well as the Princess Maxima Center Foundation, the Danish Childhood Cancer Foundation, and others. Dr. Sluis is a consultant and researcher for Amgen. Five other authors were also consultants/advisers/researchers for the company. Dr. Sharma and Dr. Patel didn’t have any relevant disclosures.

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The immunotherapy blinatumomab improves short-term outcomes when added to standard chemotherapy for infants with KMT2A-rearranged acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Two-year disease-free and overall survival measures, as well as the percentage of children who had complete minimal residual disease (MRD) responses, were substantially higher among the 30 infants in the study than in historical controls treated with the same chemotherapy backbone in an earlier trial, Interfant-06.

“These outcome data are very promising, given the poor survival and lack of improvements in outcomes among infants with KMT2A-rearranged ALL in recent decades,” said the investigators, led by Inge M. van der Sluis, MD, PhD, a hematologist-oncologist at Princess Maxima Center for Pediatric Oncology in Utrecht, the Netherlands.

“The low incidence of relapse after treatment with blinatumomab is remarkable, given that in historical controls relapses occur frequently and early during therapy,” the investigators stated. Although the “follow-up time was relatively short” in the study, “it included the period historically defined” as being at high risk of relapse, they said.

The team suggested that future research should assess whether infants benefit from multiple courses of blinatumomab, rather than the one course used in the study, and whether blinatumomab plus chemotherapy can replace stem cell transplants for high-risk infants.
 

Pediatric community responds

There was excitement on Twitter about the results; a number of pediatric blood cancer specialists were impressed and posted the study on that platform. Comments included, “Wow! After years of stagnation, a huge step forward for infant leukemia” and “great news for infant lymphoblastic leukemia.”

Akshay Sharma, MBBS, a pediatric bone marrow transplant and cellular therapy specialist at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, also posted. He said in an interview that the findings are “very exciting.”

The “outcomes of children diagnosed with leukemia in their infancy, particularly if they have a KMT2A rearrangement, have been dismal. This is terrific progress and a testament to the role that immunotherapy and novel agents will be playing in treatment of several malignant diseases in the decade to come,” he said.

Another poster, Pratik “Tik” Patel, MD, a pediatric hematology/oncology fellow at Emory University in Atlanta, told this news organization that the study “is welcome news to pediatric oncologists” and highlights “the success in incorporating newer immune-based therapeutics upfront in treatment rather than in relapsed/refractory settings.”

The National Cancer Institute–funded Children’s Oncology Group is thinking the same way. The group is launching a large, randomized trial to test if adding blinatumomab to chemotherapy upfront for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoblastic lymphoma improves outcomes in children and young adults aged 1-31 years. Results are due after 2029.
 

Study details

Blinatumomab is an expensive “T-cell engager” that helps cytotoxic CD3+T cells link to and destroy leukemic CD19+ B cells. Past studies have shown that it’s safe and works in older children and adults with B-lineage ALL after intensive chemotherapy, but until now the approach hadn’t been tested in infants, the investigators said.

The 30 subjects in the study were under a year old and newly diagnosed with KMT2A-rearranged ALL. They were treated with the Interfant-06 chemotherapy regimen – cytosine arabinoside and other agents – plus one postinduction course of blinatumomab at 15 micrograms/m2 per day as a 4-week continuous infusion. Eight of nine high-risk patients had allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplants.

Overall survival was 93.3% over a median follow up of 26.3 months, substantially higher than the 65.8% in the Interfant-06 trial. Two-year disease-free survival was 81.6% versus 49.4% in Interfant-06.

Sixteen patients (53%) were MRD negative after blinatumomab infusion and 12 (40%) had low levels of MRD. All of the children who continued chemotherapy went on to become MRD negative.

There were no permanent blinatumomab discontinuations and no treatment related deaths. Serious toxic effects were consistent with those in older patients and included four fevers, four infections, and one case each of hypertension and vomiting.

There were no cases of severe cytokine release syndrome (CRS) because of the low tumor burden of the subjects. Likewise, there were no obvious neurologic adverse events – like CRS, a particular concern with blinatumomab – but “we cannot rule out underreporting of mild neurologic symptoms that may have been unrecognized in infants,” the investigators said.

Patients who relapsed in the study had CNS involvement at relapse. “This underscores the need for adequate intrathecal chemotherapy during the blinatumomab infusion, because the efficacy of blinatumomab for the treatment of CNS leukemia may be limited,” they said.

The work was supported by Amgen, the maker of blinatumomab, as well as the Princess Maxima Center Foundation, the Danish Childhood Cancer Foundation, and others. Dr. Sluis is a consultant and researcher for Amgen. Five other authors were also consultants/advisers/researchers for the company. Dr. Sharma and Dr. Patel didn’t have any relevant disclosures.

 

The immunotherapy blinatumomab improves short-term outcomes when added to standard chemotherapy for infants with KMT2A-rearranged acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Two-year disease-free and overall survival measures, as well as the percentage of children who had complete minimal residual disease (MRD) responses, were substantially higher among the 30 infants in the study than in historical controls treated with the same chemotherapy backbone in an earlier trial, Interfant-06.

“These outcome data are very promising, given the poor survival and lack of improvements in outcomes among infants with KMT2A-rearranged ALL in recent decades,” said the investigators, led by Inge M. van der Sluis, MD, PhD, a hematologist-oncologist at Princess Maxima Center for Pediatric Oncology in Utrecht, the Netherlands.

“The low incidence of relapse after treatment with blinatumomab is remarkable, given that in historical controls relapses occur frequently and early during therapy,” the investigators stated. Although the “follow-up time was relatively short” in the study, “it included the period historically defined” as being at high risk of relapse, they said.

The team suggested that future research should assess whether infants benefit from multiple courses of blinatumomab, rather than the one course used in the study, and whether blinatumomab plus chemotherapy can replace stem cell transplants for high-risk infants.
 

Pediatric community responds

There was excitement on Twitter about the results; a number of pediatric blood cancer specialists were impressed and posted the study on that platform. Comments included, “Wow! After years of stagnation, a huge step forward for infant leukemia” and “great news for infant lymphoblastic leukemia.”

Akshay Sharma, MBBS, a pediatric bone marrow transplant and cellular therapy specialist at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, also posted. He said in an interview that the findings are “very exciting.”

The “outcomes of children diagnosed with leukemia in their infancy, particularly if they have a KMT2A rearrangement, have been dismal. This is terrific progress and a testament to the role that immunotherapy and novel agents will be playing in treatment of several malignant diseases in the decade to come,” he said.

Another poster, Pratik “Tik” Patel, MD, a pediatric hematology/oncology fellow at Emory University in Atlanta, told this news organization that the study “is welcome news to pediatric oncologists” and highlights “the success in incorporating newer immune-based therapeutics upfront in treatment rather than in relapsed/refractory settings.”

The National Cancer Institute–funded Children’s Oncology Group is thinking the same way. The group is launching a large, randomized trial to test if adding blinatumomab to chemotherapy upfront for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoblastic lymphoma improves outcomes in children and young adults aged 1-31 years. Results are due after 2029.
 

Study details

Blinatumomab is an expensive “T-cell engager” that helps cytotoxic CD3+T cells link to and destroy leukemic CD19+ B cells. Past studies have shown that it’s safe and works in older children and adults with B-lineage ALL after intensive chemotherapy, but until now the approach hadn’t been tested in infants, the investigators said.

The 30 subjects in the study were under a year old and newly diagnosed with KMT2A-rearranged ALL. They were treated with the Interfant-06 chemotherapy regimen – cytosine arabinoside and other agents – plus one postinduction course of blinatumomab at 15 micrograms/m2 per day as a 4-week continuous infusion. Eight of nine high-risk patients had allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplants.

Overall survival was 93.3% over a median follow up of 26.3 months, substantially higher than the 65.8% in the Interfant-06 trial. Two-year disease-free survival was 81.6% versus 49.4% in Interfant-06.

Sixteen patients (53%) were MRD negative after blinatumomab infusion and 12 (40%) had low levels of MRD. All of the children who continued chemotherapy went on to become MRD negative.

There were no permanent blinatumomab discontinuations and no treatment related deaths. Serious toxic effects were consistent with those in older patients and included four fevers, four infections, and one case each of hypertension and vomiting.

There were no cases of severe cytokine release syndrome (CRS) because of the low tumor burden of the subjects. Likewise, there were no obvious neurologic adverse events – like CRS, a particular concern with blinatumomab – but “we cannot rule out underreporting of mild neurologic symptoms that may have been unrecognized in infants,” the investigators said.

Patients who relapsed in the study had CNS involvement at relapse. “This underscores the need for adequate intrathecal chemotherapy during the blinatumomab infusion, because the efficacy of blinatumomab for the treatment of CNS leukemia may be limited,” they said.

The work was supported by Amgen, the maker of blinatumomab, as well as the Princess Maxima Center Foundation, the Danish Childhood Cancer Foundation, and others. Dr. Sluis is a consultant and researcher for Amgen. Five other authors were also consultants/advisers/researchers for the company. Dr. Sharma and Dr. Patel didn’t have any relevant disclosures.

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Frontline CLL treatment: Avoiding adverse events

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Mon, 05/08/2023 - 13:19

– The Food and Drug Administration’s 2016 approval of the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib (IB) as a frontline therapy for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) dramatically improved overall survival rates for patients with this condition. Follow-up data from 8 years after the RESONATE-2 trial indicated that patients with CLL (65 years or older) who remain on IB therapy can expect to live as long as someone in the general population.

Physicians now face two challenges in frontline CLL treatment: finding safe and effective drugs with fewer side effects, allowing patients to maintain therapy; and offering young or genomically high-risk patients treatments that reduce the risk of relapse.

Dr. John N. Allan, MD, hematologist oncologist, associate professor of medicine, Weill Cornell School of Medicine, NY
courtesy Dr. Allan
Dr. John N. Allan

“My preferred approach to CLL treatment is the use of second generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors, due to their improved toxicity profiles. These drugs are a great frontline option for most, if not all CLL patients,” said John N. Allan, associate professor at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, in his presentation on frontline CLL treatments at the Great Debates and Updates Hematologic Malignancies Conference. “This is true even of older patients or those with comorbidities because this class of drug allows us to keep patients on treatment with excellent long-term outcomes.”

Results from the Alpine trial (NCT03734016), which included patients with and without high genomic risk, confirmed the superiority of the second generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor zanubrutinib (ZB) versus ibrutinib in terms of overall response rate 86.2% versus 75.5%, progression free survival 2-years after treatment 79.5% versus 67.3%, and adverse events (AEs) leading to discontinuation 15.4% versus 22.2% respectively.

The SEQUOIA trial (NCT03336333) demonstrated the effectiveness of ZB versus bendamustine + rituximab combination (BR) therapy in treatment-naive CLL / small lymphocytic leukemia patients with normal and high genomic risk. Overall 24-month progression free survival (PFS) was 85% in the ZB cohort vs. 69% in the BR cohort. This trend held true among high-risk subgroups like patients with an unmutated IgVH gene or 11q22.3 gene deletion.

Therapies known as “doublets” and “triplets” (which include a Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor in addition to other drugs) are not FDA approved for frontline CLL treatment. Yet studies suggest that young patients who are better able to tolerate AEs or high-risk patients with a greater risk of relapse (even on monotherapy maintenance), may derive benefits from multidrug frontline treatment.

“With doublets and triplets, doctors add treatment intensity up front so that patients can have a fixed duration of therapy versus continuous indefinite therapy,” said Vu Nguyen MD, a hematologist at Oakland (Calif.) Medical Center. “This is encouraging because if you can have a fixed duration of treatment, patients can come off treatment agents and hopefully have a prolonged remission and normal lifespan without chronic therapy and side effects.”

The CAPTIVATE study confirmed this approach with 3 cycles of IB followed by 12 cycles of IB + venetoclax leading to a 24-month PFS rate of 94% in patients with high risk or relapse. “Furthermore, 95% of study participants patients less than 70 years old completed 12 months of combination treatment without major problems,” said Dr. Allan. He concluded his remarks by noting that “we need longer term data on the use of combination therapy for frontline CLL treatment to confirm if and when it should be used.”

Dr. Allan disclosed relationships with Adaptive Biotechnologies, ADC Therapeutics, AstraZeneca, BeiGene, Epizyme, Genentech, Janssen, Lilly, Pharmacyclics, and TG Therapeutics. Dr. Nguyen reported no disclosures.

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– The Food and Drug Administration’s 2016 approval of the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib (IB) as a frontline therapy for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) dramatically improved overall survival rates for patients with this condition. Follow-up data from 8 years after the RESONATE-2 trial indicated that patients with CLL (65 years or older) who remain on IB therapy can expect to live as long as someone in the general population.

Physicians now face two challenges in frontline CLL treatment: finding safe and effective drugs with fewer side effects, allowing patients to maintain therapy; and offering young or genomically high-risk patients treatments that reduce the risk of relapse.

Dr. John N. Allan, MD, hematologist oncologist, associate professor of medicine, Weill Cornell School of Medicine, NY
courtesy Dr. Allan
Dr. John N. Allan

“My preferred approach to CLL treatment is the use of second generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors, due to their improved toxicity profiles. These drugs are a great frontline option for most, if not all CLL patients,” said John N. Allan, associate professor at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, in his presentation on frontline CLL treatments at the Great Debates and Updates Hematologic Malignancies Conference. “This is true even of older patients or those with comorbidities because this class of drug allows us to keep patients on treatment with excellent long-term outcomes.”

Results from the Alpine trial (NCT03734016), which included patients with and without high genomic risk, confirmed the superiority of the second generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor zanubrutinib (ZB) versus ibrutinib in terms of overall response rate 86.2% versus 75.5%, progression free survival 2-years after treatment 79.5% versus 67.3%, and adverse events (AEs) leading to discontinuation 15.4% versus 22.2% respectively.

The SEQUOIA trial (NCT03336333) demonstrated the effectiveness of ZB versus bendamustine + rituximab combination (BR) therapy in treatment-naive CLL / small lymphocytic leukemia patients with normal and high genomic risk. Overall 24-month progression free survival (PFS) was 85% in the ZB cohort vs. 69% in the BR cohort. This trend held true among high-risk subgroups like patients with an unmutated IgVH gene or 11q22.3 gene deletion.

Therapies known as “doublets” and “triplets” (which include a Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor in addition to other drugs) are not FDA approved for frontline CLL treatment. Yet studies suggest that young patients who are better able to tolerate AEs or high-risk patients with a greater risk of relapse (even on monotherapy maintenance), may derive benefits from multidrug frontline treatment.

“With doublets and triplets, doctors add treatment intensity up front so that patients can have a fixed duration of therapy versus continuous indefinite therapy,” said Vu Nguyen MD, a hematologist at Oakland (Calif.) Medical Center. “This is encouraging because if you can have a fixed duration of treatment, patients can come off treatment agents and hopefully have a prolonged remission and normal lifespan without chronic therapy and side effects.”

The CAPTIVATE study confirmed this approach with 3 cycles of IB followed by 12 cycles of IB + venetoclax leading to a 24-month PFS rate of 94% in patients with high risk or relapse. “Furthermore, 95% of study participants patients less than 70 years old completed 12 months of combination treatment without major problems,” said Dr. Allan. He concluded his remarks by noting that “we need longer term data on the use of combination therapy for frontline CLL treatment to confirm if and when it should be used.”

Dr. Allan disclosed relationships with Adaptive Biotechnologies, ADC Therapeutics, AstraZeneca, BeiGene, Epizyme, Genentech, Janssen, Lilly, Pharmacyclics, and TG Therapeutics. Dr. Nguyen reported no disclosures.

– The Food and Drug Administration’s 2016 approval of the Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor ibrutinib (IB) as a frontline therapy for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) dramatically improved overall survival rates for patients with this condition. Follow-up data from 8 years after the RESONATE-2 trial indicated that patients with CLL (65 years or older) who remain on IB therapy can expect to live as long as someone in the general population.

Physicians now face two challenges in frontline CLL treatment: finding safe and effective drugs with fewer side effects, allowing patients to maintain therapy; and offering young or genomically high-risk patients treatments that reduce the risk of relapse.

Dr. John N. Allan, MD, hematologist oncologist, associate professor of medicine, Weill Cornell School of Medicine, NY
courtesy Dr. Allan
Dr. John N. Allan

“My preferred approach to CLL treatment is the use of second generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors, due to their improved toxicity profiles. These drugs are a great frontline option for most, if not all CLL patients,” said John N. Allan, associate professor at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, in his presentation on frontline CLL treatments at the Great Debates and Updates Hematologic Malignancies Conference. “This is true even of older patients or those with comorbidities because this class of drug allows us to keep patients on treatment with excellent long-term outcomes.”

Results from the Alpine trial (NCT03734016), which included patients with and without high genomic risk, confirmed the superiority of the second generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor zanubrutinib (ZB) versus ibrutinib in terms of overall response rate 86.2% versus 75.5%, progression free survival 2-years after treatment 79.5% versus 67.3%, and adverse events (AEs) leading to discontinuation 15.4% versus 22.2% respectively.

The SEQUOIA trial (NCT03336333) demonstrated the effectiveness of ZB versus bendamustine + rituximab combination (BR) therapy in treatment-naive CLL / small lymphocytic leukemia patients with normal and high genomic risk. Overall 24-month progression free survival (PFS) was 85% in the ZB cohort vs. 69% in the BR cohort. This trend held true among high-risk subgroups like patients with an unmutated IgVH gene or 11q22.3 gene deletion.

Therapies known as “doublets” and “triplets” (which include a Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor in addition to other drugs) are not FDA approved for frontline CLL treatment. Yet studies suggest that young patients who are better able to tolerate AEs or high-risk patients with a greater risk of relapse (even on monotherapy maintenance), may derive benefits from multidrug frontline treatment.

“With doublets and triplets, doctors add treatment intensity up front so that patients can have a fixed duration of therapy versus continuous indefinite therapy,” said Vu Nguyen MD, a hematologist at Oakland (Calif.) Medical Center. “This is encouraging because if you can have a fixed duration of treatment, patients can come off treatment agents and hopefully have a prolonged remission and normal lifespan without chronic therapy and side effects.”

The CAPTIVATE study confirmed this approach with 3 cycles of IB followed by 12 cycles of IB + venetoclax leading to a 24-month PFS rate of 94% in patients with high risk or relapse. “Furthermore, 95% of study participants patients less than 70 years old completed 12 months of combination treatment without major problems,” said Dr. Allan. He concluded his remarks by noting that “we need longer term data on the use of combination therapy for frontline CLL treatment to confirm if and when it should be used.”

Dr. Allan disclosed relationships with Adaptive Biotechnologies, ADC Therapeutics, AstraZeneca, BeiGene, Epizyme, Genentech, Janssen, Lilly, Pharmacyclics, and TG Therapeutics. Dr. Nguyen reported no disclosures.

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Relapsed CLL: New approaches prolong survival

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Mon, 05/08/2023 - 13:19

Most patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) who relapse after treatment with a single agent Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor have one of several high-risk characteristics, including complex karyotype, 17p-chromosome deletion, or a TP53 mutation. In contrast, genomically stable patients have a 4-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate of about 98% on single agent Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy.

Richard R. Furman, MD, Morton Coleman MD Distringuished Professor of Medicine, Weill Cornell/NY Prebyterian Hospital
Dr. Furman
Dr. Richard R. Furman

“In people who are genomically unstable, almost half will have their CLL progress on single agent BTK inhibitor therapy. These patients, I’d like to treat with combination of a Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor plus venetoclax,” said Richard R. Furman, MD, Morton Coleman MD Distinguished Professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine/New York Presbyterian Hospital. He presented on treating relapsed CLL at the Great Debates and Updates Hematologic Malignancies Conference in New York, April 13-15.

The efficacy of venetoclax (VX) in treating high risk CLL patients was demonstrated in the 2019 CLL14 trial (NCT02242942) in which the main entry criteria were being treatment-naive and being considered “unfit” for treatment, meaning that a patient’s Cumulative Illness Rating Scale score was >6, or they presented with decreased kidney function. Study participants were treated with six cycles of either venetoclax-obinutuzumab (VO) or chlorambucil-obinutuzumab (CO); the 4-year PFS was 74% vs. 35.4% (P < .0001) respectively. After 12 cycles of treatment, the 74% of patients in the VO group achieved undetectable minimal residual disease rate (MRD) vs. 32% in the CO group.

Achievement of MRD did predict for outcome, but Dr. Furman concluded that while MRD is a powerful prognostic tool, it is not clinically useful given the inability of its results to guide therapy. He went on to emphasize that “of those patients who achieved MRD levels of 10-4 after 12 cycles of venetoclax, 50% had worsening and 50% had improvement of the residual disease, suggesting that we do not know the optimal duration of venetoclax treatment, as half of the patients still continue to derive benefit.”

Dr. Furman noted that ibrutinib (IB) and the second-generation drugs zanubrutinib (ZB) and acalabrutinib (AL) are all effective, but that the second-generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors enable patients to derive the benefit of remaining on treatment longer, because the rate of concerning cardiac complications is lower than with IB.

The ALPINE trial (NCT03734016) confirmed ZB’s significantly improved overall response rate at 78.3% vs. IB’s 62.5%, as well as a lower rate of atrial fibrillation (2.5%) vs. IB (10.1%).

Noninferiority of AL vs. IB in high-risk relapsed CLL patients was demonstrated in the ELEVATE-RR trial (NCT02477696) with both drugs having a median PFS of 38.4 months. With a median follow up of 41 months, AL demonstrated less atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter, compared with IB (9.4% vs. 16.0%) with no difference in grade > 3 infections. Furthermore, AL’s half-life being shorter than that of IB means that side effects are shorter lived.

“That’s the advantage of the second generation of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors,” said Stefan Glück, MD, PhD, a hematologic oncologist and independent consultant who was formerly affiliated with the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center and taught at the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami.

Dr. Glück added that “acalabrutinib and zanubrutinib have demonstrated strong efficacy and safety. When patients no longer respond to these drugs, the addition of VX is crucial. It has a completely different mechanism of action and can reverse resistance to Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors, allowing them to start working again.”

Dr. Furman also discussed proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs), one area that he expects to make a significant impact as a future therapy for CLL and many other malignancies. Despite the fact these agents are in phase I studies, he commented that “they appear, thus far, to have tremendous potential.”

Dr. Furman disclosed relationships with Abbvie, Acerta/AstraZeneca, Beigene, Jansen, TG Therapeutics, Genentech-Roche, Incyte Corporation, Loxo Oncology, MEI Pharma, Morphosys, Pharmacyclics, Sanofi/Genzyme, and X4 Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Glück reported no conflicts of interest.
 

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Most patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) who relapse after treatment with a single agent Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor have one of several high-risk characteristics, including complex karyotype, 17p-chromosome deletion, or a TP53 mutation. In contrast, genomically stable patients have a 4-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate of about 98% on single agent Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy.

Richard R. Furman, MD, Morton Coleman MD Distringuished Professor of Medicine, Weill Cornell/NY Prebyterian Hospital
Dr. Furman
Dr. Richard R. Furman

“In people who are genomically unstable, almost half will have their CLL progress on single agent BTK inhibitor therapy. These patients, I’d like to treat with combination of a Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor plus venetoclax,” said Richard R. Furman, MD, Morton Coleman MD Distinguished Professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine/New York Presbyterian Hospital. He presented on treating relapsed CLL at the Great Debates and Updates Hematologic Malignancies Conference in New York, April 13-15.

The efficacy of venetoclax (VX) in treating high risk CLL patients was demonstrated in the 2019 CLL14 trial (NCT02242942) in which the main entry criteria were being treatment-naive and being considered “unfit” for treatment, meaning that a patient’s Cumulative Illness Rating Scale score was >6, or they presented with decreased kidney function. Study participants were treated with six cycles of either venetoclax-obinutuzumab (VO) or chlorambucil-obinutuzumab (CO); the 4-year PFS was 74% vs. 35.4% (P < .0001) respectively. After 12 cycles of treatment, the 74% of patients in the VO group achieved undetectable minimal residual disease rate (MRD) vs. 32% in the CO group.

Achievement of MRD did predict for outcome, but Dr. Furman concluded that while MRD is a powerful prognostic tool, it is not clinically useful given the inability of its results to guide therapy. He went on to emphasize that “of those patients who achieved MRD levels of 10-4 after 12 cycles of venetoclax, 50% had worsening and 50% had improvement of the residual disease, suggesting that we do not know the optimal duration of venetoclax treatment, as half of the patients still continue to derive benefit.”

Dr. Furman noted that ibrutinib (IB) and the second-generation drugs zanubrutinib (ZB) and acalabrutinib (AL) are all effective, but that the second-generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors enable patients to derive the benefit of remaining on treatment longer, because the rate of concerning cardiac complications is lower than with IB.

The ALPINE trial (NCT03734016) confirmed ZB’s significantly improved overall response rate at 78.3% vs. IB’s 62.5%, as well as a lower rate of atrial fibrillation (2.5%) vs. IB (10.1%).

Noninferiority of AL vs. IB in high-risk relapsed CLL patients was demonstrated in the ELEVATE-RR trial (NCT02477696) with both drugs having a median PFS of 38.4 months. With a median follow up of 41 months, AL demonstrated less atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter, compared with IB (9.4% vs. 16.0%) with no difference in grade > 3 infections. Furthermore, AL’s half-life being shorter than that of IB means that side effects are shorter lived.

“That’s the advantage of the second generation of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors,” said Stefan Glück, MD, PhD, a hematologic oncologist and independent consultant who was formerly affiliated with the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center and taught at the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami.

Dr. Glück added that “acalabrutinib and zanubrutinib have demonstrated strong efficacy and safety. When patients no longer respond to these drugs, the addition of VX is crucial. It has a completely different mechanism of action and can reverse resistance to Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors, allowing them to start working again.”

Dr. Furman also discussed proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs), one area that he expects to make a significant impact as a future therapy for CLL and many other malignancies. Despite the fact these agents are in phase I studies, he commented that “they appear, thus far, to have tremendous potential.”

Dr. Furman disclosed relationships with Abbvie, Acerta/AstraZeneca, Beigene, Jansen, TG Therapeutics, Genentech-Roche, Incyte Corporation, Loxo Oncology, MEI Pharma, Morphosys, Pharmacyclics, Sanofi/Genzyme, and X4 Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Glück reported no conflicts of interest.
 

Most patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) who relapse after treatment with a single agent Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor have one of several high-risk characteristics, including complex karyotype, 17p-chromosome deletion, or a TP53 mutation. In contrast, genomically stable patients have a 4-year progression-free survival (PFS) rate of about 98% on single agent Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy.

Richard R. Furman, MD, Morton Coleman MD Distringuished Professor of Medicine, Weill Cornell/NY Prebyterian Hospital
Dr. Furman
Dr. Richard R. Furman

“In people who are genomically unstable, almost half will have their CLL progress on single agent BTK inhibitor therapy. These patients, I’d like to treat with combination of a Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitor plus venetoclax,” said Richard R. Furman, MD, Morton Coleman MD Distinguished Professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine/New York Presbyterian Hospital. He presented on treating relapsed CLL at the Great Debates and Updates Hematologic Malignancies Conference in New York, April 13-15.

The efficacy of venetoclax (VX) in treating high risk CLL patients was demonstrated in the 2019 CLL14 trial (NCT02242942) in which the main entry criteria were being treatment-naive and being considered “unfit” for treatment, meaning that a patient’s Cumulative Illness Rating Scale score was >6, or they presented with decreased kidney function. Study participants were treated with six cycles of either venetoclax-obinutuzumab (VO) or chlorambucil-obinutuzumab (CO); the 4-year PFS was 74% vs. 35.4% (P < .0001) respectively. After 12 cycles of treatment, the 74% of patients in the VO group achieved undetectable minimal residual disease rate (MRD) vs. 32% in the CO group.

Achievement of MRD did predict for outcome, but Dr. Furman concluded that while MRD is a powerful prognostic tool, it is not clinically useful given the inability of its results to guide therapy. He went on to emphasize that “of those patients who achieved MRD levels of 10-4 after 12 cycles of venetoclax, 50% had worsening and 50% had improvement of the residual disease, suggesting that we do not know the optimal duration of venetoclax treatment, as half of the patients still continue to derive benefit.”

Dr. Furman noted that ibrutinib (IB) and the second-generation drugs zanubrutinib (ZB) and acalabrutinib (AL) are all effective, but that the second-generation Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors enable patients to derive the benefit of remaining on treatment longer, because the rate of concerning cardiac complications is lower than with IB.

The ALPINE trial (NCT03734016) confirmed ZB’s significantly improved overall response rate at 78.3% vs. IB’s 62.5%, as well as a lower rate of atrial fibrillation (2.5%) vs. IB (10.1%).

Noninferiority of AL vs. IB in high-risk relapsed CLL patients was demonstrated in the ELEVATE-RR trial (NCT02477696) with both drugs having a median PFS of 38.4 months. With a median follow up of 41 months, AL demonstrated less atrial fibrillation/atrial flutter, compared with IB (9.4% vs. 16.0%) with no difference in grade > 3 infections. Furthermore, AL’s half-life being shorter than that of IB means that side effects are shorter lived.

“That’s the advantage of the second generation of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors,” said Stefan Glück, MD, PhD, a hematologic oncologist and independent consultant who was formerly affiliated with the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center and taught at the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami.

Dr. Glück added that “acalabrutinib and zanubrutinib have demonstrated strong efficacy and safety. When patients no longer respond to these drugs, the addition of VX is crucial. It has a completely different mechanism of action and can reverse resistance to Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors, allowing them to start working again.”

Dr. Furman also discussed proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs), one area that he expects to make a significant impact as a future therapy for CLL and many other malignancies. Despite the fact these agents are in phase I studies, he commented that “they appear, thus far, to have tremendous potential.”

Dr. Furman disclosed relationships with Abbvie, Acerta/AstraZeneca, Beigene, Jansen, TG Therapeutics, Genentech-Roche, Incyte Corporation, Loxo Oncology, MEI Pharma, Morphosys, Pharmacyclics, Sanofi/Genzyme, and X4 Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Glück reported no conflicts of interest.
 

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Price of CLL Rx rises, despite competition

Article Type
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Mon, 05/08/2023 - 13:18

Ibrutinib (Imbruvica) quickly changed the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia after it launched in 2013 as the first Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor and went on to become a bestselling drug in the United States. However, not even the availability of newer treatment options has reduced the price or the rate of prescribing ibrutinib.

In fact, the opposite has been seen: Both the price and prescribing of ibrutinib have increased markedly from 2014 to 2020, the authors of a new study say. The estimated net spending for a 30-day supply of ibrutinib increased by 46% during that period, despite the entry of several less costly and comparable products into the marketplace.

“Further research is needed to understand why oncologists have not embraced clinically superior options for CLL being sold at prices similar to, if not lower than, ibrutinib,” write the authors, led by Edward Scheffer Cliff, MBBS, MPH, from the division of pharmacoepidemiology and pharmacoeconomics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

The study was published online (2023 Apr 7. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.7467) as a research letter in JAMA Network Open.

Ibrutinib is currently indicated for the treatment of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL), Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM), marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), and chronic graft versus host disease. Among the top-selling drugs in the United States, ibrutinib sales by 2020 accounted for more than $2.8 billion in annual net Medicare spending.

However, since ibrutinib’s launch in 2013, there have been several new drugs approved for use in CLL, the authors note. They include acalabrutinib (Calquence), also a BTK inhibitor but associated with fewer adverse events, and venetoclax (Venclexta), the first-in-class B-cell lymphoma-2 inhibitor that offers additional clinical advantages such as time-limited therapy and the potential for complete remission. In addition, phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase inhibitors (PI3K inhibitors) were also approved for CLL, but they are less effective and associated with higher toxicity and are usually reserved for patients who relapse multiple times.
 

Prescribing and cost increased

With the emergence of several new oral targeted drugs for CLL, the authors hypothesized that this might lower costs as a result of competition and affect overall spending on ibrutinib.

To test their theory, they analyzed trends in Medicare Part D use and spending on these drugs from 2014 to 2020 to determine annual spending on oral CLL drugs, the number of beneficiaries who received these drugs, and the average spending per 30-day fill.

A total of six oral medications were included in their analysis: three BTK inhibitors (ibrutinib, acalabrutinib, and zanubrutinib), two PI3K inhibitors (idelalisib and duvelisib), and one B-cell lymphoma-2 inhibitor (venetoclax).

During the study period, annual net Medicare spending for all six of these drugs and across all indications increased from $254 million to $3.7 billion.

At the start of the study period in 2014, 6,180 Medicare beneficiaries were being treated with ibrutinib, and this number dramatically increased to 26,847 beneficiaries in 2020. Spending on ibrutinib constituted more than three-quarters (77%) of the total Medicare costs for these six drugs in 2020.

The estimated net spending for a 30-day supply of ibrutinib rose by 46%, from $8,206 in 2014 to $11,980 in 2020, despite the entry of the competitor drugs into the marketplace, some of which also had lower price tags: venetoclax in 2016 (2020 30-day fill price, $7,787), acalabrutinib in 2017 ($11,428) and zanubrutinib in 2020 ($12,521).

In addition, a sensitivity analysis showed a similar trend outside of the Medicare system.

Unlike for ibrutinib, net spending for other oral targeted drugs generally did not increase over time, and some drug prices even dropped slightly.

The authors note that one limitation of their study is that Medicare does not report spending by indication, so it was unknown what proportion of the cost was for CLL as opposed to the other B-cell lymphomas.

“Brand-to-brand competition may have been ineffective at lowering Medicare costs due to lags between approval and change in prescriber practices, constraints on payers’ ability to effectively use formularies to negotiate prices, and financial incentives that can encourage intermediaries such as pharmacy benefit managers to accept high prices,” they conclude.

This study was supported by a grant from Arnold Ventures. Several of the authors have reported relationships with industry.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Ibrutinib (Imbruvica) quickly changed the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia after it launched in 2013 as the first Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor and went on to become a bestselling drug in the United States. However, not even the availability of newer treatment options has reduced the price or the rate of prescribing ibrutinib.

In fact, the opposite has been seen: Both the price and prescribing of ibrutinib have increased markedly from 2014 to 2020, the authors of a new study say. The estimated net spending for a 30-day supply of ibrutinib increased by 46% during that period, despite the entry of several less costly and comparable products into the marketplace.

“Further research is needed to understand why oncologists have not embraced clinically superior options for CLL being sold at prices similar to, if not lower than, ibrutinib,” write the authors, led by Edward Scheffer Cliff, MBBS, MPH, from the division of pharmacoepidemiology and pharmacoeconomics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

The study was published online (2023 Apr 7. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.7467) as a research letter in JAMA Network Open.

Ibrutinib is currently indicated for the treatment of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL), Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM), marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), and chronic graft versus host disease. Among the top-selling drugs in the United States, ibrutinib sales by 2020 accounted for more than $2.8 billion in annual net Medicare spending.

However, since ibrutinib’s launch in 2013, there have been several new drugs approved for use in CLL, the authors note. They include acalabrutinib (Calquence), also a BTK inhibitor but associated with fewer adverse events, and venetoclax (Venclexta), the first-in-class B-cell lymphoma-2 inhibitor that offers additional clinical advantages such as time-limited therapy and the potential for complete remission. In addition, phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase inhibitors (PI3K inhibitors) were also approved for CLL, but they are less effective and associated with higher toxicity and are usually reserved for patients who relapse multiple times.
 

Prescribing and cost increased

With the emergence of several new oral targeted drugs for CLL, the authors hypothesized that this might lower costs as a result of competition and affect overall spending on ibrutinib.

To test their theory, they analyzed trends in Medicare Part D use and spending on these drugs from 2014 to 2020 to determine annual spending on oral CLL drugs, the number of beneficiaries who received these drugs, and the average spending per 30-day fill.

A total of six oral medications were included in their analysis: three BTK inhibitors (ibrutinib, acalabrutinib, and zanubrutinib), two PI3K inhibitors (idelalisib and duvelisib), and one B-cell lymphoma-2 inhibitor (venetoclax).

During the study period, annual net Medicare spending for all six of these drugs and across all indications increased from $254 million to $3.7 billion.

At the start of the study period in 2014, 6,180 Medicare beneficiaries were being treated with ibrutinib, and this number dramatically increased to 26,847 beneficiaries in 2020. Spending on ibrutinib constituted more than three-quarters (77%) of the total Medicare costs for these six drugs in 2020.

The estimated net spending for a 30-day supply of ibrutinib rose by 46%, from $8,206 in 2014 to $11,980 in 2020, despite the entry of the competitor drugs into the marketplace, some of which also had lower price tags: venetoclax in 2016 (2020 30-day fill price, $7,787), acalabrutinib in 2017 ($11,428) and zanubrutinib in 2020 ($12,521).

In addition, a sensitivity analysis showed a similar trend outside of the Medicare system.

Unlike for ibrutinib, net spending for other oral targeted drugs generally did not increase over time, and some drug prices even dropped slightly.

The authors note that one limitation of their study is that Medicare does not report spending by indication, so it was unknown what proportion of the cost was for CLL as opposed to the other B-cell lymphomas.

“Brand-to-brand competition may have been ineffective at lowering Medicare costs due to lags between approval and change in prescriber practices, constraints on payers’ ability to effectively use formularies to negotiate prices, and financial incentives that can encourage intermediaries such as pharmacy benefit managers to accept high prices,” they conclude.

This study was supported by a grant from Arnold Ventures. Several of the authors have reported relationships with industry.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Ibrutinib (Imbruvica) quickly changed the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia after it launched in 2013 as the first Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor and went on to become a bestselling drug in the United States. However, not even the availability of newer treatment options has reduced the price or the rate of prescribing ibrutinib.

In fact, the opposite has been seen: Both the price and prescribing of ibrutinib have increased markedly from 2014 to 2020, the authors of a new study say. The estimated net spending for a 30-day supply of ibrutinib increased by 46% during that period, despite the entry of several less costly and comparable products into the marketplace.

“Further research is needed to understand why oncologists have not embraced clinically superior options for CLL being sold at prices similar to, if not lower than, ibrutinib,” write the authors, led by Edward Scheffer Cliff, MBBS, MPH, from the division of pharmacoepidemiology and pharmacoeconomics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.

The study was published online (2023 Apr 7. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.7467) as a research letter in JAMA Network Open.

Ibrutinib is currently indicated for the treatment of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL), Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM), marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), and chronic graft versus host disease. Among the top-selling drugs in the United States, ibrutinib sales by 2020 accounted for more than $2.8 billion in annual net Medicare spending.

However, since ibrutinib’s launch in 2013, there have been several new drugs approved for use in CLL, the authors note. They include acalabrutinib (Calquence), also a BTK inhibitor but associated with fewer adverse events, and venetoclax (Venclexta), the first-in-class B-cell lymphoma-2 inhibitor that offers additional clinical advantages such as time-limited therapy and the potential for complete remission. In addition, phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase inhibitors (PI3K inhibitors) were also approved for CLL, but they are less effective and associated with higher toxicity and are usually reserved for patients who relapse multiple times.
 

Prescribing and cost increased

With the emergence of several new oral targeted drugs for CLL, the authors hypothesized that this might lower costs as a result of competition and affect overall spending on ibrutinib.

To test their theory, they analyzed trends in Medicare Part D use and spending on these drugs from 2014 to 2020 to determine annual spending on oral CLL drugs, the number of beneficiaries who received these drugs, and the average spending per 30-day fill.

A total of six oral medications were included in their analysis: three BTK inhibitors (ibrutinib, acalabrutinib, and zanubrutinib), two PI3K inhibitors (idelalisib and duvelisib), and one B-cell lymphoma-2 inhibitor (venetoclax).

During the study period, annual net Medicare spending for all six of these drugs and across all indications increased from $254 million to $3.7 billion.

At the start of the study period in 2014, 6,180 Medicare beneficiaries were being treated with ibrutinib, and this number dramatically increased to 26,847 beneficiaries in 2020. Spending on ibrutinib constituted more than three-quarters (77%) of the total Medicare costs for these six drugs in 2020.

The estimated net spending for a 30-day supply of ibrutinib rose by 46%, from $8,206 in 2014 to $11,980 in 2020, despite the entry of the competitor drugs into the marketplace, some of which also had lower price tags: venetoclax in 2016 (2020 30-day fill price, $7,787), acalabrutinib in 2017 ($11,428) and zanubrutinib in 2020 ($12,521).

In addition, a sensitivity analysis showed a similar trend outside of the Medicare system.

Unlike for ibrutinib, net spending for other oral targeted drugs generally did not increase over time, and some drug prices even dropped slightly.

The authors note that one limitation of their study is that Medicare does not report spending by indication, so it was unknown what proportion of the cost was for CLL as opposed to the other B-cell lymphomas.

“Brand-to-brand competition may have been ineffective at lowering Medicare costs due to lags between approval and change in prescriber practices, constraints on payers’ ability to effectively use formularies to negotiate prices, and financial incentives that can encourage intermediaries such as pharmacy benefit managers to accept high prices,” they conclude.

This study was supported by a grant from Arnold Ventures. Several of the authors have reported relationships with industry.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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MRD: Powerful metric for CLL research

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Mon, 05/08/2023 - 13:18

 

The latest therapies for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) offer prolonged remission, along with a need for better tools to gauge their effectiveness. Data from a new study published in Frontiers in Oncology demonstrate that assessing measurable residual disease (MRD) helps doctors evaluate and implement novel treatments.

“MRD measurement is now a key feature of CLL clinical trials reporting. It can change CLL care by enabling approval of medication use in the wider (nontrial) patient population based on MRD data, without having to wait (ever-increasing) times for conventional trial outcomes, such as progression-free survival [PFS],” said study author Tahla Munir MD, of the department of hematology, at the Leeds (England) Teaching Hospitals of the National Health Service Trust.

Dr. Tahir Munir, MD, department of hematology, Leeds Teaching Hospital, United Kingdom
courtesy of NHS
Dr. Tahla Munir

“It also has potential to direct our treatment duration and follow-up strategies based on MRD results taken during or at the end of treatment, and to direct new treatment strategies, such as intermittent (as opposed to fixed-duration or continuous) treatment,” Dr. Munir said in an interview.

The review study defined MRD according to the detectable proportion of residual CLL cells. (Current international consensus for undetectable is U-MRD4 1 leukemic cell in 10,000 leukocytes.) The advantages and disadvantages of different MRD assays were analyzed. Multiparameter flow cytometry, an older technology, proved less sensitive to newer tests. It is reliable measuring to a sensitivity of U-MRD4 and more widely available than next-generation real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction tests (NG-PCR).

“NG-PCR has the most potential for use in laboratory practice. It doesn’t require patient-specific primers and can detect around 1 CLL cell in 1x106 leukocytes. The biggest challenge is laboratory sequencing and bioinformatic capacity,” said lead study author Amelia Fisher, clinical research fellow at the division of cancer studies and pathology, University of Leeds.

“Multiple wells are required to gather adequate data to match the sensitivity of NGS. As this technology improves to match NGS sensitivity using fewer wells, once primers (bespoke to each patient) are designed it will provide a simple to use, rapid and easily reportable MRD tool, that could be scaled up in the event of MRD testing becoming routine practice,” explained Dr. Fisher.

The study also demonstrated how MRD can offer more in-depth insights into the success of treatments versus PFS. In the MURANO clinical trial, which compared venetoclax-rituximab treatment with standard chemoimmunotherapy (SC) to treat relapsed or refractory CLL, the PFS and overall survival (OS) remained significantly prolonged in the VR group at 5 years after therapy.

Analysis of MRD levels in the VR arm demonstrated that those with U-MRD4 had superior OS, with survival at 5 years of 95.3%, compared with those with higher rates of MRD (72.9%). A slower rate of MRD doubling time in the VR-treated patients, compared with the SC-treated patients, also buttressed the notion of moving from SC to VR treatment for the general CLL patient population.

Researchers cautioned that “a lot of the data is very recent, and therefore we do not have conventional trial outcomes, e.g., PFS and OS for all the studies. Some of the data we have is over a relatively short time period.”

Dr. Alessandra Ferrajoli, department of leukemia, MD Anderson Cancer Center, University of Texas, Houston
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Dr. Alessandra Ferrajoli

An independent expert not associated with the study, Alessandra Ferrajoli, MD, associate medical director of the department of leukemia at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, expressed agreement with the study’s main findings.

“It is very likely that MRD assessment will be incorporated as a standard measurement of treatment efficacy in patients with CLL in the near future. The technologies have evolved to high levels of sensitivity, and the methods are being successfully harmonized and standardized,” she said.

Neither the study authors nor Dr. Ferrajoli reported conflicts of interest.

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The latest therapies for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) offer prolonged remission, along with a need for better tools to gauge their effectiveness. Data from a new study published in Frontiers in Oncology demonstrate that assessing measurable residual disease (MRD) helps doctors evaluate and implement novel treatments.

“MRD measurement is now a key feature of CLL clinical trials reporting. It can change CLL care by enabling approval of medication use in the wider (nontrial) patient population based on MRD data, without having to wait (ever-increasing) times for conventional trial outcomes, such as progression-free survival [PFS],” said study author Tahla Munir MD, of the department of hematology, at the Leeds (England) Teaching Hospitals of the National Health Service Trust.

Dr. Tahir Munir, MD, department of hematology, Leeds Teaching Hospital, United Kingdom
courtesy of NHS
Dr. Tahla Munir

“It also has potential to direct our treatment duration and follow-up strategies based on MRD results taken during or at the end of treatment, and to direct new treatment strategies, such as intermittent (as opposed to fixed-duration or continuous) treatment,” Dr. Munir said in an interview.

The review study defined MRD according to the detectable proportion of residual CLL cells. (Current international consensus for undetectable is U-MRD4 1 leukemic cell in 10,000 leukocytes.) The advantages and disadvantages of different MRD assays were analyzed. Multiparameter flow cytometry, an older technology, proved less sensitive to newer tests. It is reliable measuring to a sensitivity of U-MRD4 and more widely available than next-generation real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction tests (NG-PCR).

“NG-PCR has the most potential for use in laboratory practice. It doesn’t require patient-specific primers and can detect around 1 CLL cell in 1x106 leukocytes. The biggest challenge is laboratory sequencing and bioinformatic capacity,” said lead study author Amelia Fisher, clinical research fellow at the division of cancer studies and pathology, University of Leeds.

“Multiple wells are required to gather adequate data to match the sensitivity of NGS. As this technology improves to match NGS sensitivity using fewer wells, once primers (bespoke to each patient) are designed it will provide a simple to use, rapid and easily reportable MRD tool, that could be scaled up in the event of MRD testing becoming routine practice,” explained Dr. Fisher.

The study also demonstrated how MRD can offer more in-depth insights into the success of treatments versus PFS. In the MURANO clinical trial, which compared venetoclax-rituximab treatment with standard chemoimmunotherapy (SC) to treat relapsed or refractory CLL, the PFS and overall survival (OS) remained significantly prolonged in the VR group at 5 years after therapy.

Analysis of MRD levels in the VR arm demonstrated that those with U-MRD4 had superior OS, with survival at 5 years of 95.3%, compared with those with higher rates of MRD (72.9%). A slower rate of MRD doubling time in the VR-treated patients, compared with the SC-treated patients, also buttressed the notion of moving from SC to VR treatment for the general CLL patient population.

Researchers cautioned that “a lot of the data is very recent, and therefore we do not have conventional trial outcomes, e.g., PFS and OS for all the studies. Some of the data we have is over a relatively short time period.”

Dr. Alessandra Ferrajoli, department of leukemia, MD Anderson Cancer Center, University of Texas, Houston
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Dr. Alessandra Ferrajoli

An independent expert not associated with the study, Alessandra Ferrajoli, MD, associate medical director of the department of leukemia at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, expressed agreement with the study’s main findings.

“It is very likely that MRD assessment will be incorporated as a standard measurement of treatment efficacy in patients with CLL in the near future. The technologies have evolved to high levels of sensitivity, and the methods are being successfully harmonized and standardized,” she said.

Neither the study authors nor Dr. Ferrajoli reported conflicts of interest.

 

The latest therapies for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) offer prolonged remission, along with a need for better tools to gauge their effectiveness. Data from a new study published in Frontiers in Oncology demonstrate that assessing measurable residual disease (MRD) helps doctors evaluate and implement novel treatments.

“MRD measurement is now a key feature of CLL clinical trials reporting. It can change CLL care by enabling approval of medication use in the wider (nontrial) patient population based on MRD data, without having to wait (ever-increasing) times for conventional trial outcomes, such as progression-free survival [PFS],” said study author Tahla Munir MD, of the department of hematology, at the Leeds (England) Teaching Hospitals of the National Health Service Trust.

Dr. Tahir Munir, MD, department of hematology, Leeds Teaching Hospital, United Kingdom
courtesy of NHS
Dr. Tahla Munir

“It also has potential to direct our treatment duration and follow-up strategies based on MRD results taken during or at the end of treatment, and to direct new treatment strategies, such as intermittent (as opposed to fixed-duration or continuous) treatment,” Dr. Munir said in an interview.

The review study defined MRD according to the detectable proportion of residual CLL cells. (Current international consensus for undetectable is U-MRD4 1 leukemic cell in 10,000 leukocytes.) The advantages and disadvantages of different MRD assays were analyzed. Multiparameter flow cytometry, an older technology, proved less sensitive to newer tests. It is reliable measuring to a sensitivity of U-MRD4 and more widely available than next-generation real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction tests (NG-PCR).

“NG-PCR has the most potential for use in laboratory practice. It doesn’t require patient-specific primers and can detect around 1 CLL cell in 1x106 leukocytes. The biggest challenge is laboratory sequencing and bioinformatic capacity,” said lead study author Amelia Fisher, clinical research fellow at the division of cancer studies and pathology, University of Leeds.

“Multiple wells are required to gather adequate data to match the sensitivity of NGS. As this technology improves to match NGS sensitivity using fewer wells, once primers (bespoke to each patient) are designed it will provide a simple to use, rapid and easily reportable MRD tool, that could be scaled up in the event of MRD testing becoming routine practice,” explained Dr. Fisher.

The study also demonstrated how MRD can offer more in-depth insights into the success of treatments versus PFS. In the MURANO clinical trial, which compared venetoclax-rituximab treatment with standard chemoimmunotherapy (SC) to treat relapsed or refractory CLL, the PFS and overall survival (OS) remained significantly prolonged in the VR group at 5 years after therapy.

Analysis of MRD levels in the VR arm demonstrated that those with U-MRD4 had superior OS, with survival at 5 years of 95.3%, compared with those with higher rates of MRD (72.9%). A slower rate of MRD doubling time in the VR-treated patients, compared with the SC-treated patients, also buttressed the notion of moving from SC to VR treatment for the general CLL patient population.

Researchers cautioned that “a lot of the data is very recent, and therefore we do not have conventional trial outcomes, e.g., PFS and OS for all the studies. Some of the data we have is over a relatively short time period.”

Dr. Alessandra Ferrajoli, department of leukemia, MD Anderson Cancer Center, University of Texas, Houston
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Dr. Alessandra Ferrajoli

An independent expert not associated with the study, Alessandra Ferrajoli, MD, associate medical director of the department of leukemia at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, expressed agreement with the study’s main findings.

“It is very likely that MRD assessment will be incorporated as a standard measurement of treatment efficacy in patients with CLL in the near future. The technologies have evolved to high levels of sensitivity, and the methods are being successfully harmonized and standardized,” she said.

Neither the study authors nor Dr. Ferrajoli reported conflicts of interest.

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B-cell cancers: Sparse insight into preventing infections

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Cases of acquired hypogammaglobulinemia are expected to rise, as patients live longer with such B-cell malignancies as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and multiple myeloma. But there’s a striking shortage of research into the best prophylactic approaches to prevent infections, a new systematic review and meta-analysis showed.

Researchers found just 22 randomized controlled studies into prophylactic strategies, with several of them conducted prior to 2000. According to the report, published in Blood Advances, the studies together only evaluated a few thousand participants.

Reliable findings are so sparse that study coauthor Zoe McQuilten, MBBS, PhD, MD, a hematologist at Monash University, Melbourne, said “we simply don’t know” which preventive strategy is most effective. This is especially worrisome because more patients will survive their cancers and “be at risk of infection or have significant cytopenias and will experience impaired quality of life as a result,” she said in an interview.

The study authors launched the analysis to better understand the evidence regarding infection prevention and to guide the development of clinical trials, study coauthor Robert Weinkove, MBBS, PhD, a hematologist at Malaghan Institute of Medical Research, Wellington, New Zealand, said in an interview.

As he explained, targeted therapies have revolutionized the treatment of some B-cell cancers. They also have boosted the number of patients who survive the diseases yet still have profound hypogammaglobulinemia.

“Indeed, we may soon reach the point at which infection, and not tumor progression, is the leading cause of death for patients with certain B-cell cancers,” he said. “The evidence base for managing hypogammaglobulinemia is largely based on randomized trials of immunoglobulin replacement conducted in the 1980s and early 1990s, before the advent of B cell–targeted therapies. Immunoglobulin replacement is a costly intervention, and many countries are facing a shortage of immunoglobulin.”

The report authors identified 22 total randomized controlled trials, including one led by Dr. McQuilten: 8 studies into prophylactic immunoglobulin (n = 370; all but 1 study published prior to 2000), 5 into prophylactic antibiotics (n = 1,587), 7 into vaccination (n = 3,996), and 1 comparing immunoglobulin versus antibiotics (n = 60).

No evidence was found to support a lowering of risk by prophylactic antibiotics, although they caused adverse events.

Prophylactic immunoglobulin also caused adverse events, but a meta-analysis found that it reduced the risk of clinically documented infection by 28% (n = 2 trials; relative risk, 0.72; 95% confidence interval, 0.54-0.96). Three trials reported adverse events and found a higher risk overall (RR, 2.23; 95% CI, 1.67-2.99).

Varicella zoster virus vaccination reduced the risk of one or more infections by 63% (n = 5 trials, RR, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.30-0.45, n = 3,515). Prophylactic antibiotics did not reduce the risk.

No intervention reduced all-cause mortality.

“Our findings should be interpreted with caution, Dr. McQuilten said, “because of the low number of patients, high risk of bias in the included studies, and lack of contemporary data applicable to the current standard of care for such patients.”

The lack of useful data is surprising, she said, especially considering “how commonly these interventions are used in current clinical practice and the cost and supply constraints for immunoglobulin. Given the variation in international guidelines, rising global demand and cost of immunoglobulin, and concerns regarding antimicrobial resistance, more evidence is needed to inform infection prevention strategies for this patient population.”

More data is expected soon. One ongoing study is examining intravenous immunoglobulin versus placebo in patients with CLL. It’s expected to be completed in September 2023.

What should clinicians do for now? “Given the lack of a proven survival benefit in favor of prophylactic immunoglobulin replacement, one strategy is to maximize use of vaccination and to educate both patients and clinicians regarding the need for early treatment of infections,” Dr. Weinkove said. “For people who have recurrent or severe infections despite these measures, both immunoglobulin replacement and prophylactic antibiotics are clinical options. It would be reasonable to take account of patient preference, logistical considerations, and reimbursement and availability in deciding between these options.”

He added that, “for people with severe hypogammaglobulinemia who experience recurrent or severe infections despite prophylactic antibiotics, switching to immunoglobulin replacement would be appropriate. We advocate enrollment in clinical trials, if possible.”

In an interview, Juthaporn Cowan, MD, PhD, an infectious disease physician with the University of Ottawa, said many patients with B-cell lymphomas develop acquired hypogammaglobulinemia. “Patients tend to get prolonged colds, frequent sinusitis, bronchitis, or pneumonia. Some can end up with severe infection. Many patients told me that, even though their cancer is cured or in remission, quality of life is still quite poor due to these infections and fatigue.”

Dr. Cowan said the new report is somewhat useful, although “concluding that vaccination reduces infection is misleading. Vaccination reduces the infection that patients were vaccinated against. Patients who received Shingrix will have less shingles but will continue to have bronchitis and other infections.”

As for advice for clinicians, she said preventing acquired hypogammaglobulinemia is difficult since it can be caused by the malignancies, by treatment, or both. “The other item to consider is that we do not know how long we should continue [immunoglobulin] treatment in these patients. I have a patient post CAR [chimeric antigen receptor] T therapy who still does not have B-cell 5-6 years after CAR T, while I have lymphoma patients who could safely discontinue [immunoglobulin] treatment in a few years.”

Dr. Cowan added that patients on immunoglobulin treatment can still get opportunistic infections from cytomegalovirus or herpes simplex virus “because the mechanism of host defense against these infections is different. Antimicrobial prophylaxis should still be considered as vaccination is not available for every single potential opportunistic infection.”

Australia funded the research through the National Blood Authority. Dr. McQuilten and Dr. Weinkove reported no disclosures. Other report authors disclosed ties with Aegros, CSL Behring, Janssen, AbbVie, and BeiGene. Monash University has received funding for unrelated projects from CSL Behring. Dr. Cowan reports honoraria from Takeda, CSL Behring, Octapharma, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, and AstraZeneca.

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Cases of acquired hypogammaglobulinemia are expected to rise, as patients live longer with such B-cell malignancies as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and multiple myeloma. But there’s a striking shortage of research into the best prophylactic approaches to prevent infections, a new systematic review and meta-analysis showed.

Researchers found just 22 randomized controlled studies into prophylactic strategies, with several of them conducted prior to 2000. According to the report, published in Blood Advances, the studies together only evaluated a few thousand participants.

Reliable findings are so sparse that study coauthor Zoe McQuilten, MBBS, PhD, MD, a hematologist at Monash University, Melbourne, said “we simply don’t know” which preventive strategy is most effective. This is especially worrisome because more patients will survive their cancers and “be at risk of infection or have significant cytopenias and will experience impaired quality of life as a result,” she said in an interview.

The study authors launched the analysis to better understand the evidence regarding infection prevention and to guide the development of clinical trials, study coauthor Robert Weinkove, MBBS, PhD, a hematologist at Malaghan Institute of Medical Research, Wellington, New Zealand, said in an interview.

As he explained, targeted therapies have revolutionized the treatment of some B-cell cancers. They also have boosted the number of patients who survive the diseases yet still have profound hypogammaglobulinemia.

“Indeed, we may soon reach the point at which infection, and not tumor progression, is the leading cause of death for patients with certain B-cell cancers,” he said. “The evidence base for managing hypogammaglobulinemia is largely based on randomized trials of immunoglobulin replacement conducted in the 1980s and early 1990s, before the advent of B cell–targeted therapies. Immunoglobulin replacement is a costly intervention, and many countries are facing a shortage of immunoglobulin.”

The report authors identified 22 total randomized controlled trials, including one led by Dr. McQuilten: 8 studies into prophylactic immunoglobulin (n = 370; all but 1 study published prior to 2000), 5 into prophylactic antibiotics (n = 1,587), 7 into vaccination (n = 3,996), and 1 comparing immunoglobulin versus antibiotics (n = 60).

No evidence was found to support a lowering of risk by prophylactic antibiotics, although they caused adverse events.

Prophylactic immunoglobulin also caused adverse events, but a meta-analysis found that it reduced the risk of clinically documented infection by 28% (n = 2 trials; relative risk, 0.72; 95% confidence interval, 0.54-0.96). Three trials reported adverse events and found a higher risk overall (RR, 2.23; 95% CI, 1.67-2.99).

Varicella zoster virus vaccination reduced the risk of one or more infections by 63% (n = 5 trials, RR, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.30-0.45, n = 3,515). Prophylactic antibiotics did not reduce the risk.

No intervention reduced all-cause mortality.

“Our findings should be interpreted with caution, Dr. McQuilten said, “because of the low number of patients, high risk of bias in the included studies, and lack of contemporary data applicable to the current standard of care for such patients.”

The lack of useful data is surprising, she said, especially considering “how commonly these interventions are used in current clinical practice and the cost and supply constraints for immunoglobulin. Given the variation in international guidelines, rising global demand and cost of immunoglobulin, and concerns regarding antimicrobial resistance, more evidence is needed to inform infection prevention strategies for this patient population.”

More data is expected soon. One ongoing study is examining intravenous immunoglobulin versus placebo in patients with CLL. It’s expected to be completed in September 2023.

What should clinicians do for now? “Given the lack of a proven survival benefit in favor of prophylactic immunoglobulin replacement, one strategy is to maximize use of vaccination and to educate both patients and clinicians regarding the need for early treatment of infections,” Dr. Weinkove said. “For people who have recurrent or severe infections despite these measures, both immunoglobulin replacement and prophylactic antibiotics are clinical options. It would be reasonable to take account of patient preference, logistical considerations, and reimbursement and availability in deciding between these options.”

He added that, “for people with severe hypogammaglobulinemia who experience recurrent or severe infections despite prophylactic antibiotics, switching to immunoglobulin replacement would be appropriate. We advocate enrollment in clinical trials, if possible.”

In an interview, Juthaporn Cowan, MD, PhD, an infectious disease physician with the University of Ottawa, said many patients with B-cell lymphomas develop acquired hypogammaglobulinemia. “Patients tend to get prolonged colds, frequent sinusitis, bronchitis, or pneumonia. Some can end up with severe infection. Many patients told me that, even though their cancer is cured or in remission, quality of life is still quite poor due to these infections and fatigue.”

Dr. Cowan said the new report is somewhat useful, although “concluding that vaccination reduces infection is misleading. Vaccination reduces the infection that patients were vaccinated against. Patients who received Shingrix will have less shingles but will continue to have bronchitis and other infections.”

As for advice for clinicians, she said preventing acquired hypogammaglobulinemia is difficult since it can be caused by the malignancies, by treatment, or both. “The other item to consider is that we do not know how long we should continue [immunoglobulin] treatment in these patients. I have a patient post CAR [chimeric antigen receptor] T therapy who still does not have B-cell 5-6 years after CAR T, while I have lymphoma patients who could safely discontinue [immunoglobulin] treatment in a few years.”

Dr. Cowan added that patients on immunoglobulin treatment can still get opportunistic infections from cytomegalovirus or herpes simplex virus “because the mechanism of host defense against these infections is different. Antimicrobial prophylaxis should still be considered as vaccination is not available for every single potential opportunistic infection.”

Australia funded the research through the National Blood Authority. Dr. McQuilten and Dr. Weinkove reported no disclosures. Other report authors disclosed ties with Aegros, CSL Behring, Janssen, AbbVie, and BeiGene. Monash University has received funding for unrelated projects from CSL Behring. Dr. Cowan reports honoraria from Takeda, CSL Behring, Octapharma, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, and AstraZeneca.

 

Cases of acquired hypogammaglobulinemia are expected to rise, as patients live longer with such B-cell malignancies as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and multiple myeloma. But there’s a striking shortage of research into the best prophylactic approaches to prevent infections, a new systematic review and meta-analysis showed.

Researchers found just 22 randomized controlled studies into prophylactic strategies, with several of them conducted prior to 2000. According to the report, published in Blood Advances, the studies together only evaluated a few thousand participants.

Reliable findings are so sparse that study coauthor Zoe McQuilten, MBBS, PhD, MD, a hematologist at Monash University, Melbourne, said “we simply don’t know” which preventive strategy is most effective. This is especially worrisome because more patients will survive their cancers and “be at risk of infection or have significant cytopenias and will experience impaired quality of life as a result,” she said in an interview.

The study authors launched the analysis to better understand the evidence regarding infection prevention and to guide the development of clinical trials, study coauthor Robert Weinkove, MBBS, PhD, a hematologist at Malaghan Institute of Medical Research, Wellington, New Zealand, said in an interview.

As he explained, targeted therapies have revolutionized the treatment of some B-cell cancers. They also have boosted the number of patients who survive the diseases yet still have profound hypogammaglobulinemia.

“Indeed, we may soon reach the point at which infection, and not tumor progression, is the leading cause of death for patients with certain B-cell cancers,” he said. “The evidence base for managing hypogammaglobulinemia is largely based on randomized trials of immunoglobulin replacement conducted in the 1980s and early 1990s, before the advent of B cell–targeted therapies. Immunoglobulin replacement is a costly intervention, and many countries are facing a shortage of immunoglobulin.”

The report authors identified 22 total randomized controlled trials, including one led by Dr. McQuilten: 8 studies into prophylactic immunoglobulin (n = 370; all but 1 study published prior to 2000), 5 into prophylactic antibiotics (n = 1,587), 7 into vaccination (n = 3,996), and 1 comparing immunoglobulin versus antibiotics (n = 60).

No evidence was found to support a lowering of risk by prophylactic antibiotics, although they caused adverse events.

Prophylactic immunoglobulin also caused adverse events, but a meta-analysis found that it reduced the risk of clinically documented infection by 28% (n = 2 trials; relative risk, 0.72; 95% confidence interval, 0.54-0.96). Three trials reported adverse events and found a higher risk overall (RR, 2.23; 95% CI, 1.67-2.99).

Varicella zoster virus vaccination reduced the risk of one or more infections by 63% (n = 5 trials, RR, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.30-0.45, n = 3,515). Prophylactic antibiotics did not reduce the risk.

No intervention reduced all-cause mortality.

“Our findings should be interpreted with caution, Dr. McQuilten said, “because of the low number of patients, high risk of bias in the included studies, and lack of contemporary data applicable to the current standard of care for such patients.”

The lack of useful data is surprising, she said, especially considering “how commonly these interventions are used in current clinical practice and the cost and supply constraints for immunoglobulin. Given the variation in international guidelines, rising global demand and cost of immunoglobulin, and concerns regarding antimicrobial resistance, more evidence is needed to inform infection prevention strategies for this patient population.”

More data is expected soon. One ongoing study is examining intravenous immunoglobulin versus placebo in patients with CLL. It’s expected to be completed in September 2023.

What should clinicians do for now? “Given the lack of a proven survival benefit in favor of prophylactic immunoglobulin replacement, one strategy is to maximize use of vaccination and to educate both patients and clinicians regarding the need for early treatment of infections,” Dr. Weinkove said. “For people who have recurrent or severe infections despite these measures, both immunoglobulin replacement and prophylactic antibiotics are clinical options. It would be reasonable to take account of patient preference, logistical considerations, and reimbursement and availability in deciding between these options.”

He added that, “for people with severe hypogammaglobulinemia who experience recurrent or severe infections despite prophylactic antibiotics, switching to immunoglobulin replacement would be appropriate. We advocate enrollment in clinical trials, if possible.”

In an interview, Juthaporn Cowan, MD, PhD, an infectious disease physician with the University of Ottawa, said many patients with B-cell lymphomas develop acquired hypogammaglobulinemia. “Patients tend to get prolonged colds, frequent sinusitis, bronchitis, or pneumonia. Some can end up with severe infection. Many patients told me that, even though their cancer is cured or in remission, quality of life is still quite poor due to these infections and fatigue.”

Dr. Cowan said the new report is somewhat useful, although “concluding that vaccination reduces infection is misleading. Vaccination reduces the infection that patients were vaccinated against. Patients who received Shingrix will have less shingles but will continue to have bronchitis and other infections.”

As for advice for clinicians, she said preventing acquired hypogammaglobulinemia is difficult since it can be caused by the malignancies, by treatment, or both. “The other item to consider is that we do not know how long we should continue [immunoglobulin] treatment in these patients. I have a patient post CAR [chimeric antigen receptor] T therapy who still does not have B-cell 5-6 years after CAR T, while I have lymphoma patients who could safely discontinue [immunoglobulin] treatment in a few years.”

Dr. Cowan added that patients on immunoglobulin treatment can still get opportunistic infections from cytomegalovirus or herpes simplex virus “because the mechanism of host defense against these infections is different. Antimicrobial prophylaxis should still be considered as vaccination is not available for every single potential opportunistic infection.”

Australia funded the research through the National Blood Authority. Dr. McQuilten and Dr. Weinkove reported no disclosures. Other report authors disclosed ties with Aegros, CSL Behring, Janssen, AbbVie, and BeiGene. Monash University has received funding for unrelated projects from CSL Behring. Dr. Cowan reports honoraria from Takeda, CSL Behring, Octapharma, GlaxoSmithKline, Merck, and AstraZeneca.

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CLL and surgery are more compatible than ever

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As various surgical procedures become more feasible for patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), a team of hematologist-oncologists and cardiologists published a new report advising colleagues to carefully consider the risks and benefits of such operations.

In the past decade, as targeted therapies have permitted better management of CLL, a new realm of possibilities has opened up for patients with this blood cancer.

“Previously, patients may not have been candidates for elective surgeries, such as hip replacements,” said hematologist-oncologist Helen Ma, MD, of the University of Irvine (Calif.) and VA Long Beach Healthcare System. She is the lead author of the report, which appeared in the British Journal of Hematology.

“Now that targeted therapies are controlling CLL well, patients may elect to have procedures that they may not have considered if their blood counts were very low or they felt too unwell to go through such invasive surgeries,” said Dr. Ma in an interview. In fact, the study authors noted that, “with currently available treatments, many patients with CLL are living considerably longer than the 1-year life expectancy threshold that proceduralists require.”

But extra surgical risks persist. “Both CLL and its treatment can increase the risk of complications during and after procedures, though available data are not consistently stratified by stage and whether patients are undergoing treatment,” the report authors noted.

Research has linked CLL to higher rates of blood transfusions in cardiac surgeries: One study, conducted partially in the era of targeted therapy, found that 87% of these surgery patients with CLL needed blood products vs. 65% of those who didn’t have CLL (P = .01). Studies didn’t find any extra risk of infections in patients with CLL, however, and there are conflicting findings about whether hospital mortality is higher.

Another study, also conducted partially in the era of targeted therapy, found that patients with CLL who had percutaneous coronary intervention procedures “developed higher rates of in-hospital mortality, any complication, bleeding and postoperative stroke compared to those seen in patients without leukemia.”

The authors of the new report noted that “patients with more advanced stage are at increased risk of bleeding and thromboembolic events relevant to their disease and invasive procedures.” Patients at more than minimal risk should undergo electrocardiograms prior to cardiac procedures, they wrote. Stress tests, coronary angiography, and percutaneous coronary intervention may also be warranted.

“To optimize evaluation and perioperative management, we strongly recommend the prospective collaborative inclusion of a multidisciplinary team including hematologists/oncologists, cardiologists (ideally cardio-oncologists), surgeons and anesthetists, as well as their ongoing involvement during the postoperative period,” the authors wrote.

As for medications, the researchers said that “generally, antibody therapy has no impact on surgery.” They added, “There is no evidence to hold treatment with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies prior to procedures unless the patient has cytopenias that may be a contra-indication. If that is the case, we recommend holding until counts recover to the parameters required for the procedure.”

In regard to Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as ibrutinib, “patients undergoing major surgeries with high risk of bleeding should hold Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors for a week prior to surgery to ensure adequate platelet function recovery given the disruption between collagen and platelet aggregation. Medications can be resumed 3-7 days after achieving postoperative hemostasis, depending on the type of surgery and risk of bleeding.”

As for venetoclax, “prior to surgery, patients should receive granulocyte colony-stimulating factor for neutropenia, blood transfusions for anemia, and platelet transfusions for thrombocytopenia to maintain procedural parameters.”

In the big picture, study lead author Dr. Ma said, “patients with CLL are doing well on continuous targeted treatments, and if there are otherwise no contraindications, they should be considered for procedures to improve their quality of life.”

In an interview, Stanford (Calif.) University surgeon Joe Forrester MD, MSc, who’s familiar with the report findings, said its conclusions are valid. “The nice thing is that a lot of the [CLL] therapies don’t have a lot of surgical side effects. Most should not preclude a patient from going to surgery.”

He advised colleagues to make sure to be open with patients about the heightened surgical risks due to CLL, such when they need emergency procedures. And it’s important to be realistic about whether patients will live long enough to benefit from the rare surgeries – such as weight-loss procedures – that won’t show major benefits for 5-10 years, he said.

The Lymphoma Research Foundation supported the study. Dr. Ma, several coauthors, and Dr. Forrester report no disclosures. One coauthor reports multiple relationships with industry.

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As various surgical procedures become more feasible for patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), a team of hematologist-oncologists and cardiologists published a new report advising colleagues to carefully consider the risks and benefits of such operations.

In the past decade, as targeted therapies have permitted better management of CLL, a new realm of possibilities has opened up for patients with this blood cancer.

“Previously, patients may not have been candidates for elective surgeries, such as hip replacements,” said hematologist-oncologist Helen Ma, MD, of the University of Irvine (Calif.) and VA Long Beach Healthcare System. She is the lead author of the report, which appeared in the British Journal of Hematology.

“Now that targeted therapies are controlling CLL well, patients may elect to have procedures that they may not have considered if their blood counts were very low or they felt too unwell to go through such invasive surgeries,” said Dr. Ma in an interview. In fact, the study authors noted that, “with currently available treatments, many patients with CLL are living considerably longer than the 1-year life expectancy threshold that proceduralists require.”

But extra surgical risks persist. “Both CLL and its treatment can increase the risk of complications during and after procedures, though available data are not consistently stratified by stage and whether patients are undergoing treatment,” the report authors noted.

Research has linked CLL to higher rates of blood transfusions in cardiac surgeries: One study, conducted partially in the era of targeted therapy, found that 87% of these surgery patients with CLL needed blood products vs. 65% of those who didn’t have CLL (P = .01). Studies didn’t find any extra risk of infections in patients with CLL, however, and there are conflicting findings about whether hospital mortality is higher.

Another study, also conducted partially in the era of targeted therapy, found that patients with CLL who had percutaneous coronary intervention procedures “developed higher rates of in-hospital mortality, any complication, bleeding and postoperative stroke compared to those seen in patients without leukemia.”

The authors of the new report noted that “patients with more advanced stage are at increased risk of bleeding and thromboembolic events relevant to their disease and invasive procedures.” Patients at more than minimal risk should undergo electrocardiograms prior to cardiac procedures, they wrote. Stress tests, coronary angiography, and percutaneous coronary intervention may also be warranted.

“To optimize evaluation and perioperative management, we strongly recommend the prospective collaborative inclusion of a multidisciplinary team including hematologists/oncologists, cardiologists (ideally cardio-oncologists), surgeons and anesthetists, as well as their ongoing involvement during the postoperative period,” the authors wrote.

As for medications, the researchers said that “generally, antibody therapy has no impact on surgery.” They added, “There is no evidence to hold treatment with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies prior to procedures unless the patient has cytopenias that may be a contra-indication. If that is the case, we recommend holding until counts recover to the parameters required for the procedure.”

In regard to Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as ibrutinib, “patients undergoing major surgeries with high risk of bleeding should hold Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors for a week prior to surgery to ensure adequate platelet function recovery given the disruption between collagen and platelet aggregation. Medications can be resumed 3-7 days after achieving postoperative hemostasis, depending on the type of surgery and risk of bleeding.”

As for venetoclax, “prior to surgery, patients should receive granulocyte colony-stimulating factor for neutropenia, blood transfusions for anemia, and platelet transfusions for thrombocytopenia to maintain procedural parameters.”

In the big picture, study lead author Dr. Ma said, “patients with CLL are doing well on continuous targeted treatments, and if there are otherwise no contraindications, they should be considered for procedures to improve their quality of life.”

In an interview, Stanford (Calif.) University surgeon Joe Forrester MD, MSc, who’s familiar with the report findings, said its conclusions are valid. “The nice thing is that a lot of the [CLL] therapies don’t have a lot of surgical side effects. Most should not preclude a patient from going to surgery.”

He advised colleagues to make sure to be open with patients about the heightened surgical risks due to CLL, such when they need emergency procedures. And it’s important to be realistic about whether patients will live long enough to benefit from the rare surgeries – such as weight-loss procedures – that won’t show major benefits for 5-10 years, he said.

The Lymphoma Research Foundation supported the study. Dr. Ma, several coauthors, and Dr. Forrester report no disclosures. One coauthor reports multiple relationships with industry.

 

As various surgical procedures become more feasible for patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), a team of hematologist-oncologists and cardiologists published a new report advising colleagues to carefully consider the risks and benefits of such operations.

In the past decade, as targeted therapies have permitted better management of CLL, a new realm of possibilities has opened up for patients with this blood cancer.

“Previously, patients may not have been candidates for elective surgeries, such as hip replacements,” said hematologist-oncologist Helen Ma, MD, of the University of Irvine (Calif.) and VA Long Beach Healthcare System. She is the lead author of the report, which appeared in the British Journal of Hematology.

“Now that targeted therapies are controlling CLL well, patients may elect to have procedures that they may not have considered if their blood counts were very low or they felt too unwell to go through such invasive surgeries,” said Dr. Ma in an interview. In fact, the study authors noted that, “with currently available treatments, many patients with CLL are living considerably longer than the 1-year life expectancy threshold that proceduralists require.”

But extra surgical risks persist. “Both CLL and its treatment can increase the risk of complications during and after procedures, though available data are not consistently stratified by stage and whether patients are undergoing treatment,” the report authors noted.

Research has linked CLL to higher rates of blood transfusions in cardiac surgeries: One study, conducted partially in the era of targeted therapy, found that 87% of these surgery patients with CLL needed blood products vs. 65% of those who didn’t have CLL (P = .01). Studies didn’t find any extra risk of infections in patients with CLL, however, and there are conflicting findings about whether hospital mortality is higher.

Another study, also conducted partially in the era of targeted therapy, found that patients with CLL who had percutaneous coronary intervention procedures “developed higher rates of in-hospital mortality, any complication, bleeding and postoperative stroke compared to those seen in patients without leukemia.”

The authors of the new report noted that “patients with more advanced stage are at increased risk of bleeding and thromboembolic events relevant to their disease and invasive procedures.” Patients at more than minimal risk should undergo electrocardiograms prior to cardiac procedures, they wrote. Stress tests, coronary angiography, and percutaneous coronary intervention may also be warranted.

“To optimize evaluation and perioperative management, we strongly recommend the prospective collaborative inclusion of a multidisciplinary team including hematologists/oncologists, cardiologists (ideally cardio-oncologists), surgeons and anesthetists, as well as their ongoing involvement during the postoperative period,” the authors wrote.

As for medications, the researchers said that “generally, antibody therapy has no impact on surgery.” They added, “There is no evidence to hold treatment with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies prior to procedures unless the patient has cytopenias that may be a contra-indication. If that is the case, we recommend holding until counts recover to the parameters required for the procedure.”

In regard to Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors such as ibrutinib, “patients undergoing major surgeries with high risk of bleeding should hold Bruton’s tyrosine kinase inhibitors for a week prior to surgery to ensure adequate platelet function recovery given the disruption between collagen and platelet aggregation. Medications can be resumed 3-7 days after achieving postoperative hemostasis, depending on the type of surgery and risk of bleeding.”

As for venetoclax, “prior to surgery, patients should receive granulocyte colony-stimulating factor for neutropenia, blood transfusions for anemia, and platelet transfusions for thrombocytopenia to maintain procedural parameters.”

In the big picture, study lead author Dr. Ma said, “patients with CLL are doing well on continuous targeted treatments, and if there are otherwise no contraindications, they should be considered for procedures to improve their quality of life.”

In an interview, Stanford (Calif.) University surgeon Joe Forrester MD, MSc, who’s familiar with the report findings, said its conclusions are valid. “The nice thing is that a lot of the [CLL] therapies don’t have a lot of surgical side effects. Most should not preclude a patient from going to surgery.”

He advised colleagues to make sure to be open with patients about the heightened surgical risks due to CLL, such when they need emergency procedures. And it’s important to be realistic about whether patients will live long enough to benefit from the rare surgeries – such as weight-loss procedures – that won’t show major benefits for 5-10 years, he said.

The Lymphoma Research Foundation supported the study. Dr. Ma, several coauthors, and Dr. Forrester report no disclosures. One coauthor reports multiple relationships with industry.

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FROM THE BRITISH JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY

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CLL treatment: More infections among real-world patients

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A new real-world analysis finds that severe infection rates were higher than in clinical trials in 67 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or B-cell lymphoma who took ibrutinib (Imbruvica), idelalisib (Zydelig), or venetoclax (Venclexta).

For example, “the rate of severe infection for ibrutinib in clinical trials ranged from 12.8% to 45% with median follow-up ranging from 27 to 65 months. In our study, the rate of severe infection was 45.3% within a shorter median follow-up period of 23.3 months,” said study lead author Amanda Tey, MPharm, a hematology pharmacist with Monash Health in Clayton, Australia, in an interview.

The results suggest that “real-world severe infection risk is higher than previously appreciated,” said Ms. Tey, whose findings were published in the European Journal of Hematology. “Poor performance status and a high comorbidity burden further increase this risk.”

According to the study, there are limited data about real-world infection rates for patients with CLL or B-cell lymphoma who take the three drugs.

Both the underlying blood cancer and the drugs themselves may disrupt the immune system in these patients, Ms. Tey noted. “Ibrutinib inhibits interleukin-2-inducible T-cell kinase, which has a role in T-cell maturation. Idelalisib reduces regulatory T-cell activity and natural killer cell and neutrophil inflammatory responses. Venetoclax is associated with a high rate of neutropenia.”

For the new retrospective, single-center study, researchers tracked adult patients who’d received the drugs from 2014 to 2021 in a hospital network serving 1.5 million people in the Australian state of Victoria. The primary outcome was severe infection of grade 3 or higher. Patients were excluded for such factors as having been primarily treated at other facilities, receiving less than 30 days of treatment, or having been treated for other indications such as primary central nervous system lymphoma.

Of the 67 patients in the study, the numbers taking the drugs were 53 (ibrutinib), 8 (idelalisib), and 6 (venetoclax). Eleven patients took more than one drug. Median age was 73 years, and 73% of patients were male.

Patients spent a median 23.3, 4.8, and 3.5 months taking ibrutinib, idelalisib, and venetoclax, respectively, before treatment stopped or data were collected. Patients were commonly prescribed antimicrobials to prevent pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia and herpes simplex virus (HSV)/varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection.

Researchers found that 48% of the patients had at least one serious infection: 45% of those on ibrutinib, 63% of those on idelalisib, and 50% of those on venetoclax. Seven patients died of infections.

In comparison, the researchers reported, a systematic review of idelalisib in blood cancer clinical trials reported an overall infection rate of 28%, while clinical trials reported an infection rate of 17.5%-22% in patients taking venetoclax for CLL.

Poor performance status and higher levels of comorbidity were linked to higher risk of infection, and infections occurred at a median of 5.4 months.

Lead author Ms. Tey highlighted the fact that most of the patients in the new study had relapsed/refractory disease. The infection risk in the real-world first-line setting is unknown, she said. “Furthermore, due to the size of our study and high uptake of antimicrobial prophylaxis, the optimal prophylaxis strategy for these patients remains unclear.”

In an interview, infectious disease physician Gemma Reynolds, MChD, MPH, of Austin Health and Peter MacCallum Cancer Center in Melbourne, said the study findings reflect “a lot of what we know from other observational studies and clinical practice. There is a risk of infection, and serious infection, associated with these agents. Sometimes the pathogen is classically opportunistic, but often it is bacterial, and respiratory sites are common. Infections often occur early into a course of therapy.”

Dr. Reynolds, who didn’t take part in the study, urged colleagues to cast a wide net if a patient appears to have an infection but doesn’t respond to conventional therapies such as antibiotics. “Unusual infections are possible,” she said, and aggressive early workups may be advisable via blood cultures, viral swabs, sputum culture, early imaging, bronchoscopy, and preemptive monitoring in patients with a prior infection history with a disease such as CMV.

Alessandra Ferrajoli, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center who also didn’t take part in the study, agreed in an interview that the findings reflect those found in other reports. “It should be highlighted that the population studied is at particular high risk for infections given the high proportion of patients with recurrent disease (85%), many patients with concurrent hypogammaglobulinemia (64%), and the patient median age of 73 years and a high comorbidities burden,” she said. “In my view, this explains the higher rate of infections reported in this study, when compared to other case series.”

Dr. Ferrajoli added that there’s no standard antimicrobial prophylaxis for patients with B-cell malignancies receiving targeted therapies. “Anti-HSV/VZV prophylaxis is commonly implemented. Additional antiviral, antimicrobial, and antifungal prophylaxis should be used based on patients’ absolute neutrophil and T-cell count and individual risk factors, including prior history of infections such as CMV, prior splenectomy, and history of invasive fungal infections.”

The study was funded by Monash Health, the National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia), and the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia. Ms. Tey reported no disclosures. Some of the study authors reported multiple disclosures. Dr. Reynolds discloses a PhD scholarship from the National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr. Ferrajoli reported no disclosures.

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A new real-world analysis finds that severe infection rates were higher than in clinical trials in 67 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or B-cell lymphoma who took ibrutinib (Imbruvica), idelalisib (Zydelig), or venetoclax (Venclexta).

For example, “the rate of severe infection for ibrutinib in clinical trials ranged from 12.8% to 45% with median follow-up ranging from 27 to 65 months. In our study, the rate of severe infection was 45.3% within a shorter median follow-up period of 23.3 months,” said study lead author Amanda Tey, MPharm, a hematology pharmacist with Monash Health in Clayton, Australia, in an interview.

The results suggest that “real-world severe infection risk is higher than previously appreciated,” said Ms. Tey, whose findings were published in the European Journal of Hematology. “Poor performance status and a high comorbidity burden further increase this risk.”

According to the study, there are limited data about real-world infection rates for patients with CLL or B-cell lymphoma who take the three drugs.

Both the underlying blood cancer and the drugs themselves may disrupt the immune system in these patients, Ms. Tey noted. “Ibrutinib inhibits interleukin-2-inducible T-cell kinase, which has a role in T-cell maturation. Idelalisib reduces regulatory T-cell activity and natural killer cell and neutrophil inflammatory responses. Venetoclax is associated with a high rate of neutropenia.”

For the new retrospective, single-center study, researchers tracked adult patients who’d received the drugs from 2014 to 2021 in a hospital network serving 1.5 million people in the Australian state of Victoria. The primary outcome was severe infection of grade 3 or higher. Patients were excluded for such factors as having been primarily treated at other facilities, receiving less than 30 days of treatment, or having been treated for other indications such as primary central nervous system lymphoma.

Of the 67 patients in the study, the numbers taking the drugs were 53 (ibrutinib), 8 (idelalisib), and 6 (venetoclax). Eleven patients took more than one drug. Median age was 73 years, and 73% of patients were male.

Patients spent a median 23.3, 4.8, and 3.5 months taking ibrutinib, idelalisib, and venetoclax, respectively, before treatment stopped or data were collected. Patients were commonly prescribed antimicrobials to prevent pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia and herpes simplex virus (HSV)/varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection.

Researchers found that 48% of the patients had at least one serious infection: 45% of those on ibrutinib, 63% of those on idelalisib, and 50% of those on venetoclax. Seven patients died of infections.

In comparison, the researchers reported, a systematic review of idelalisib in blood cancer clinical trials reported an overall infection rate of 28%, while clinical trials reported an infection rate of 17.5%-22% in patients taking venetoclax for CLL.

Poor performance status and higher levels of comorbidity were linked to higher risk of infection, and infections occurred at a median of 5.4 months.

Lead author Ms. Tey highlighted the fact that most of the patients in the new study had relapsed/refractory disease. The infection risk in the real-world first-line setting is unknown, she said. “Furthermore, due to the size of our study and high uptake of antimicrobial prophylaxis, the optimal prophylaxis strategy for these patients remains unclear.”

In an interview, infectious disease physician Gemma Reynolds, MChD, MPH, of Austin Health and Peter MacCallum Cancer Center in Melbourne, said the study findings reflect “a lot of what we know from other observational studies and clinical practice. There is a risk of infection, and serious infection, associated with these agents. Sometimes the pathogen is classically opportunistic, but often it is bacterial, and respiratory sites are common. Infections often occur early into a course of therapy.”

Dr. Reynolds, who didn’t take part in the study, urged colleagues to cast a wide net if a patient appears to have an infection but doesn’t respond to conventional therapies such as antibiotics. “Unusual infections are possible,” she said, and aggressive early workups may be advisable via blood cultures, viral swabs, sputum culture, early imaging, bronchoscopy, and preemptive monitoring in patients with a prior infection history with a disease such as CMV.

Alessandra Ferrajoli, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center who also didn’t take part in the study, agreed in an interview that the findings reflect those found in other reports. “It should be highlighted that the population studied is at particular high risk for infections given the high proportion of patients with recurrent disease (85%), many patients with concurrent hypogammaglobulinemia (64%), and the patient median age of 73 years and a high comorbidities burden,” she said. “In my view, this explains the higher rate of infections reported in this study, when compared to other case series.”

Dr. Ferrajoli added that there’s no standard antimicrobial prophylaxis for patients with B-cell malignancies receiving targeted therapies. “Anti-HSV/VZV prophylaxis is commonly implemented. Additional antiviral, antimicrobial, and antifungal prophylaxis should be used based on patients’ absolute neutrophil and T-cell count and individual risk factors, including prior history of infections such as CMV, prior splenectomy, and history of invasive fungal infections.”

The study was funded by Monash Health, the National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia), and the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia. Ms. Tey reported no disclosures. Some of the study authors reported multiple disclosures. Dr. Reynolds discloses a PhD scholarship from the National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr. Ferrajoli reported no disclosures.

 

A new real-world analysis finds that severe infection rates were higher than in clinical trials in 67 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or B-cell lymphoma who took ibrutinib (Imbruvica), idelalisib (Zydelig), or venetoclax (Venclexta).

For example, “the rate of severe infection for ibrutinib in clinical trials ranged from 12.8% to 45% with median follow-up ranging from 27 to 65 months. In our study, the rate of severe infection was 45.3% within a shorter median follow-up period of 23.3 months,” said study lead author Amanda Tey, MPharm, a hematology pharmacist with Monash Health in Clayton, Australia, in an interview.

The results suggest that “real-world severe infection risk is higher than previously appreciated,” said Ms. Tey, whose findings were published in the European Journal of Hematology. “Poor performance status and a high comorbidity burden further increase this risk.”

According to the study, there are limited data about real-world infection rates for patients with CLL or B-cell lymphoma who take the three drugs.

Both the underlying blood cancer and the drugs themselves may disrupt the immune system in these patients, Ms. Tey noted. “Ibrutinib inhibits interleukin-2-inducible T-cell kinase, which has a role in T-cell maturation. Idelalisib reduces regulatory T-cell activity and natural killer cell and neutrophil inflammatory responses. Venetoclax is associated with a high rate of neutropenia.”

For the new retrospective, single-center study, researchers tracked adult patients who’d received the drugs from 2014 to 2021 in a hospital network serving 1.5 million people in the Australian state of Victoria. The primary outcome was severe infection of grade 3 or higher. Patients were excluded for such factors as having been primarily treated at other facilities, receiving less than 30 days of treatment, or having been treated for other indications such as primary central nervous system lymphoma.

Of the 67 patients in the study, the numbers taking the drugs were 53 (ibrutinib), 8 (idelalisib), and 6 (venetoclax). Eleven patients took more than one drug. Median age was 73 years, and 73% of patients were male.

Patients spent a median 23.3, 4.8, and 3.5 months taking ibrutinib, idelalisib, and venetoclax, respectively, before treatment stopped or data were collected. Patients were commonly prescribed antimicrobials to prevent pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia and herpes simplex virus (HSV)/varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection.

Researchers found that 48% of the patients had at least one serious infection: 45% of those on ibrutinib, 63% of those on idelalisib, and 50% of those on venetoclax. Seven patients died of infections.

In comparison, the researchers reported, a systematic review of idelalisib in blood cancer clinical trials reported an overall infection rate of 28%, while clinical trials reported an infection rate of 17.5%-22% in patients taking venetoclax for CLL.

Poor performance status and higher levels of comorbidity were linked to higher risk of infection, and infections occurred at a median of 5.4 months.

Lead author Ms. Tey highlighted the fact that most of the patients in the new study had relapsed/refractory disease. The infection risk in the real-world first-line setting is unknown, she said. “Furthermore, due to the size of our study and high uptake of antimicrobial prophylaxis, the optimal prophylaxis strategy for these patients remains unclear.”

In an interview, infectious disease physician Gemma Reynolds, MChD, MPH, of Austin Health and Peter MacCallum Cancer Center in Melbourne, said the study findings reflect “a lot of what we know from other observational studies and clinical practice. There is a risk of infection, and serious infection, associated with these agents. Sometimes the pathogen is classically opportunistic, but often it is bacterial, and respiratory sites are common. Infections often occur early into a course of therapy.”

Dr. Reynolds, who didn’t take part in the study, urged colleagues to cast a wide net if a patient appears to have an infection but doesn’t respond to conventional therapies such as antibiotics. “Unusual infections are possible,” she said, and aggressive early workups may be advisable via blood cultures, viral swabs, sputum culture, early imaging, bronchoscopy, and preemptive monitoring in patients with a prior infection history with a disease such as CMV.

Alessandra Ferrajoli, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center who also didn’t take part in the study, agreed in an interview that the findings reflect those found in other reports. “It should be highlighted that the population studied is at particular high risk for infections given the high proportion of patients with recurrent disease (85%), many patients with concurrent hypogammaglobulinemia (64%), and the patient median age of 73 years and a high comorbidities burden,” she said. “In my view, this explains the higher rate of infections reported in this study, when compared to other case series.”

Dr. Ferrajoli added that there’s no standard antimicrobial prophylaxis for patients with B-cell malignancies receiving targeted therapies. “Anti-HSV/VZV prophylaxis is commonly implemented. Additional antiviral, antimicrobial, and antifungal prophylaxis should be used based on patients’ absolute neutrophil and T-cell count and individual risk factors, including prior history of infections such as CMV, prior splenectomy, and history of invasive fungal infections.”

The study was funded by Monash Health, the National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia), and the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia. Ms. Tey reported no disclosures. Some of the study authors reported multiple disclosures. Dr. Reynolds discloses a PhD scholarship from the National Health and Medical Research Council. Dr. Ferrajoli reported no disclosures.

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FROM THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY

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Maternal infection in pregnancy ups risk for childhood leukemia?

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Mon, 04/03/2023 - 13:34

Children born to mothers who had urinary or genital tract infections during pregnancy appear to have an increased risk for childhood leukemia, said researchers reporting a Danish registry analysis that may point to preventive strategies for the disease.

The research was published online in JAMA Network Open.

The team studied more than 2.2 million children born in Denmark over more than 3 decades, linking their records across multiple national registries to examine both later cancer risk and maternal infection rates.

They found that, overall, at least one maternal infection during pregnancy was associated with a 35% increased risk for leukemia in the children, rising to 65% for urinary tract infections, and 142% for genital infections.

“The findings of this large population-based cohort study suggest that maternal urinary and genital tract infections during pregnancy are associated with a higher risk of childhood leukemia in offspring,” said lead author Jian-Rong He, DPhil, division of birth cohort study, Guangzhou (China) Women and Children’s Medical Center.

However, he added, “the associated absolute risk remained small given the rarity” of the disease. In absolute terms, the risk difference between exposed and unexposed children was 1.8 cases per 100,000 person-years for any infection, 3.4 cases per 100,000 person-years for urinary traction infection, and 7.1 cases per 100,000 person-years for genital tract infection.

Maternal infections during pregnancy may be associated with chromosomal and immunologic alterations in the fetus, the authors speculated.

“Given that little is known about the etiology of childhood leukemia,” these results “suggest an important direction for research on the etiology of childhood leukemia as well as development of potential preventive measures,” they wrote.

In many countries, pregnant women are tested for urinary tract infection and bacterial vaginosis, and treated with antibiotics in antenatal care, as these infections are linked to adverse perinatal outcomes, they pointed out.
 

Study details

The team conducted a large population-based study that included all live births in Denmark between 1978 and 2015.

After exclusions, they gathered information on 2,222,797 children, linking data from several national registries, including the Danish Medical Birth Register, the Danish National Patient Registry, and the Danish National Cancer Registry, to identify cases of childhood cancers and maternal infection during pregnancy.

The results were then validated by comparing them with those in 2.6 million live births in Sweden between 1988 and 2014, for whom similar data were available through linkage with several Swedish registries.

The Danish cohort was followed up for a mean of 12 years per person, yielding a total of 27 million person-years. Just over half (51.3%) were boys.

Cancer was diagnosed in 4,362 children before 15 years of age, of whom 1,307 had leukemia (1,050 had acute lymphocytic leukemia), 1,267 had a brain tumor, 224 had lymphoma, and 1,564 had other cancers.

At least one infection during pregnancy was diagnosed in 81,717 mothers (3.7%). Urinary tract infections were the most common (in 1.7% of women), followed by genital tract infection (in 0.7%), digestive system infection (in 0.5%), and respiratory tract infection (in 0.3%).

Women with any infection during pregnancy were more likely to be younger and primiparous than were women who did not have infections, and they were also more likely to have fewer years of education, higher prepregnancy BMI, diabetes, and to smoke during early pregnancy.

Preterm delivery and low-birth-weight infants were also more common in women with infections during pregnancy.

Cox proportional hazards regression models revealed that, after adjustment for confounders, any maternal infection was associated with a hazard ratio of childhood leukemia of 1.35.

Further analysis revealed that the association was driven by genital tract infection, at a hazard ratio for childhood leukemia of 2.42, and urinary tract infection, at a hazard ratio 1.65.

Moreover, children born to women who had a sexually transmitted infection during pregnancy had a hazard ratio for developing leukemia of 3.13 compared with unexposed children.

There were no associations between other maternal infections and childhood leukemia.

The patterns of association between maternal infections and childhood leukemia were similar when looking at disease subtypes, as well as in the Swedish validation cohort, they added.

When interpreting the results, the researchers caution that, as data on maternal infection were drawn from hospital data, “milder infections and those not diagnosed or treated in specialized health care facilities were not captured.”

“Also, some infections could be captured because the mother sought care for other, more serious conditions, which might bias the association of maternal infections and childhood leukemia.”

The study was supported by grants from the China Scholarship Council–University of Oxford; National Natural Science Foundation of China; Danish Council for Independent Research; Nordic Cancer Union; Novo Nordisk Fonden; and the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research. Dr He reported receiving a PhD scholarship from the China Scholarship Council during the conduct of the study. Several other coauthors have disclosures; the full list can be found with the original article.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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Children born to mothers who had urinary or genital tract infections during pregnancy appear to have an increased risk for childhood leukemia, said researchers reporting a Danish registry analysis that may point to preventive strategies for the disease.

The research was published online in JAMA Network Open.

The team studied more than 2.2 million children born in Denmark over more than 3 decades, linking their records across multiple national registries to examine both later cancer risk and maternal infection rates.

They found that, overall, at least one maternal infection during pregnancy was associated with a 35% increased risk for leukemia in the children, rising to 65% for urinary tract infections, and 142% for genital infections.

“The findings of this large population-based cohort study suggest that maternal urinary and genital tract infections during pregnancy are associated with a higher risk of childhood leukemia in offspring,” said lead author Jian-Rong He, DPhil, division of birth cohort study, Guangzhou (China) Women and Children’s Medical Center.

However, he added, “the associated absolute risk remained small given the rarity” of the disease. In absolute terms, the risk difference between exposed and unexposed children was 1.8 cases per 100,000 person-years for any infection, 3.4 cases per 100,000 person-years for urinary traction infection, and 7.1 cases per 100,000 person-years for genital tract infection.

Maternal infections during pregnancy may be associated with chromosomal and immunologic alterations in the fetus, the authors speculated.

“Given that little is known about the etiology of childhood leukemia,” these results “suggest an important direction for research on the etiology of childhood leukemia as well as development of potential preventive measures,” they wrote.

In many countries, pregnant women are tested for urinary tract infection and bacterial vaginosis, and treated with antibiotics in antenatal care, as these infections are linked to adverse perinatal outcomes, they pointed out.
 

Study details

The team conducted a large population-based study that included all live births in Denmark between 1978 and 2015.

After exclusions, they gathered information on 2,222,797 children, linking data from several national registries, including the Danish Medical Birth Register, the Danish National Patient Registry, and the Danish National Cancer Registry, to identify cases of childhood cancers and maternal infection during pregnancy.

The results were then validated by comparing them with those in 2.6 million live births in Sweden between 1988 and 2014, for whom similar data were available through linkage with several Swedish registries.

The Danish cohort was followed up for a mean of 12 years per person, yielding a total of 27 million person-years. Just over half (51.3%) were boys.

Cancer was diagnosed in 4,362 children before 15 years of age, of whom 1,307 had leukemia (1,050 had acute lymphocytic leukemia), 1,267 had a brain tumor, 224 had lymphoma, and 1,564 had other cancers.

At least one infection during pregnancy was diagnosed in 81,717 mothers (3.7%). Urinary tract infections were the most common (in 1.7% of women), followed by genital tract infection (in 0.7%), digestive system infection (in 0.5%), and respiratory tract infection (in 0.3%).

Women with any infection during pregnancy were more likely to be younger and primiparous than were women who did not have infections, and they were also more likely to have fewer years of education, higher prepregnancy BMI, diabetes, and to smoke during early pregnancy.

Preterm delivery and low-birth-weight infants were also more common in women with infections during pregnancy.

Cox proportional hazards regression models revealed that, after adjustment for confounders, any maternal infection was associated with a hazard ratio of childhood leukemia of 1.35.

Further analysis revealed that the association was driven by genital tract infection, at a hazard ratio for childhood leukemia of 2.42, and urinary tract infection, at a hazard ratio 1.65.

Moreover, children born to women who had a sexually transmitted infection during pregnancy had a hazard ratio for developing leukemia of 3.13 compared with unexposed children.

There were no associations between other maternal infections and childhood leukemia.

The patterns of association between maternal infections and childhood leukemia were similar when looking at disease subtypes, as well as in the Swedish validation cohort, they added.

When interpreting the results, the researchers caution that, as data on maternal infection were drawn from hospital data, “milder infections and those not diagnosed or treated in specialized health care facilities were not captured.”

“Also, some infections could be captured because the mother sought care for other, more serious conditions, which might bias the association of maternal infections and childhood leukemia.”

The study was supported by grants from the China Scholarship Council–University of Oxford; National Natural Science Foundation of China; Danish Council for Independent Research; Nordic Cancer Union; Novo Nordisk Fonden; and the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research. Dr He reported receiving a PhD scholarship from the China Scholarship Council during the conduct of the study. Several other coauthors have disclosures; the full list can be found with the original article.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Children born to mothers who had urinary or genital tract infections during pregnancy appear to have an increased risk for childhood leukemia, said researchers reporting a Danish registry analysis that may point to preventive strategies for the disease.

The research was published online in JAMA Network Open.

The team studied more than 2.2 million children born in Denmark over more than 3 decades, linking their records across multiple national registries to examine both later cancer risk and maternal infection rates.

They found that, overall, at least one maternal infection during pregnancy was associated with a 35% increased risk for leukemia in the children, rising to 65% for urinary tract infections, and 142% for genital infections.

“The findings of this large population-based cohort study suggest that maternal urinary and genital tract infections during pregnancy are associated with a higher risk of childhood leukemia in offspring,” said lead author Jian-Rong He, DPhil, division of birth cohort study, Guangzhou (China) Women and Children’s Medical Center.

However, he added, “the associated absolute risk remained small given the rarity” of the disease. In absolute terms, the risk difference between exposed and unexposed children was 1.8 cases per 100,000 person-years for any infection, 3.4 cases per 100,000 person-years for urinary traction infection, and 7.1 cases per 100,000 person-years for genital tract infection.

Maternal infections during pregnancy may be associated with chromosomal and immunologic alterations in the fetus, the authors speculated.

“Given that little is known about the etiology of childhood leukemia,” these results “suggest an important direction for research on the etiology of childhood leukemia as well as development of potential preventive measures,” they wrote.

In many countries, pregnant women are tested for urinary tract infection and bacterial vaginosis, and treated with antibiotics in antenatal care, as these infections are linked to adverse perinatal outcomes, they pointed out.
 

Study details

The team conducted a large population-based study that included all live births in Denmark between 1978 and 2015.

After exclusions, they gathered information on 2,222,797 children, linking data from several national registries, including the Danish Medical Birth Register, the Danish National Patient Registry, and the Danish National Cancer Registry, to identify cases of childhood cancers and maternal infection during pregnancy.

The results were then validated by comparing them with those in 2.6 million live births in Sweden between 1988 and 2014, for whom similar data were available through linkage with several Swedish registries.

The Danish cohort was followed up for a mean of 12 years per person, yielding a total of 27 million person-years. Just over half (51.3%) were boys.

Cancer was diagnosed in 4,362 children before 15 years of age, of whom 1,307 had leukemia (1,050 had acute lymphocytic leukemia), 1,267 had a brain tumor, 224 had lymphoma, and 1,564 had other cancers.

At least one infection during pregnancy was diagnosed in 81,717 mothers (3.7%). Urinary tract infections were the most common (in 1.7% of women), followed by genital tract infection (in 0.7%), digestive system infection (in 0.5%), and respiratory tract infection (in 0.3%).

Women with any infection during pregnancy were more likely to be younger and primiparous than were women who did not have infections, and they were also more likely to have fewer years of education, higher prepregnancy BMI, diabetes, and to smoke during early pregnancy.

Preterm delivery and low-birth-weight infants were also more common in women with infections during pregnancy.

Cox proportional hazards regression models revealed that, after adjustment for confounders, any maternal infection was associated with a hazard ratio of childhood leukemia of 1.35.

Further analysis revealed that the association was driven by genital tract infection, at a hazard ratio for childhood leukemia of 2.42, and urinary tract infection, at a hazard ratio 1.65.

Moreover, children born to women who had a sexually transmitted infection during pregnancy had a hazard ratio for developing leukemia of 3.13 compared with unexposed children.

There were no associations between other maternal infections and childhood leukemia.

The patterns of association between maternal infections and childhood leukemia were similar when looking at disease subtypes, as well as in the Swedish validation cohort, they added.

When interpreting the results, the researchers caution that, as data on maternal infection were drawn from hospital data, “milder infections and those not diagnosed or treated in specialized health care facilities were not captured.”

“Also, some infections could be captured because the mother sought care for other, more serious conditions, which might bias the association of maternal infections and childhood leukemia.”

The study was supported by grants from the China Scholarship Council–University of Oxford; National Natural Science Foundation of China; Danish Council for Independent Research; Nordic Cancer Union; Novo Nordisk Fonden; and the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research. Dr He reported receiving a PhD scholarship from the China Scholarship Council during the conduct of the study. Several other coauthors have disclosures; the full list can be found with the original article.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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