Four phase 3 studies highlighted at ASCO mark progress in GI cancers

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– Findings from four recent, phase 3 gastrointestinal cancer studies mark a step forward toward “the answers we need” for patients with pancreatic, colorectal, or esophageal cancer, according to Andrew S. Epstein, MD.

In this video interview, Dr. Epstein summarizes and provides context for the findings, which were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and highlighted during a press briefing there. Dr. Epstein, an ASCO Expert and a medical oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, who was invited to discuss each of the studies at the briefing, said the UNICANCER-sponsored Prodige 7 trial addressed an important, long-unanswered question about the value of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) with surgery for colorectal peritoneal carcinomatosis.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel


“This randomized study, very importantly, answered that longstanding question and showed us in a less-is-more type of way that the addition of the chemotherapy during surgery actually did not improve the overall survival of these patients,” he said, adding that, at 60 days, HIPEC actually had done more harm than good.

The findings are helpful, as HIPEC has been widely used without a solid data foundation, and now the use of an “additional toxic nonbeneficial treatment” can be avoided in a subset of patients.

Two studies regarding chemotherapy in patients with pancreatic cancer also provided important information about treatment. Preliminary data from one, the PREOPANC-1 trial, suggested that perioperative chemoradiotherapy significantly improves outcomes in resectable and borderline resectable patients, compared with immediate surgery; the other – the Prodige 24/CCTG PA.6 trial – demonstrated that adjuvant mFOLFIRINOX, a four-agent regimen, improved disease-free, metastasis-free, and overall survival, with treated patients living a median of 20 months longer and being cancer free for a median of 9 months longer than those who received gemcitabine therapy.

“We saw a very impressive, encouraging, statistically and clinically significant improvement,” he said regarding survival outcomes in Prodige 24. In patients with good performance status who can tolerate the regimen, mFOLFIRINOX “seems to be the way to go now,” he added, noting that patients receiving the regimen require close monitoring by a medical oncologist.

The fourth study, a prevention trial known as the ASPECT trial, showed that high-dose esomeprazole and low-dose aspirin taken for at least 7 years moderately reduces the risk of high-grade dysplasia and esophageal cancer, and may delay death from any cause in patients with Barrett’s esophagus.

“[It is] obviously of huge importance to be able to prevent a cancer before its onset. ... So with esophagus cancer, which also is a very difficult disease to treat in whatever stage it is, it would be a huge benefit to have a way in which to effectively prevent it,” Dr. Epstein said.

However, more information is needed about the actual benefits in terms of all-cause mortality and the contributors from aspirin versus the proton pump inhibitor versus both, he noted, adding that it is important for the public to know that the findings only apply to those with Barrett’s esophagus and shouldn’t be attempted with over-the-counter treatments as some treatments are associated with complications, and the proton pump inhibitor dose used in this study is not available over the counter.

“So I think it is an intriguing study which needs more clarity and more follow-up, as the author himself said,” he added.

In summing up the findings presented at the briefing, Dr. Epstein said that “collectively we see that the challenge of cancer remains significant and we need high-quality studies like the ones presented today in order to best present ...what the best therapies are for [patients].

“With good sound science like this we continue to inch closer to the answers we need,” he concluded.

Dr. Epstein reported having no disclosures.

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– Findings from four recent, phase 3 gastrointestinal cancer studies mark a step forward toward “the answers we need” for patients with pancreatic, colorectal, or esophageal cancer, according to Andrew S. Epstein, MD.

In this video interview, Dr. Epstein summarizes and provides context for the findings, which were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and highlighted during a press briefing there. Dr. Epstein, an ASCO Expert and a medical oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, who was invited to discuss each of the studies at the briefing, said the UNICANCER-sponsored Prodige 7 trial addressed an important, long-unanswered question about the value of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) with surgery for colorectal peritoneal carcinomatosis.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel


“This randomized study, very importantly, answered that longstanding question and showed us in a less-is-more type of way that the addition of the chemotherapy during surgery actually did not improve the overall survival of these patients,” he said, adding that, at 60 days, HIPEC actually had done more harm than good.

The findings are helpful, as HIPEC has been widely used without a solid data foundation, and now the use of an “additional toxic nonbeneficial treatment” can be avoided in a subset of patients.

Two studies regarding chemotherapy in patients with pancreatic cancer also provided important information about treatment. Preliminary data from one, the PREOPANC-1 trial, suggested that perioperative chemoradiotherapy significantly improves outcomes in resectable and borderline resectable patients, compared with immediate surgery; the other – the Prodige 24/CCTG PA.6 trial – demonstrated that adjuvant mFOLFIRINOX, a four-agent regimen, improved disease-free, metastasis-free, and overall survival, with treated patients living a median of 20 months longer and being cancer free for a median of 9 months longer than those who received gemcitabine therapy.

“We saw a very impressive, encouraging, statistically and clinically significant improvement,” he said regarding survival outcomes in Prodige 24. In patients with good performance status who can tolerate the regimen, mFOLFIRINOX “seems to be the way to go now,” he added, noting that patients receiving the regimen require close monitoring by a medical oncologist.

The fourth study, a prevention trial known as the ASPECT trial, showed that high-dose esomeprazole and low-dose aspirin taken for at least 7 years moderately reduces the risk of high-grade dysplasia and esophageal cancer, and may delay death from any cause in patients with Barrett’s esophagus.

“[It is] obviously of huge importance to be able to prevent a cancer before its onset. ... So with esophagus cancer, which also is a very difficult disease to treat in whatever stage it is, it would be a huge benefit to have a way in which to effectively prevent it,” Dr. Epstein said.

However, more information is needed about the actual benefits in terms of all-cause mortality and the contributors from aspirin versus the proton pump inhibitor versus both, he noted, adding that it is important for the public to know that the findings only apply to those with Barrett’s esophagus and shouldn’t be attempted with over-the-counter treatments as some treatments are associated with complications, and the proton pump inhibitor dose used in this study is not available over the counter.

“So I think it is an intriguing study which needs more clarity and more follow-up, as the author himself said,” he added.

In summing up the findings presented at the briefing, Dr. Epstein said that “collectively we see that the challenge of cancer remains significant and we need high-quality studies like the ones presented today in order to best present ...what the best therapies are for [patients].

“With good sound science like this we continue to inch closer to the answers we need,” he concluded.

Dr. Epstein reported having no disclosures.

 

– Findings from four recent, phase 3 gastrointestinal cancer studies mark a step forward toward “the answers we need” for patients with pancreatic, colorectal, or esophageal cancer, according to Andrew S. Epstein, MD.

In this video interview, Dr. Epstein summarizes and provides context for the findings, which were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and highlighted during a press briefing there. Dr. Epstein, an ASCO Expert and a medical oncologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, who was invited to discuss each of the studies at the briefing, said the UNICANCER-sponsored Prodige 7 trial addressed an important, long-unanswered question about the value of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) with surgery for colorectal peritoneal carcinomatosis.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel


“This randomized study, very importantly, answered that longstanding question and showed us in a less-is-more type of way that the addition of the chemotherapy during surgery actually did not improve the overall survival of these patients,” he said, adding that, at 60 days, HIPEC actually had done more harm than good.

The findings are helpful, as HIPEC has been widely used without a solid data foundation, and now the use of an “additional toxic nonbeneficial treatment” can be avoided in a subset of patients.

Two studies regarding chemotherapy in patients with pancreatic cancer also provided important information about treatment. Preliminary data from one, the PREOPANC-1 trial, suggested that perioperative chemoradiotherapy significantly improves outcomes in resectable and borderline resectable patients, compared with immediate surgery; the other – the Prodige 24/CCTG PA.6 trial – demonstrated that adjuvant mFOLFIRINOX, a four-agent regimen, improved disease-free, metastasis-free, and overall survival, with treated patients living a median of 20 months longer and being cancer free for a median of 9 months longer than those who received gemcitabine therapy.

“We saw a very impressive, encouraging, statistically and clinically significant improvement,” he said regarding survival outcomes in Prodige 24. In patients with good performance status who can tolerate the regimen, mFOLFIRINOX “seems to be the way to go now,” he added, noting that patients receiving the regimen require close monitoring by a medical oncologist.

The fourth study, a prevention trial known as the ASPECT trial, showed that high-dose esomeprazole and low-dose aspirin taken for at least 7 years moderately reduces the risk of high-grade dysplasia and esophageal cancer, and may delay death from any cause in patients with Barrett’s esophagus.

“[It is] obviously of huge importance to be able to prevent a cancer before its onset. ... So with esophagus cancer, which also is a very difficult disease to treat in whatever stage it is, it would be a huge benefit to have a way in which to effectively prevent it,” Dr. Epstein said.

However, more information is needed about the actual benefits in terms of all-cause mortality and the contributors from aspirin versus the proton pump inhibitor versus both, he noted, adding that it is important for the public to know that the findings only apply to those with Barrett’s esophagus and shouldn’t be attempted with over-the-counter treatments as some treatments are associated with complications, and the proton pump inhibitor dose used in this study is not available over the counter.

“So I think it is an intriguing study which needs more clarity and more follow-up, as the author himself said,” he added.

In summing up the findings presented at the briefing, Dr. Epstein said that “collectively we see that the challenge of cancer remains significant and we need high-quality studies like the ones presented today in order to best present ...what the best therapies are for [patients].

“With good sound science like this we continue to inch closer to the answers we need,” he concluded.

Dr. Epstein reported having no disclosures.

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Chemo-free combo provides potential first-line option for FL

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©ASCO/Scott Morgan 2018
Attendee at ASCO 2018

 

CHICAGO—A chemotherapy-free combination of lenalidomide plus rituximab shows similar efficacy and a different safety profile to chemotherapy plus rituximab (R-chemo) followed by rituximab maintenance in patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

According to investigators, the multicenter, international phase 3 RELEVANCE trial is the first to evaluate the chemo-free combination against the standard of care, R-chemo with rituximab maintenance.

 

“These results show that lenalidomide plus rituximab, a novel immunomodulatory approach, is a potential first-line option for patients with FL requiring treatment,” said investigator Nathan H. Fowler, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

 

Dr Fowler presented the results of the study at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract 7500).

 

The current standard of care in previously untreated symptomatic FL is immunochemotherapy induction followed by rituximab maintenance.

 

The immunomodulatory agent lenalidomide has complementary mechanisms with rituximab. Phase 2 studies of combined immunotherapy with lenalidomide and rituximab demonstrated 3-year progression-free survival (PFS) of 79%-81% in previously untreated FL, Dr Fowler said.

 

Phase 3 RELEVANCE trial (NCT01650701)

 

Investigators evaluated 1030 previously untreated grade 1-3a FL patients who required therapy.

 

Patients in the lenalidomide-rituximab group (n=513) received lenalidomide doses of 20 mg per day on days 2 to 22 and 28 for 6 to 12 cycles. Responders continued on therapy at 10 mg per day for a total of 18 cycles.

 

The rituximab dose was 375 mg/m2 weekly in cycle 1 and day 1 in cycles 2 to 6 and continued in responders for 12 additional cycles.

 

Patients in the R-chemo arm (n=517) received the investigator’s choice of standard rituximab-CHOP, rituximab-bendamustine, or rituximab-CVP, followed by 12 cycles of rituximab.

 

Most patients (72%) in the R-chemo arm received R-CHOP.

 

Baseline characteristics were similar in both groups, Dr Fowler said.

 

Co-primary endpoints were complete remission/complete remission unconfirmed (CR/Cru) at 120 weeks and PFS.

 

Results

 

At a median follow-up of 37.9 months, the superiority for lenalidomide and rituximab over rituximab-chemotherapy was not established.

 

For the lenalidomide-rituximab patients, the CR/Cru was 48% and 3-year PFS was 77% as compared to 53% and 78%, respectively, for rituximab-chemotherapy patients, as assessed by an independent review committee.

 

Overall survival was 94% in both groups.

 

Safety

 

“Important differences in safety profiles were observed between the arms,” Dr Fowler said.

 

Rituximab-chemotherapy patients had more frequent neutropenia, febrile neutropenia, growth factor usage, nausea, vomiting, neuropathy, and alopecia.

 

Lenalidomide and rituximab showed more cutaneous reactions, tumor flare, and diarrhea.

 

Toxicity profiles differed, with higher grade 4 neutropenia (31% vs 8%) and febrile neutropenia (7% vs 2%) with rituximab-chemotherapy compared with lenalidomide-rituximab, respectively.

 

More patients experienced grade 3/4 cutaneous events (7% vs 1%) with lenalidomide-rituximab.

 

Second primary malignancies were slightly higher with rituximab-chemotherapy (10%) than with lenalidomide-rituximab (7%). Grade 5 adverse events were 1% in both groups.

 

About 70% of patients completed treatment in both groups.

 

“Lenalidomide and rituximab was not superior to rituximab-chemotherapy based on mature CR/Cru at 120 weeks and interim PFS,” Dr Fowler said. “Both treatments showed similar efficacy results. Treatment effects on PFS were consistent across pre-specified subgroups.”

 

Dr Fowler presented data as of May 31, 2017. Continued follow-up on PFS and OS is ongoing.

 

The study is sponsored by Celgene Corporation and the Lymphoma Academic Research Organisation (LYSARC). 

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©ASCO/Scott Morgan 2018
Attendee at ASCO 2018

 

CHICAGO—A chemotherapy-free combination of lenalidomide plus rituximab shows similar efficacy and a different safety profile to chemotherapy plus rituximab (R-chemo) followed by rituximab maintenance in patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

According to investigators, the multicenter, international phase 3 RELEVANCE trial is the first to evaluate the chemo-free combination against the standard of care, R-chemo with rituximab maintenance.

 

“These results show that lenalidomide plus rituximab, a novel immunomodulatory approach, is a potential first-line option for patients with FL requiring treatment,” said investigator Nathan H. Fowler, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

 

Dr Fowler presented the results of the study at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract 7500).

 

The current standard of care in previously untreated symptomatic FL is immunochemotherapy induction followed by rituximab maintenance.

 

The immunomodulatory agent lenalidomide has complementary mechanisms with rituximab. Phase 2 studies of combined immunotherapy with lenalidomide and rituximab demonstrated 3-year progression-free survival (PFS) of 79%-81% in previously untreated FL, Dr Fowler said.

 

Phase 3 RELEVANCE trial (NCT01650701)

 

Investigators evaluated 1030 previously untreated grade 1-3a FL patients who required therapy.

 

Patients in the lenalidomide-rituximab group (n=513) received lenalidomide doses of 20 mg per day on days 2 to 22 and 28 for 6 to 12 cycles. Responders continued on therapy at 10 mg per day for a total of 18 cycles.

 

The rituximab dose was 375 mg/m2 weekly in cycle 1 and day 1 in cycles 2 to 6 and continued in responders for 12 additional cycles.

 

Patients in the R-chemo arm (n=517) received the investigator’s choice of standard rituximab-CHOP, rituximab-bendamustine, or rituximab-CVP, followed by 12 cycles of rituximab.

 

Most patients (72%) in the R-chemo arm received R-CHOP.

 

Baseline characteristics were similar in both groups, Dr Fowler said.

 

Co-primary endpoints were complete remission/complete remission unconfirmed (CR/Cru) at 120 weeks and PFS.

 

Results

 

At a median follow-up of 37.9 months, the superiority for lenalidomide and rituximab over rituximab-chemotherapy was not established.

 

For the lenalidomide-rituximab patients, the CR/Cru was 48% and 3-year PFS was 77% as compared to 53% and 78%, respectively, for rituximab-chemotherapy patients, as assessed by an independent review committee.

 

Overall survival was 94% in both groups.

 

Safety

 

“Important differences in safety profiles were observed between the arms,” Dr Fowler said.

 

Rituximab-chemotherapy patients had more frequent neutropenia, febrile neutropenia, growth factor usage, nausea, vomiting, neuropathy, and alopecia.

 

Lenalidomide and rituximab showed more cutaneous reactions, tumor flare, and diarrhea.

 

Toxicity profiles differed, with higher grade 4 neutropenia (31% vs 8%) and febrile neutropenia (7% vs 2%) with rituximab-chemotherapy compared with lenalidomide-rituximab, respectively.

 

More patients experienced grade 3/4 cutaneous events (7% vs 1%) with lenalidomide-rituximab.

 

Second primary malignancies were slightly higher with rituximab-chemotherapy (10%) than with lenalidomide-rituximab (7%). Grade 5 adverse events were 1% in both groups.

 

About 70% of patients completed treatment in both groups.

 

“Lenalidomide and rituximab was not superior to rituximab-chemotherapy based on mature CR/Cru at 120 weeks and interim PFS,” Dr Fowler said. “Both treatments showed similar efficacy results. Treatment effects on PFS were consistent across pre-specified subgroups.”

 

Dr Fowler presented data as of May 31, 2017. Continued follow-up on PFS and OS is ongoing.

 

The study is sponsored by Celgene Corporation and the Lymphoma Academic Research Organisation (LYSARC). 

 

©ASCO/Scott Morgan 2018
Attendee at ASCO 2018

 

CHICAGO—A chemotherapy-free combination of lenalidomide plus rituximab shows similar efficacy and a different safety profile to chemotherapy plus rituximab (R-chemo) followed by rituximab maintenance in patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

According to investigators, the multicenter, international phase 3 RELEVANCE trial is the first to evaluate the chemo-free combination against the standard of care, R-chemo with rituximab maintenance.

 

“These results show that lenalidomide plus rituximab, a novel immunomodulatory approach, is a potential first-line option for patients with FL requiring treatment,” said investigator Nathan H. Fowler, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

 

Dr Fowler presented the results of the study at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract 7500).

 

The current standard of care in previously untreated symptomatic FL is immunochemotherapy induction followed by rituximab maintenance.

 

The immunomodulatory agent lenalidomide has complementary mechanisms with rituximab. Phase 2 studies of combined immunotherapy with lenalidomide and rituximab demonstrated 3-year progression-free survival (PFS) of 79%-81% in previously untreated FL, Dr Fowler said.

 

Phase 3 RELEVANCE trial (NCT01650701)

 

Investigators evaluated 1030 previously untreated grade 1-3a FL patients who required therapy.

 

Patients in the lenalidomide-rituximab group (n=513) received lenalidomide doses of 20 mg per day on days 2 to 22 and 28 for 6 to 12 cycles. Responders continued on therapy at 10 mg per day for a total of 18 cycles.

 

The rituximab dose was 375 mg/m2 weekly in cycle 1 and day 1 in cycles 2 to 6 and continued in responders for 12 additional cycles.

 

Patients in the R-chemo arm (n=517) received the investigator’s choice of standard rituximab-CHOP, rituximab-bendamustine, or rituximab-CVP, followed by 12 cycles of rituximab.

 

Most patients (72%) in the R-chemo arm received R-CHOP.

 

Baseline characteristics were similar in both groups, Dr Fowler said.

 

Co-primary endpoints were complete remission/complete remission unconfirmed (CR/Cru) at 120 weeks and PFS.

 

Results

 

At a median follow-up of 37.9 months, the superiority for lenalidomide and rituximab over rituximab-chemotherapy was not established.

 

For the lenalidomide-rituximab patients, the CR/Cru was 48% and 3-year PFS was 77% as compared to 53% and 78%, respectively, for rituximab-chemotherapy patients, as assessed by an independent review committee.

 

Overall survival was 94% in both groups.

 

Safety

 

“Important differences in safety profiles were observed between the arms,” Dr Fowler said.

 

Rituximab-chemotherapy patients had more frequent neutropenia, febrile neutropenia, growth factor usage, nausea, vomiting, neuropathy, and alopecia.

 

Lenalidomide and rituximab showed more cutaneous reactions, tumor flare, and diarrhea.

 

Toxicity profiles differed, with higher grade 4 neutropenia (31% vs 8%) and febrile neutropenia (7% vs 2%) with rituximab-chemotherapy compared with lenalidomide-rituximab, respectively.

 

More patients experienced grade 3/4 cutaneous events (7% vs 1%) with lenalidomide-rituximab.

 

Second primary malignancies were slightly higher with rituximab-chemotherapy (10%) than with lenalidomide-rituximab (7%). Grade 5 adverse events were 1% in both groups.

 

About 70% of patients completed treatment in both groups.

 

“Lenalidomide and rituximab was not superior to rituximab-chemotherapy based on mature CR/Cru at 120 weeks and interim PFS,” Dr Fowler said. “Both treatments showed similar efficacy results. Treatment effects on PFS were consistent across pre-specified subgroups.”

 

Dr Fowler presented data as of May 31, 2017. Continued follow-up on PFS and OS is ongoing.

 

The study is sponsored by Celgene Corporation and the Lymphoma Academic Research Organisation (LYSARC). 

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Youth with rhabdomyosarcoma see better survival with maintenance chemo

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Six months of maintenance chemotherapy prolongs overall survival in youth with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma, finds a phase 3 randomized controlled trial of the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG).

Rhabdomyosarcoma is a rare but very aggressive tumor, lead study author Gianni Bisogno, MD, PhD, a professor at the University Hospital of Padova, Italy, and chair of the EpSSG, noted in a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, where the findings were reported. Among pediatric patients who achieve complete response to standard therapy, “we know that after 1 or 2 years, one-third of these children relapse, and most of them die,” he said.

The EpSSG trial, which took about 10 years to conduct, enrolled 371 patients aged 0-21 years with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma who had had a complete response to standard intensive therapy. They were randomized evenly to stop treatment or to receive 6 months of maintenance treatment consisting of low-dose vinorelbine and cyclophosphamide.

Results reported in the meeting’s plenary session showed that giving maintenance chemotherapy improved the 5-year overall survival rate by an absolute 12.8%, which translated to a near halving of the risk of death. And the maintenance regimen used was generally well tolerated.

“At the end of this long, not-easy study, we concluded that maintenance chemotherapy is an effective and well tolerated treatment for children with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma,” Dr. Bisogno said.

Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Gianni Bisogno


There are three possibilities for its efficacy, he speculated. “It may be the duration, the type of drugs used, or the metronomic approach. Maybe altogether, these three different actions have a benefit to increase survival.

“Our group has decided this is the new standard treatment for patients. At least in Europe, we give standard intensive therapy and then we continue with 6 more months of low-dose chemotherapy,” Dr. Bisogno concluded. “We think that this approach – a new way of using old drugs – can be of interest also for other pediatric tumors.”

The trial is noteworthy in that it shows “how to successfully conduct large and important trials in rare diseases,” said ASCO Expert Warren Chow, MD.
Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Warren Chow

 

 


The standard therapy for rhabdomyosarcomas is somewhat different in the United States, typically a regimen containing vincristine, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, and (more recently) irinotecan, he noted. “We have not been traditionally using maintenance chemo for any of the pediatric sarcomas, so this is a paradigm shift. These results will need to be tested with U.S.-based protocols before becoming standard of care in the United States. Also, we will need to determine if these results are applicable to patients older than 21 years of age who are considered high risk based solely on their age.

“Even with these caveats, this is the first significant treatment advance in this rare cancer in more than 30 years,” concluded Dr. Chow, a medical oncologist and clinical professor at City of Hope, Duarte, Calif. “No doubt, this trial was a home run.”

Study details

Patients enrolled in the EpSSG trial had had a complete response to the standard intensive therapy used in Europe: high-dose chemotherapy (ifosfamide, vincristine, and actinomycin D, with or without doxorubicin), radiation therapy, and surgery.

The maintenance chemotherapy consisted of a combination of low-dose intravenous vinorelbine given weekly and oral cyclophosphamide given daily. The 6-month duration was somewhat arbitrary, according to Dr. Bisogno. “We had to start somewhere. So when we started, we decided to use 6 months because there was some evidence in the past for regimens that long. In our next European trial, we are going to test different kinds and durations of maintenance because this is very important.”

 

 


The maintenance regimen was well tolerated compared with the regimen given during standard intensive therapy, with, for example, lower rates of grade 3 and 4 anemia (8.9% vs. 48.9%), neutropenia (80.6% vs. 91.6%), and thrombocytopenia (0.6% vs. 26.0%), which translated to less need for transfusions, and a lower rate of grade 3 or 4 infection (29.4% vs. 56.4%), Dr. Bisogno reported. There were no cases of grade 3 or 4 cardiac, hepatobiliary/pancreatic, or renal toxicity.

Relative to peers who stopped treatment after standard intensive therapy, patients who received maintenance treatment tended to have better disease-free survival (77.6% vs. 69.8%; hazard ratio, 0.68; P = .0613) and had significantly better overall survival (86.5% vs. 73.7%; hazard ratio, 0.52; P = .0111).

Dr. Bisogno disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with Clinigen Group, and receives travel, accommodations, and/or expenses from Jazz Pharmaceuticals. The study received funding from Fondazione Città della Speranza, Italy.

SOURCE: Bisogno et al. ASCO 2018 Abstract LBA2.

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Six months of maintenance chemotherapy prolongs overall survival in youth with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma, finds a phase 3 randomized controlled trial of the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG).

Rhabdomyosarcoma is a rare but very aggressive tumor, lead study author Gianni Bisogno, MD, PhD, a professor at the University Hospital of Padova, Italy, and chair of the EpSSG, noted in a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, where the findings were reported. Among pediatric patients who achieve complete response to standard therapy, “we know that after 1 or 2 years, one-third of these children relapse, and most of them die,” he said.

The EpSSG trial, which took about 10 years to conduct, enrolled 371 patients aged 0-21 years with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma who had had a complete response to standard intensive therapy. They were randomized evenly to stop treatment or to receive 6 months of maintenance treatment consisting of low-dose vinorelbine and cyclophosphamide.

Results reported in the meeting’s plenary session showed that giving maintenance chemotherapy improved the 5-year overall survival rate by an absolute 12.8%, which translated to a near halving of the risk of death. And the maintenance regimen used was generally well tolerated.

“At the end of this long, not-easy study, we concluded that maintenance chemotherapy is an effective and well tolerated treatment for children with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma,” Dr. Bisogno said.

Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Gianni Bisogno


There are three possibilities for its efficacy, he speculated. “It may be the duration, the type of drugs used, or the metronomic approach. Maybe altogether, these three different actions have a benefit to increase survival.

“Our group has decided this is the new standard treatment for patients. At least in Europe, we give standard intensive therapy and then we continue with 6 more months of low-dose chemotherapy,” Dr. Bisogno concluded. “We think that this approach – a new way of using old drugs – can be of interest also for other pediatric tumors.”

The trial is noteworthy in that it shows “how to successfully conduct large and important trials in rare diseases,” said ASCO Expert Warren Chow, MD.
Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Warren Chow

 

 


The standard therapy for rhabdomyosarcomas is somewhat different in the United States, typically a regimen containing vincristine, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, and (more recently) irinotecan, he noted. “We have not been traditionally using maintenance chemo for any of the pediatric sarcomas, so this is a paradigm shift. These results will need to be tested with U.S.-based protocols before becoming standard of care in the United States. Also, we will need to determine if these results are applicable to patients older than 21 years of age who are considered high risk based solely on their age.

“Even with these caveats, this is the first significant treatment advance in this rare cancer in more than 30 years,” concluded Dr. Chow, a medical oncologist and clinical professor at City of Hope, Duarte, Calif. “No doubt, this trial was a home run.”

Study details

Patients enrolled in the EpSSG trial had had a complete response to the standard intensive therapy used in Europe: high-dose chemotherapy (ifosfamide, vincristine, and actinomycin D, with or without doxorubicin), radiation therapy, and surgery.

The maintenance chemotherapy consisted of a combination of low-dose intravenous vinorelbine given weekly and oral cyclophosphamide given daily. The 6-month duration was somewhat arbitrary, according to Dr. Bisogno. “We had to start somewhere. So when we started, we decided to use 6 months because there was some evidence in the past for regimens that long. In our next European trial, we are going to test different kinds and durations of maintenance because this is very important.”

 

 


The maintenance regimen was well tolerated compared with the regimen given during standard intensive therapy, with, for example, lower rates of grade 3 and 4 anemia (8.9% vs. 48.9%), neutropenia (80.6% vs. 91.6%), and thrombocytopenia (0.6% vs. 26.0%), which translated to less need for transfusions, and a lower rate of grade 3 or 4 infection (29.4% vs. 56.4%), Dr. Bisogno reported. There were no cases of grade 3 or 4 cardiac, hepatobiliary/pancreatic, or renal toxicity.

Relative to peers who stopped treatment after standard intensive therapy, patients who received maintenance treatment tended to have better disease-free survival (77.6% vs. 69.8%; hazard ratio, 0.68; P = .0613) and had significantly better overall survival (86.5% vs. 73.7%; hazard ratio, 0.52; P = .0111).

Dr. Bisogno disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with Clinigen Group, and receives travel, accommodations, and/or expenses from Jazz Pharmaceuticals. The study received funding from Fondazione Città della Speranza, Italy.

SOURCE: Bisogno et al. ASCO 2018 Abstract LBA2.

 

Six months of maintenance chemotherapy prolongs overall survival in youth with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma, finds a phase 3 randomized controlled trial of the European Paediatric Soft Tissue Sarcoma Study Group (EpSSG).

Rhabdomyosarcoma is a rare but very aggressive tumor, lead study author Gianni Bisogno, MD, PhD, a professor at the University Hospital of Padova, Italy, and chair of the EpSSG, noted in a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, where the findings were reported. Among pediatric patients who achieve complete response to standard therapy, “we know that after 1 or 2 years, one-third of these children relapse, and most of them die,” he said.

The EpSSG trial, which took about 10 years to conduct, enrolled 371 patients aged 0-21 years with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma who had had a complete response to standard intensive therapy. They were randomized evenly to stop treatment or to receive 6 months of maintenance treatment consisting of low-dose vinorelbine and cyclophosphamide.

Results reported in the meeting’s plenary session showed that giving maintenance chemotherapy improved the 5-year overall survival rate by an absolute 12.8%, which translated to a near halving of the risk of death. And the maintenance regimen used was generally well tolerated.

“At the end of this long, not-easy study, we concluded that maintenance chemotherapy is an effective and well tolerated treatment for children with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma,” Dr. Bisogno said.

Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Gianni Bisogno


There are three possibilities for its efficacy, he speculated. “It may be the duration, the type of drugs used, or the metronomic approach. Maybe altogether, these three different actions have a benefit to increase survival.

“Our group has decided this is the new standard treatment for patients. At least in Europe, we give standard intensive therapy and then we continue with 6 more months of low-dose chemotherapy,” Dr. Bisogno concluded. “We think that this approach – a new way of using old drugs – can be of interest also for other pediatric tumors.”

The trial is noteworthy in that it shows “how to successfully conduct large and important trials in rare diseases,” said ASCO Expert Warren Chow, MD.
Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Warren Chow

 

 


The standard therapy for rhabdomyosarcomas is somewhat different in the United States, typically a regimen containing vincristine, actinomycin D, cyclophosphamide, and (more recently) irinotecan, he noted. “We have not been traditionally using maintenance chemo for any of the pediatric sarcomas, so this is a paradigm shift. These results will need to be tested with U.S.-based protocols before becoming standard of care in the United States. Also, we will need to determine if these results are applicable to patients older than 21 years of age who are considered high risk based solely on their age.

“Even with these caveats, this is the first significant treatment advance in this rare cancer in more than 30 years,” concluded Dr. Chow, a medical oncologist and clinical professor at City of Hope, Duarte, Calif. “No doubt, this trial was a home run.”

Study details

Patients enrolled in the EpSSG trial had had a complete response to the standard intensive therapy used in Europe: high-dose chemotherapy (ifosfamide, vincristine, and actinomycin D, with or without doxorubicin), radiation therapy, and surgery.

The maintenance chemotherapy consisted of a combination of low-dose intravenous vinorelbine given weekly and oral cyclophosphamide given daily. The 6-month duration was somewhat arbitrary, according to Dr. Bisogno. “We had to start somewhere. So when we started, we decided to use 6 months because there was some evidence in the past for regimens that long. In our next European trial, we are going to test different kinds and durations of maintenance because this is very important.”

 

 


The maintenance regimen was well tolerated compared with the regimen given during standard intensive therapy, with, for example, lower rates of grade 3 and 4 anemia (8.9% vs. 48.9%), neutropenia (80.6% vs. 91.6%), and thrombocytopenia (0.6% vs. 26.0%), which translated to less need for transfusions, and a lower rate of grade 3 or 4 infection (29.4% vs. 56.4%), Dr. Bisogno reported. There were no cases of grade 3 or 4 cardiac, hepatobiliary/pancreatic, or renal toxicity.

Relative to peers who stopped treatment after standard intensive therapy, patients who received maintenance treatment tended to have better disease-free survival (77.6% vs. 69.8%; hazard ratio, 0.68; P = .0613) and had significantly better overall survival (86.5% vs. 73.7%; hazard ratio, 0.52; P = .0111).

Dr. Bisogno disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with Clinigen Group, and receives travel, accommodations, and/or expenses from Jazz Pharmaceuticals. The study received funding from Fondazione Città della Speranza, Italy.

SOURCE: Bisogno et al. ASCO 2018 Abstract LBA2.

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Key clinical point: Six months of maintenance chemotherapy improves survival in youth with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma.

Major finding: Compared with counterparts not receiving any additional treatment, patients given maintenance low-dose vinorelbine and cyclophosphamide had better 5-year overall survival (86.5% vs. 73.7%; hazard ratio, 0.52).

Study details: A phase 3 randomized controlled trial among 371 patients aged 0-21 years with high-risk rhabdomyosarcoma who had had a complete response to standard intensive therapy.

Disclosures: Dr. Bisogno disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with Clinigen Group, and receives travel, accommodations, and/or expenses from Jazz Pharmaceuticals. The study received funding from Fondazione Città della Speranza, Italy.

Source: Bisogno et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract LBA2.

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bb2121 demonstrates durable responses, manageable toxicity in MM

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Noopur S. Raje, MD

CHICAGO—bb2121, the anti-BCMA chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, induced deep and durable ongoing responses in heavily pretreated multiple myeloma (MM) patients, updated results of a phase 1 study show.

At active doses (≥150 x 108 CAR+ T cells), the B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-targeted therapy produced an overall response rate of 95.5%, including a 50% rate of complete response (CR) or stringent CR, with a median duration of response of 10.8 months.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 11.8 months in the dose-escalation cohort.

Noopur S. Raje, MD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in Boston, reported these results at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract 8007*). The study is sponsored by Celgene Corporation and bluebird bio.

To date, bb2121 has been manageable for patients at doses as high as 800 x 108 CAR T cells, Dr Raje noted.

She updated the findings of CRB-401 (NCT02658929), which included 43 patients with relapsed/refractory MM, including 21 in a dose-escalation (DE) cohort and 22 in a dose-expansion (Exp) cohort.

Patients received one infusion of bb2121 anti-BCMA CAR T cells after a lymphodepleting conditioning regimen including fludarabine and cyclophosphamide.

Patients were a median age of 58 (range, 37 – 74) and 65 (range, 44 – 75) in the DE and Exp cohorts, respectively.

Eight patients (38%) in the DE cohort and 9 (41%) in the Exp cohort had high-risk cytogenetics and had received a median of 7 (range, 3 – 14) and 8 (range, 3 – 23) prior regimens, respectively.

All patients in the DE cohort and 86% in the Exp cohort had a prior autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT), and 29% and 23% in each cohort, respectively, had more than one ASCT.

Results

Patients in the DE cohort had a median PFS of 11.8 months at active doses.

All 16 responding patients who were evaluable for minimal residual disease (MRD) achieved MRD negativity and had a median PFS of 17.7 months.

The investigators observed a dose-response relationship across the active dose ranges and higher peak CAR T expansion in responding patients compared with those who did not respond.

The investigators also noted that the tumor response was independent of tumor BCMA expression.

bb2121 persisted for 6 months or longer in 44% of responding patients.

“This should be tested a little bit earlier now, because what we’ve done here is show the proof of concept, and really treated these very end-stage myeloma patients,” Dr Raje observed.

Adverse events of interest

“We found that this product is extremely well tolerated,” Dr Raje said. “We saw, certainly, cytokine release syndrome (CRS) in over 60% of patients, but most of the CRS was managed, and it was grade 1 and 2 with very little grade 3 CRS. [W]e just had 1 patient with grade 4 neurotoxicity who is now completely recovered.”

The 2 grade 3 CRS events observed in this study resolved in 24 hours, Dr Raje noted.

Infused patients (n=43) also experienced neutropenia (81%), thrombocytopenia (61%), and anemia (56%).

Thirty-one of 40 patients (78%) recovered their absolute neutrophil count to 1000/μL or greater by day 32, and 22 of 40 (55%) patients recovered their platelet counts to 50,000/μL or greater by day 32.

Commentary

BCMA is the “latest promising target” in MM, said Parameswaran Hari, MD, of the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, and this bb2121 data represents the largest and most mature experience with the CAR T approach in the disease.

 

 

However, patients are still relapsing, and the meaning of MRD negativity is unclear in this setting, Dr Parameswaran said in a presentation referencing the results of the study.

“Unfortunately, this is not yet a cure, so I’m going advise my patients who are in stringent CR and on maintenance not to go for CAR T cells unless they relapse,” he said.

An ongoing global trial of bb2121, known as KarMMa, is open for enrollment in North America and Europe, and additional studies are planned in earlier lines of myeloma.

*Data presented at the meeting differ from the abstract. 

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Photo by Andrew D. Bowser
Noopur S. Raje, MD

CHICAGO—bb2121, the anti-BCMA chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, induced deep and durable ongoing responses in heavily pretreated multiple myeloma (MM) patients, updated results of a phase 1 study show.

At active doses (≥150 x 108 CAR+ T cells), the B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-targeted therapy produced an overall response rate of 95.5%, including a 50% rate of complete response (CR) or stringent CR, with a median duration of response of 10.8 months.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 11.8 months in the dose-escalation cohort.

Noopur S. Raje, MD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in Boston, reported these results at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract 8007*). The study is sponsored by Celgene Corporation and bluebird bio.

To date, bb2121 has been manageable for patients at doses as high as 800 x 108 CAR T cells, Dr Raje noted.

She updated the findings of CRB-401 (NCT02658929), which included 43 patients with relapsed/refractory MM, including 21 in a dose-escalation (DE) cohort and 22 in a dose-expansion (Exp) cohort.

Patients received one infusion of bb2121 anti-BCMA CAR T cells after a lymphodepleting conditioning regimen including fludarabine and cyclophosphamide.

Patients were a median age of 58 (range, 37 – 74) and 65 (range, 44 – 75) in the DE and Exp cohorts, respectively.

Eight patients (38%) in the DE cohort and 9 (41%) in the Exp cohort had high-risk cytogenetics and had received a median of 7 (range, 3 – 14) and 8 (range, 3 – 23) prior regimens, respectively.

All patients in the DE cohort and 86% in the Exp cohort had a prior autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT), and 29% and 23% in each cohort, respectively, had more than one ASCT.

Results

Patients in the DE cohort had a median PFS of 11.8 months at active doses.

All 16 responding patients who were evaluable for minimal residual disease (MRD) achieved MRD negativity and had a median PFS of 17.7 months.

The investigators observed a dose-response relationship across the active dose ranges and higher peak CAR T expansion in responding patients compared with those who did not respond.

The investigators also noted that the tumor response was independent of tumor BCMA expression.

bb2121 persisted for 6 months or longer in 44% of responding patients.

“This should be tested a little bit earlier now, because what we’ve done here is show the proof of concept, and really treated these very end-stage myeloma patients,” Dr Raje observed.

Adverse events of interest

“We found that this product is extremely well tolerated,” Dr Raje said. “We saw, certainly, cytokine release syndrome (CRS) in over 60% of patients, but most of the CRS was managed, and it was grade 1 and 2 with very little grade 3 CRS. [W]e just had 1 patient with grade 4 neurotoxicity who is now completely recovered.”

The 2 grade 3 CRS events observed in this study resolved in 24 hours, Dr Raje noted.

Infused patients (n=43) also experienced neutropenia (81%), thrombocytopenia (61%), and anemia (56%).

Thirty-one of 40 patients (78%) recovered their absolute neutrophil count to 1000/μL or greater by day 32, and 22 of 40 (55%) patients recovered their platelet counts to 50,000/μL or greater by day 32.

Commentary

BCMA is the “latest promising target” in MM, said Parameswaran Hari, MD, of the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, and this bb2121 data represents the largest and most mature experience with the CAR T approach in the disease.

 

 

However, patients are still relapsing, and the meaning of MRD negativity is unclear in this setting, Dr Parameswaran said in a presentation referencing the results of the study.

“Unfortunately, this is not yet a cure, so I’m going advise my patients who are in stringent CR and on maintenance not to go for CAR T cells unless they relapse,” he said.

An ongoing global trial of bb2121, known as KarMMa, is open for enrollment in North America and Europe, and additional studies are planned in earlier lines of myeloma.

*Data presented at the meeting differ from the abstract. 

Photo by Andrew D. Bowser
Noopur S. Raje, MD

CHICAGO—bb2121, the anti-BCMA chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy, induced deep and durable ongoing responses in heavily pretreated multiple myeloma (MM) patients, updated results of a phase 1 study show.

At active doses (≥150 x 108 CAR+ T cells), the B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-targeted therapy produced an overall response rate of 95.5%, including a 50% rate of complete response (CR) or stringent CR, with a median duration of response of 10.8 months.

Median progression-free survival (PFS) was 11.8 months in the dose-escalation cohort.

Noopur S. Raje, MD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in Boston, reported these results at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract 8007*). The study is sponsored by Celgene Corporation and bluebird bio.

To date, bb2121 has been manageable for patients at doses as high as 800 x 108 CAR T cells, Dr Raje noted.

She updated the findings of CRB-401 (NCT02658929), which included 43 patients with relapsed/refractory MM, including 21 in a dose-escalation (DE) cohort and 22 in a dose-expansion (Exp) cohort.

Patients received one infusion of bb2121 anti-BCMA CAR T cells after a lymphodepleting conditioning regimen including fludarabine and cyclophosphamide.

Patients were a median age of 58 (range, 37 – 74) and 65 (range, 44 – 75) in the DE and Exp cohorts, respectively.

Eight patients (38%) in the DE cohort and 9 (41%) in the Exp cohort had high-risk cytogenetics and had received a median of 7 (range, 3 – 14) and 8 (range, 3 – 23) prior regimens, respectively.

All patients in the DE cohort and 86% in the Exp cohort had a prior autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT), and 29% and 23% in each cohort, respectively, had more than one ASCT.

Results

Patients in the DE cohort had a median PFS of 11.8 months at active doses.

All 16 responding patients who were evaluable for minimal residual disease (MRD) achieved MRD negativity and had a median PFS of 17.7 months.

The investigators observed a dose-response relationship across the active dose ranges and higher peak CAR T expansion in responding patients compared with those who did not respond.

The investigators also noted that the tumor response was independent of tumor BCMA expression.

bb2121 persisted for 6 months or longer in 44% of responding patients.

“This should be tested a little bit earlier now, because what we’ve done here is show the proof of concept, and really treated these very end-stage myeloma patients,” Dr Raje observed.

Adverse events of interest

“We found that this product is extremely well tolerated,” Dr Raje said. “We saw, certainly, cytokine release syndrome (CRS) in over 60% of patients, but most of the CRS was managed, and it was grade 1 and 2 with very little grade 3 CRS. [W]e just had 1 patient with grade 4 neurotoxicity who is now completely recovered.”

The 2 grade 3 CRS events observed in this study resolved in 24 hours, Dr Raje noted.

Infused patients (n=43) also experienced neutropenia (81%), thrombocytopenia (61%), and anemia (56%).

Thirty-one of 40 patients (78%) recovered their absolute neutrophil count to 1000/μL or greater by day 32, and 22 of 40 (55%) patients recovered their platelet counts to 50,000/μL or greater by day 32.

Commentary

BCMA is the “latest promising target” in MM, said Parameswaran Hari, MD, of the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, and this bb2121 data represents the largest and most mature experience with the CAR T approach in the disease.

 

 

However, patients are still relapsing, and the meaning of MRD negativity is unclear in this setting, Dr Parameswaran said in a presentation referencing the results of the study.

“Unfortunately, this is not yet a cure, so I’m going advise my patients who are in stringent CR and on maintenance not to go for CAR T cells unless they relapse,” he said.

An ongoing global trial of bb2121, known as KarMMa, is open for enrollment in North America and Europe, and additional studies are planned in earlier lines of myeloma.

*Data presented at the meeting differ from the abstract. 

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Venetoclax plus ibrutinib yields encouraging MRD results in first-line CLL

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– The combination of ibrutinib plus venetoclax yielded a high rate of undetectable minimal residual disease (MRD) when used as first-line treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), according to preliminary results of the CAPTIVATE trial.

Of the first 30 patients in the trial, 23 (77%) had undetectable blood MRD after just six cycles of combined treatment, said investigator William G. Wierda, MD, PhD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

Dr. William G. Wierda
Also, of the 14 patients completing 12 cycles of the combination, 12 (86%) had undetectable bone marrow MRD, including all complete responders and most of the partial responders.

“These early results show a highly active and safe treatment with 12 cycles of combined treatment with ibrutinib and venetoclax,” Dr. Wierda said in a presentation of the CAPTIVATE results at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Those MRD results are “at least as good as we can achieve with chemoimmunotherapy,” Bruce D. Cheson, MD, head of hematology at Georgetown University, Washington, said during a discussion of the CAPTIVATE study results.

Dr. Cheson referenced MRD results from a 2016 analysis of the CLL8 and CLL10 trials, which included patients treated with fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab (FCR) and bendamustine plus rituximab (BR). In that analysis, 33.6% of patients achieved MRD-negative complete response and 29.1% achieved MRD-negative partial response.

In CAPTIVATE, by contrast, all of the complete remissions were MRD negative, as were a majority of the partial responders, Dr. Cheson noted.

 

 


Venetoclax and ibrutinib have “clinically complimentary activity” that provided a rationale for combining the two, Dr. Wierda said at ASCO. Ibrutinib is a BTK inhibitor that has a high rate of response and durable disease control, though continuous treatment is indicated, he said, because most patients achieve partial remissions as best response and continue to have residual disease in blood or bone marrow. Venetoclax, he added, is a BCL-2 inhibitor that produces durable partial remissions, though “residual disease is typically present in the form of persistently enlarged lymph nodes,” he said. “Venetoclax is highly effective at clearing disease from blood and bone marrow.”

The phase 2 CAPTIVATE trial includes a total of 164 patients younger than 70 years of age who receive a 3-cycle ibrutinib lead-in, followed by ibrutinib plus venetoclax for 12 cycles. At that point, patients are randomized according to MRD status. Patients with confirmed undetectable MRD are randomized to further treatment with ibrutinib or placebo, and those with undetectable MRD not confirmed are randomized to ibrutinib versus ibrutinib plus venetoclax.

In addition to early efficacy data, Dr. Wierda also reported some safety data. Compared with the single-agent ibrutinib lead-in period, combined ibrutinib plus venetoclax treatment had more gastrointestinal-associated events and neutropenia. Almost half of patients (45%) have had a treatment-related grade 3-4 adverse event, though just 18 (11%) have had treatment-related adverse events classified as serious, and there have been no adverse event-related deaths on study.

The high activity of ibrutinib plus venetoclax in CAPTIVATE supports further study of the combination, Dr. Wierda said. A randomized, open-label phase 3 trial of ibrutinib plus venetoclax versus chlorambucil plus obinutuzumab as first-line treatment for CLL is currently recruiting.

The study was sponsored by Pharmacyclics, an AbbVie company. Dr. Wierda reported consulting and research funding from Pharmacyclics, AbbVie, and several other companies.

SOURCE: Wierda WG et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7502.

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– The combination of ibrutinib plus venetoclax yielded a high rate of undetectable minimal residual disease (MRD) when used as first-line treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), according to preliminary results of the CAPTIVATE trial.

Of the first 30 patients in the trial, 23 (77%) had undetectable blood MRD after just six cycles of combined treatment, said investigator William G. Wierda, MD, PhD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

Dr. William G. Wierda
Also, of the 14 patients completing 12 cycles of the combination, 12 (86%) had undetectable bone marrow MRD, including all complete responders and most of the partial responders.

“These early results show a highly active and safe treatment with 12 cycles of combined treatment with ibrutinib and venetoclax,” Dr. Wierda said in a presentation of the CAPTIVATE results at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Those MRD results are “at least as good as we can achieve with chemoimmunotherapy,” Bruce D. Cheson, MD, head of hematology at Georgetown University, Washington, said during a discussion of the CAPTIVATE study results.

Dr. Cheson referenced MRD results from a 2016 analysis of the CLL8 and CLL10 trials, which included patients treated with fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab (FCR) and bendamustine plus rituximab (BR). In that analysis, 33.6% of patients achieved MRD-negative complete response and 29.1% achieved MRD-negative partial response.

In CAPTIVATE, by contrast, all of the complete remissions were MRD negative, as were a majority of the partial responders, Dr. Cheson noted.

 

 


Venetoclax and ibrutinib have “clinically complimentary activity” that provided a rationale for combining the two, Dr. Wierda said at ASCO. Ibrutinib is a BTK inhibitor that has a high rate of response and durable disease control, though continuous treatment is indicated, he said, because most patients achieve partial remissions as best response and continue to have residual disease in blood or bone marrow. Venetoclax, he added, is a BCL-2 inhibitor that produces durable partial remissions, though “residual disease is typically present in the form of persistently enlarged lymph nodes,” he said. “Venetoclax is highly effective at clearing disease from blood and bone marrow.”

The phase 2 CAPTIVATE trial includes a total of 164 patients younger than 70 years of age who receive a 3-cycle ibrutinib lead-in, followed by ibrutinib plus venetoclax for 12 cycles. At that point, patients are randomized according to MRD status. Patients with confirmed undetectable MRD are randomized to further treatment with ibrutinib or placebo, and those with undetectable MRD not confirmed are randomized to ibrutinib versus ibrutinib plus venetoclax.

In addition to early efficacy data, Dr. Wierda also reported some safety data. Compared with the single-agent ibrutinib lead-in period, combined ibrutinib plus venetoclax treatment had more gastrointestinal-associated events and neutropenia. Almost half of patients (45%) have had a treatment-related grade 3-4 adverse event, though just 18 (11%) have had treatment-related adverse events classified as serious, and there have been no adverse event-related deaths on study.

The high activity of ibrutinib plus venetoclax in CAPTIVATE supports further study of the combination, Dr. Wierda said. A randomized, open-label phase 3 trial of ibrutinib plus venetoclax versus chlorambucil plus obinutuzumab as first-line treatment for CLL is currently recruiting.

The study was sponsored by Pharmacyclics, an AbbVie company. Dr. Wierda reported consulting and research funding from Pharmacyclics, AbbVie, and several other companies.

SOURCE: Wierda WG et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7502.

 

– The combination of ibrutinib plus venetoclax yielded a high rate of undetectable minimal residual disease (MRD) when used as first-line treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), according to preliminary results of the CAPTIVATE trial.

Of the first 30 patients in the trial, 23 (77%) had undetectable blood MRD after just six cycles of combined treatment, said investigator William G. Wierda, MD, PhD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

Dr. William G. Wierda
Also, of the 14 patients completing 12 cycles of the combination, 12 (86%) had undetectable bone marrow MRD, including all complete responders and most of the partial responders.

“These early results show a highly active and safe treatment with 12 cycles of combined treatment with ibrutinib and venetoclax,” Dr. Wierda said in a presentation of the CAPTIVATE results at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

Those MRD results are “at least as good as we can achieve with chemoimmunotherapy,” Bruce D. Cheson, MD, head of hematology at Georgetown University, Washington, said during a discussion of the CAPTIVATE study results.

Dr. Cheson referenced MRD results from a 2016 analysis of the CLL8 and CLL10 trials, which included patients treated with fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, and rituximab (FCR) and bendamustine plus rituximab (BR). In that analysis, 33.6% of patients achieved MRD-negative complete response and 29.1% achieved MRD-negative partial response.

In CAPTIVATE, by contrast, all of the complete remissions were MRD negative, as were a majority of the partial responders, Dr. Cheson noted.

 

 


Venetoclax and ibrutinib have “clinically complimentary activity” that provided a rationale for combining the two, Dr. Wierda said at ASCO. Ibrutinib is a BTK inhibitor that has a high rate of response and durable disease control, though continuous treatment is indicated, he said, because most patients achieve partial remissions as best response and continue to have residual disease in blood or bone marrow. Venetoclax, he added, is a BCL-2 inhibitor that produces durable partial remissions, though “residual disease is typically present in the form of persistently enlarged lymph nodes,” he said. “Venetoclax is highly effective at clearing disease from blood and bone marrow.”

The phase 2 CAPTIVATE trial includes a total of 164 patients younger than 70 years of age who receive a 3-cycle ibrutinib lead-in, followed by ibrutinib plus venetoclax for 12 cycles. At that point, patients are randomized according to MRD status. Patients with confirmed undetectable MRD are randomized to further treatment with ibrutinib or placebo, and those with undetectable MRD not confirmed are randomized to ibrutinib versus ibrutinib plus venetoclax.

In addition to early efficacy data, Dr. Wierda also reported some safety data. Compared with the single-agent ibrutinib lead-in period, combined ibrutinib plus venetoclax treatment had more gastrointestinal-associated events and neutropenia. Almost half of patients (45%) have had a treatment-related grade 3-4 adverse event, though just 18 (11%) have had treatment-related adverse events classified as serious, and there have been no adverse event-related deaths on study.

The high activity of ibrutinib plus venetoclax in CAPTIVATE supports further study of the combination, Dr. Wierda said. A randomized, open-label phase 3 trial of ibrutinib plus venetoclax versus chlorambucil plus obinutuzumab as first-line treatment for CLL is currently recruiting.

The study was sponsored by Pharmacyclics, an AbbVie company. Dr. Wierda reported consulting and research funding from Pharmacyclics, AbbVie, and several other companies.

SOURCE: Wierda WG et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7502.

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Key clinical point: Ibrutinib plus venetoclax produced a high rate of undetectable minimal residual disease.

Major finding: Of 14 patients, 12 (86%) who completed 12 cycles of treatment had undetectable bone marrow MRD.

Study details: Early results of the phase 2 CAPTIVATE trial including 164 patients younger than 70 years of age with previously untreated CLL.

Disclosures: The study was sponsored by Pharmacyclics, an Abbvie company. Dr. Wierda reported consulting and research funding from Pharmacyclics, AbbVie, and several other companies.

Source: Wierda WG et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7502.

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New cell-free DNA assays hold promise for lung cancer screening

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A set of blood-based assays that search for abnormalities in cell-free DNA show moderately good sensitivity for detecting lung cancer in its early stages, according to the first interim report from a substudy of the large, ongoing Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas (CCGA).

“Lung cancer screening with low-dose CT is known to improve outcomes. And yet, CT-based lung cancer screening is not widely adopted,” said lead study author Geoffrey R. Oxnard, MD, associate professor of medicine at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, in a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, where the study was reported. “Criticisms of low-dose CT include the risk of false positives and overdiagnosis. We proposed to investigate an untapped opportunity for cancer detection, which is using cell-free DNA.”

Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Geoffrey R. Oxnard

Main substudy results among 164 patients with lung cancer and 923 comparable individuals without known cancer showed that at a specificity of 98%, the three assays evaluated detected up to 51% of early-stage (stage I-IIIA) lung cancers and up to 91% of late-stage (stage IIIB-IV) lung cancers. And among the healthy participants with false-positive results for lung cancer, several were ultimately found to have cancers of other types.

“This first interim analysis of the CCGA study demonstrates that comprehensive sequencing of the plasma cell-free DNA can generate high-quality data across the entire genome, and it permits noninvasive cancer detection. The assays can detect lung cancer across stages, across histologies, across populations,” Dr. Oxnard said.

“Together, these results support the promise of using cell-free, DNA-based assays to develop an early cancer detection test with high specificity. Further assay and clinical development is ongoing: There is a separate prospective trial enrolling, the STRIVE study, and there remain thousands of patients still on this CCGA study to be analyzed for further optimization and focusing of this assay towards an eventual cancer diagnostic.”

The cohort studied was not a screening population, so the assays’ performance cannot be compared with that of low-dose CT at this point, he said. But the hypothesis going forward is that the assays will have comparatively higher specificity, sparing some patients an unnecessary diagnostic work-up.

The population in which the final blood test might be used will depend on its diagnostic performance once the assays are fully refined and clinic ready, which will take some time, according to Dr. Oxnard. However, “2 years ago, this was a pipe dream. Two years ago, it was completely just a brainstorm that had no data to support it, and I didn’t believe that this could be done. Today, we actually have data to show that this is really feasible to find early-stage cancer in the blood. So this is a huge step forward and actually means that this is going to be a reality.”

 

 



Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. David Graham

“This is an important first step towards an easier way to detect lung cancer at earlier and hopefully more curable stages,” agreed ASCO Expert David Graham, MD, who is also medical director at the Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C. “If the promise of this report holds, we could easily see a day when a person could be screened for lung cancer and possibly other cancers simply by going into their regular doctor’s office for a blood draw.”

Study details

The CCGA study has enrolled more than 12,000 of its planned 15,000 participants (70% with cancer, 30% without) across 142 U.S. and Canadian sites.

The substudy reported had a development cohort (118 patients with lung cancer, 561 individuals without cancer) and a validation cohort (46 patients with lung cancer, 362 individuals without cancer), with the lung cancer and noncancer groups matched on age, race, and body mass index. “Having a comparable control cohort is very important in developing such a diagnostic for accurate analysis of the potential false-positive rate,” Dr. Oxnard noted.

Three prototype assays were tested: A targeted sequencing assay entailing very deep sequencing across 507 genes for somatic mutations such as single-nucleotide variants and small insertions and/or deletions; a novel, whole-genome sequencing assay to detect somatic gene copy number changes; and a novel, whole-genome methylation sequencing assay to detect abnormal epigenetic changes.

 

 


Sequencing was also performed on DNA from white blood cells. “That’s very important. The white blood cells are rich with mutations that can pollute the DNA and make you think that there is cancer present in the cell-free DNA,” Dr. Oxnard explained. “You screen out this interference from the white blood cells and other biologic noise, and you are left with the final features: mutations, copy number variations, and methylation signatures that then go into the final assays being studied.”

Results showed that when assay specificity was 98%, sensitivity for early-stage (stage I-IIIA) lung cancer ranged from 38% to 51%, and sensitivity for late-stage (stage IIIB-IV) lung cancer ranged from 87% to 91%.

Among five presumed cancer-free individuals having positive results on all three assays, two subsequently received a cancer diagnosis (one with stage III ovarian cancer, one with stage II endometrial cancer).

An additional 19 cancer types across all stages were tested in the CCGA substudy. Early results for breast, gastrointestinal, gynecologic, blood, and other cancers were also reported at the meeting (abstracts 536, 12021, and 12003).
 

 


Dr. Oxnard disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with AstraZeneca, Inivata, Boehringer Ingelheim, Takeda, Genentech/Roche, Novartis, Loxo Oncology, Ignyta, DropWorks, and GRAIL, and that he has patents, royalties, and/or other intellectual property with Chugai Pharmaceutical, Bio-Rad, Sysmex, and Guardant Health. The study was funded by GRAIL.

SOURCE: Oxnard GR et al. ASCO 2018. Abstract LBA8501.

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A set of blood-based assays that search for abnormalities in cell-free DNA show moderately good sensitivity for detecting lung cancer in its early stages, according to the first interim report from a substudy of the large, ongoing Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas (CCGA).

“Lung cancer screening with low-dose CT is known to improve outcomes. And yet, CT-based lung cancer screening is not widely adopted,” said lead study author Geoffrey R. Oxnard, MD, associate professor of medicine at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, in a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, where the study was reported. “Criticisms of low-dose CT include the risk of false positives and overdiagnosis. We proposed to investigate an untapped opportunity for cancer detection, which is using cell-free DNA.”

Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Geoffrey R. Oxnard

Main substudy results among 164 patients with lung cancer and 923 comparable individuals without known cancer showed that at a specificity of 98%, the three assays evaluated detected up to 51% of early-stage (stage I-IIIA) lung cancers and up to 91% of late-stage (stage IIIB-IV) lung cancers. And among the healthy participants with false-positive results for lung cancer, several were ultimately found to have cancers of other types.

“This first interim analysis of the CCGA study demonstrates that comprehensive sequencing of the plasma cell-free DNA can generate high-quality data across the entire genome, and it permits noninvasive cancer detection. The assays can detect lung cancer across stages, across histologies, across populations,” Dr. Oxnard said.

“Together, these results support the promise of using cell-free, DNA-based assays to develop an early cancer detection test with high specificity. Further assay and clinical development is ongoing: There is a separate prospective trial enrolling, the STRIVE study, and there remain thousands of patients still on this CCGA study to be analyzed for further optimization and focusing of this assay towards an eventual cancer diagnostic.”

The cohort studied was not a screening population, so the assays’ performance cannot be compared with that of low-dose CT at this point, he said. But the hypothesis going forward is that the assays will have comparatively higher specificity, sparing some patients an unnecessary diagnostic work-up.

The population in which the final blood test might be used will depend on its diagnostic performance once the assays are fully refined and clinic ready, which will take some time, according to Dr. Oxnard. However, “2 years ago, this was a pipe dream. Two years ago, it was completely just a brainstorm that had no data to support it, and I didn’t believe that this could be done. Today, we actually have data to show that this is really feasible to find early-stage cancer in the blood. So this is a huge step forward and actually means that this is going to be a reality.”

 

 



Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. David Graham

“This is an important first step towards an easier way to detect lung cancer at earlier and hopefully more curable stages,” agreed ASCO Expert David Graham, MD, who is also medical director at the Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C. “If the promise of this report holds, we could easily see a day when a person could be screened for lung cancer and possibly other cancers simply by going into their regular doctor’s office for a blood draw.”

Study details

The CCGA study has enrolled more than 12,000 of its planned 15,000 participants (70% with cancer, 30% without) across 142 U.S. and Canadian sites.

The substudy reported had a development cohort (118 patients with lung cancer, 561 individuals without cancer) and a validation cohort (46 patients with lung cancer, 362 individuals without cancer), with the lung cancer and noncancer groups matched on age, race, and body mass index. “Having a comparable control cohort is very important in developing such a diagnostic for accurate analysis of the potential false-positive rate,” Dr. Oxnard noted.

Three prototype assays were tested: A targeted sequencing assay entailing very deep sequencing across 507 genes for somatic mutations such as single-nucleotide variants and small insertions and/or deletions; a novel, whole-genome sequencing assay to detect somatic gene copy number changes; and a novel, whole-genome methylation sequencing assay to detect abnormal epigenetic changes.

 

 


Sequencing was also performed on DNA from white blood cells. “That’s very important. The white blood cells are rich with mutations that can pollute the DNA and make you think that there is cancer present in the cell-free DNA,” Dr. Oxnard explained. “You screen out this interference from the white blood cells and other biologic noise, and you are left with the final features: mutations, copy number variations, and methylation signatures that then go into the final assays being studied.”

Results showed that when assay specificity was 98%, sensitivity for early-stage (stage I-IIIA) lung cancer ranged from 38% to 51%, and sensitivity for late-stage (stage IIIB-IV) lung cancer ranged from 87% to 91%.

Among five presumed cancer-free individuals having positive results on all three assays, two subsequently received a cancer diagnosis (one with stage III ovarian cancer, one with stage II endometrial cancer).

An additional 19 cancer types across all stages were tested in the CCGA substudy. Early results for breast, gastrointestinal, gynecologic, blood, and other cancers were also reported at the meeting (abstracts 536, 12021, and 12003).
 

 


Dr. Oxnard disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with AstraZeneca, Inivata, Boehringer Ingelheim, Takeda, Genentech/Roche, Novartis, Loxo Oncology, Ignyta, DropWorks, and GRAIL, and that he has patents, royalties, and/or other intellectual property with Chugai Pharmaceutical, Bio-Rad, Sysmex, and Guardant Health. The study was funded by GRAIL.

SOURCE: Oxnard GR et al. ASCO 2018. Abstract LBA8501.

 

A set of blood-based assays that search for abnormalities in cell-free DNA show moderately good sensitivity for detecting lung cancer in its early stages, according to the first interim report from a substudy of the large, ongoing Circulating Cell-free Genome Atlas (CCGA).

“Lung cancer screening with low-dose CT is known to improve outcomes. And yet, CT-based lung cancer screening is not widely adopted,” said lead study author Geoffrey R. Oxnard, MD, associate professor of medicine at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, in a press briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, where the study was reported. “Criticisms of low-dose CT include the risk of false positives and overdiagnosis. We proposed to investigate an untapped opportunity for cancer detection, which is using cell-free DNA.”

Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. Geoffrey R. Oxnard

Main substudy results among 164 patients with lung cancer and 923 comparable individuals without known cancer showed that at a specificity of 98%, the three assays evaluated detected up to 51% of early-stage (stage I-IIIA) lung cancers and up to 91% of late-stage (stage IIIB-IV) lung cancers. And among the healthy participants with false-positive results for lung cancer, several were ultimately found to have cancers of other types.

“This first interim analysis of the CCGA study demonstrates that comprehensive sequencing of the plasma cell-free DNA can generate high-quality data across the entire genome, and it permits noninvasive cancer detection. The assays can detect lung cancer across stages, across histologies, across populations,” Dr. Oxnard said.

“Together, these results support the promise of using cell-free, DNA-based assays to develop an early cancer detection test with high specificity. Further assay and clinical development is ongoing: There is a separate prospective trial enrolling, the STRIVE study, and there remain thousands of patients still on this CCGA study to be analyzed for further optimization and focusing of this assay towards an eventual cancer diagnostic.”

The cohort studied was not a screening population, so the assays’ performance cannot be compared with that of low-dose CT at this point, he said. But the hypothesis going forward is that the assays will have comparatively higher specificity, sparing some patients an unnecessary diagnostic work-up.

The population in which the final blood test might be used will depend on its diagnostic performance once the assays are fully refined and clinic ready, which will take some time, according to Dr. Oxnard. However, “2 years ago, this was a pipe dream. Two years ago, it was completely just a brainstorm that had no data to support it, and I didn’t believe that this could be done. Today, we actually have data to show that this is really feasible to find early-stage cancer in the blood. So this is a huge step forward and actually means that this is going to be a reality.”

 

 



Susan London/MDedge News
Dr. David Graham

“This is an important first step towards an easier way to detect lung cancer at earlier and hopefully more curable stages,” agreed ASCO Expert David Graham, MD, who is also medical director at the Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C. “If the promise of this report holds, we could easily see a day when a person could be screened for lung cancer and possibly other cancers simply by going into their regular doctor’s office for a blood draw.”

Study details

The CCGA study has enrolled more than 12,000 of its planned 15,000 participants (70% with cancer, 30% without) across 142 U.S. and Canadian sites.

The substudy reported had a development cohort (118 patients with lung cancer, 561 individuals without cancer) and a validation cohort (46 patients with lung cancer, 362 individuals without cancer), with the lung cancer and noncancer groups matched on age, race, and body mass index. “Having a comparable control cohort is very important in developing such a diagnostic for accurate analysis of the potential false-positive rate,” Dr. Oxnard noted.

Three prototype assays were tested: A targeted sequencing assay entailing very deep sequencing across 507 genes for somatic mutations such as single-nucleotide variants and small insertions and/or deletions; a novel, whole-genome sequencing assay to detect somatic gene copy number changes; and a novel, whole-genome methylation sequencing assay to detect abnormal epigenetic changes.

 

 


Sequencing was also performed on DNA from white blood cells. “That’s very important. The white blood cells are rich with mutations that can pollute the DNA and make you think that there is cancer present in the cell-free DNA,” Dr. Oxnard explained. “You screen out this interference from the white blood cells and other biologic noise, and you are left with the final features: mutations, copy number variations, and methylation signatures that then go into the final assays being studied.”

Results showed that when assay specificity was 98%, sensitivity for early-stage (stage I-IIIA) lung cancer ranged from 38% to 51%, and sensitivity for late-stage (stage IIIB-IV) lung cancer ranged from 87% to 91%.

Among five presumed cancer-free individuals having positive results on all three assays, two subsequently received a cancer diagnosis (one with stage III ovarian cancer, one with stage II endometrial cancer).

An additional 19 cancer types across all stages were tested in the CCGA substudy. Early results for breast, gastrointestinal, gynecologic, blood, and other cancers were also reported at the meeting (abstracts 536, 12021, and 12003).
 

 


Dr. Oxnard disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with AstraZeneca, Inivata, Boehringer Ingelheim, Takeda, Genentech/Roche, Novartis, Loxo Oncology, Ignyta, DropWorks, and GRAIL, and that he has patents, royalties, and/or other intellectual property with Chugai Pharmaceutical, Bio-Rad, Sysmex, and Guardant Health. The study was funded by GRAIL.

SOURCE: Oxnard GR et al. ASCO 2018. Abstract LBA8501.

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Key clinical point: Three blood-based assays performed moderately well for identifying lung cancer in early, potentially curable stages.

Major finding: At 98% specificity, the assays had sensitivities of 38%-51% for detecting lung cancers of stage I-IIIA.

Study details: A case-control study of circulating cell-free DNA assays among 164 patients with lung cancer and 923 comparable individuals without cancer.

Disclosures: Dr. Oxnard disclosed that he has a consulting or advisory role with AstraZeneca, Inivata, Boehringer Ingelheim, Takeda, Genentech/Roche, Novartis, Loxo Oncology, Ignyta, DropWorks, and GRAIL, and that he has patents, royalties, and/or other intellectual property with Chugai Pharmaceutical, Bio-Rad, Sysmex, and Guardant Health. The study was funded by GRAIL.

Source: Oxnard GR et al. ASCO 2018. Abstract LBA8501.

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Everolimus/exemestane improves PFS of ER+/HER2– breast cancer vs. everolimus alone

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CHICAGO – For women with estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer resistant to endocrine therapy, the combination of everolimus and exemestane had better efficacy than did everolimus alone, but single-agent capecitabine appeared to offer benefit comparable to that of the combination therapy, results of the BOLERO-6 trial suggest.

Among 309 postmenopausal women with ER-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, the combination of everolimus (Afinitor) and exemestane (Aromasin and generics) was associated with a 26% improvement in progression-free survival (PFS) compared with everolimus alone, reported Guy Jerusalem, MD, PhD, of Liege University, Belgium.

There was also, however, a numerical but not statistically significant difference in PFS favoring capecitabine (Xeloda and generics) “which may be attributed to various baseline characteristics favoring capecitabine, and potential informative censoring,” he said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“We have noted in BOLERO-6 a better-than-expected outcome in median progression-free survival of capecitabine compared with the previously reported 4.1 to 7.9 months median progression-free survival,” he said.

BOLERO-6, results of which were published online June 3 in JAMA Oncology, was a postmarketing study by the sponsors to fulfill commitments to both the Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency to estimate the treatment benefit with combined everolimus and exemestane vs. monotherapy with everolimus or capecitabine in patients with ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer that progressed during nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor therapy.

Patients from 83 centers in 18 countries were enrolled in the open label, phase 2 study and randomly assigned to receive oral everolimus 10 mg daily with oral exemestane 25 mg daily, everolimus at the same dose alone, or oral capecitabine 1,250 mg/m2 twice daily for 2 weeks on, 1 week off.

 

 


The trial was not powered for statistical comparisons between arms, but was instead designed with the primary objective of estimated investigator-assessed PFS for the combination vs. everolimus alone.

At baseline, more patients assigned to capecitabine vs. everolimus-containing regimens were younger than 65, white, had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group status of 0 (fully active), and had bone-only metastases. In addition, fewer patients in the capecitabine arm had three or more metastatic sites, Dr. Jerusalem noted,

For the primary analysis, the median PFS with everolimus/exemestane was 8.4 months, compared with 6.8 months for everolimus alone. The estimated hazard ratio (HR) for PFS with everolimus/exemestane vs. everolimus alone was 0.74 (90% confidence interval [CI], 0.57-0.97)

In contrast, median PFS with capecitabine was 9.6 months, with a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 1.26 for the combination (90% CI, 0.96-1.66).

 

 


A stratified multivariate Cox regression model controlling for baseline difference and known prognostic factor yielded an HR for PFS of 1.15 (90% CI, 0.86-1.52) for the combination.

Censoring of patients was more frequent in the capecitabine arm (33% vs. 23% in the combination arm), which included 20% of patients on capecitabine who were censored for starting on a new antineoplastic therapy vs. 9% of patients on everolimus/exemestane.

The median time to treatment failure was 5.8 months with the combination, vs. 4.2 months with everolimus alone (HR, 0.66, 90% CI, 0.52-0.4), and 6.2 months with capecitabine alone (HR, 1.03, 90% CI, 0.81-1.31).

Median overall survival was 23.1 months in the combination arm, 29.3 months in the everolimus arm, and 25.6 months in the capecitabine arm. There were no statistically significant differences in overall survival among the groups.

 

 


Grade 3 or greater adverse events were more frequent in the combination vs. everolimus arms, and comparable between the combination and capecitabine arms, Dr. Jerusalem said.

Serious adverse events of any grade were more frequent in the combination arm than in the other two arms, but there were no significant differences in discontinuations due to adverse events

“The results of the present study suggest that mTOR inhibitor and endocrine therapy combinations remain important for aromatase inhibitor–refractory disease. Safety and PFS with everolimus plus exemestane in this study were consistent with BOLERO-2 and are now supported by real-world evidence,” the investigators wrote.

“The take home from the BOLERO-6 trial is that the progression-free survival for the combination of everolimus and exemestane is superior to everolimus alone, and is in line with data from the BOLERO-2 trial, and also the PrE0102 study, demonstrating the consistent activity of mTOR inhibition in combination with endocrine therapy in the aromatase inhibitor resistance setting, and this supports our use of the combination in the endocrine resistant patients,” said Cynthia X. Ma, MD, PhD, of Washington University, St. Louis, the invited discussant.

Novartis funded the study. Dr Jerusalem received research funding from Novartis and Roche; honoraria from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Celgene, Amgen, BMS, and Puma Technology; and nonfinancial support from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Amgen, and BMS. Dr. Ma reported consulting/advising, travel expenses, and institutional research funding from Novartis and others.

SOURCE: Jerusalem G et al. ASCO 2018 Abstract 1005

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CHICAGO – For women with estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer resistant to endocrine therapy, the combination of everolimus and exemestane had better efficacy than did everolimus alone, but single-agent capecitabine appeared to offer benefit comparable to that of the combination therapy, results of the BOLERO-6 trial suggest.

Among 309 postmenopausal women with ER-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, the combination of everolimus (Afinitor) and exemestane (Aromasin and generics) was associated with a 26% improvement in progression-free survival (PFS) compared with everolimus alone, reported Guy Jerusalem, MD, PhD, of Liege University, Belgium.

There was also, however, a numerical but not statistically significant difference in PFS favoring capecitabine (Xeloda and generics) “which may be attributed to various baseline characteristics favoring capecitabine, and potential informative censoring,” he said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“We have noted in BOLERO-6 a better-than-expected outcome in median progression-free survival of capecitabine compared with the previously reported 4.1 to 7.9 months median progression-free survival,” he said.

BOLERO-6, results of which were published online June 3 in JAMA Oncology, was a postmarketing study by the sponsors to fulfill commitments to both the Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency to estimate the treatment benefit with combined everolimus and exemestane vs. monotherapy with everolimus or capecitabine in patients with ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer that progressed during nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor therapy.

Patients from 83 centers in 18 countries were enrolled in the open label, phase 2 study and randomly assigned to receive oral everolimus 10 mg daily with oral exemestane 25 mg daily, everolimus at the same dose alone, or oral capecitabine 1,250 mg/m2 twice daily for 2 weeks on, 1 week off.

 

 


The trial was not powered for statistical comparisons between arms, but was instead designed with the primary objective of estimated investigator-assessed PFS for the combination vs. everolimus alone.

At baseline, more patients assigned to capecitabine vs. everolimus-containing regimens were younger than 65, white, had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group status of 0 (fully active), and had bone-only metastases. In addition, fewer patients in the capecitabine arm had three or more metastatic sites, Dr. Jerusalem noted,

For the primary analysis, the median PFS with everolimus/exemestane was 8.4 months, compared with 6.8 months for everolimus alone. The estimated hazard ratio (HR) for PFS with everolimus/exemestane vs. everolimus alone was 0.74 (90% confidence interval [CI], 0.57-0.97)

In contrast, median PFS with capecitabine was 9.6 months, with a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 1.26 for the combination (90% CI, 0.96-1.66).

 

 


A stratified multivariate Cox regression model controlling for baseline difference and known prognostic factor yielded an HR for PFS of 1.15 (90% CI, 0.86-1.52) for the combination.

Censoring of patients was more frequent in the capecitabine arm (33% vs. 23% in the combination arm), which included 20% of patients on capecitabine who were censored for starting on a new antineoplastic therapy vs. 9% of patients on everolimus/exemestane.

The median time to treatment failure was 5.8 months with the combination, vs. 4.2 months with everolimus alone (HR, 0.66, 90% CI, 0.52-0.4), and 6.2 months with capecitabine alone (HR, 1.03, 90% CI, 0.81-1.31).

Median overall survival was 23.1 months in the combination arm, 29.3 months in the everolimus arm, and 25.6 months in the capecitabine arm. There were no statistically significant differences in overall survival among the groups.

 

 


Grade 3 or greater adverse events were more frequent in the combination vs. everolimus arms, and comparable between the combination and capecitabine arms, Dr. Jerusalem said.

Serious adverse events of any grade were more frequent in the combination arm than in the other two arms, but there were no significant differences in discontinuations due to adverse events

“The results of the present study suggest that mTOR inhibitor and endocrine therapy combinations remain important for aromatase inhibitor–refractory disease. Safety and PFS with everolimus plus exemestane in this study were consistent with BOLERO-2 and are now supported by real-world evidence,” the investigators wrote.

“The take home from the BOLERO-6 trial is that the progression-free survival for the combination of everolimus and exemestane is superior to everolimus alone, and is in line with data from the BOLERO-2 trial, and also the PrE0102 study, demonstrating the consistent activity of mTOR inhibition in combination with endocrine therapy in the aromatase inhibitor resistance setting, and this supports our use of the combination in the endocrine resistant patients,” said Cynthia X. Ma, MD, PhD, of Washington University, St. Louis, the invited discussant.

Novartis funded the study. Dr Jerusalem received research funding from Novartis and Roche; honoraria from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Celgene, Amgen, BMS, and Puma Technology; and nonfinancial support from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Amgen, and BMS. Dr. Ma reported consulting/advising, travel expenses, and institutional research funding from Novartis and others.

SOURCE: Jerusalem G et al. ASCO 2018 Abstract 1005

 

CHICAGO – For women with estrogen receptor–positive breast cancer resistant to endocrine therapy, the combination of everolimus and exemestane had better efficacy than did everolimus alone, but single-agent capecitabine appeared to offer benefit comparable to that of the combination therapy, results of the BOLERO-6 trial suggest.

Among 309 postmenopausal women with ER-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer, the combination of everolimus (Afinitor) and exemestane (Aromasin and generics) was associated with a 26% improvement in progression-free survival (PFS) compared with everolimus alone, reported Guy Jerusalem, MD, PhD, of Liege University, Belgium.

There was also, however, a numerical but not statistically significant difference in PFS favoring capecitabine (Xeloda and generics) “which may be attributed to various baseline characteristics favoring capecitabine, and potential informative censoring,” he said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“We have noted in BOLERO-6 a better-than-expected outcome in median progression-free survival of capecitabine compared with the previously reported 4.1 to 7.9 months median progression-free survival,” he said.

BOLERO-6, results of which were published online June 3 in JAMA Oncology, was a postmarketing study by the sponsors to fulfill commitments to both the Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency to estimate the treatment benefit with combined everolimus and exemestane vs. monotherapy with everolimus or capecitabine in patients with ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer that progressed during nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor therapy.

Patients from 83 centers in 18 countries were enrolled in the open label, phase 2 study and randomly assigned to receive oral everolimus 10 mg daily with oral exemestane 25 mg daily, everolimus at the same dose alone, or oral capecitabine 1,250 mg/m2 twice daily for 2 weeks on, 1 week off.

 

 


The trial was not powered for statistical comparisons between arms, but was instead designed with the primary objective of estimated investigator-assessed PFS for the combination vs. everolimus alone.

At baseline, more patients assigned to capecitabine vs. everolimus-containing regimens were younger than 65, white, had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group status of 0 (fully active), and had bone-only metastases. In addition, fewer patients in the capecitabine arm had three or more metastatic sites, Dr. Jerusalem noted,

For the primary analysis, the median PFS with everolimus/exemestane was 8.4 months, compared with 6.8 months for everolimus alone. The estimated hazard ratio (HR) for PFS with everolimus/exemestane vs. everolimus alone was 0.74 (90% confidence interval [CI], 0.57-0.97)

In contrast, median PFS with capecitabine was 9.6 months, with a nonsignificant hazard ratio of 1.26 for the combination (90% CI, 0.96-1.66).

 

 


A stratified multivariate Cox regression model controlling for baseline difference and known prognostic factor yielded an HR for PFS of 1.15 (90% CI, 0.86-1.52) for the combination.

Censoring of patients was more frequent in the capecitabine arm (33% vs. 23% in the combination arm), which included 20% of patients on capecitabine who were censored for starting on a new antineoplastic therapy vs. 9% of patients on everolimus/exemestane.

The median time to treatment failure was 5.8 months with the combination, vs. 4.2 months with everolimus alone (HR, 0.66, 90% CI, 0.52-0.4), and 6.2 months with capecitabine alone (HR, 1.03, 90% CI, 0.81-1.31).

Median overall survival was 23.1 months in the combination arm, 29.3 months in the everolimus arm, and 25.6 months in the capecitabine arm. There were no statistically significant differences in overall survival among the groups.

 

 


Grade 3 or greater adverse events were more frequent in the combination vs. everolimus arms, and comparable between the combination and capecitabine arms, Dr. Jerusalem said.

Serious adverse events of any grade were more frequent in the combination arm than in the other two arms, but there were no significant differences in discontinuations due to adverse events

“The results of the present study suggest that mTOR inhibitor and endocrine therapy combinations remain important for aromatase inhibitor–refractory disease. Safety and PFS with everolimus plus exemestane in this study were consistent with BOLERO-2 and are now supported by real-world evidence,” the investigators wrote.

“The take home from the BOLERO-6 trial is that the progression-free survival for the combination of everolimus and exemestane is superior to everolimus alone, and is in line with data from the BOLERO-2 trial, and also the PrE0102 study, demonstrating the consistent activity of mTOR inhibition in combination with endocrine therapy in the aromatase inhibitor resistance setting, and this supports our use of the combination in the endocrine resistant patients,” said Cynthia X. Ma, MD, PhD, of Washington University, St. Louis, the invited discussant.

Novartis funded the study. Dr Jerusalem received research funding from Novartis and Roche; honoraria from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Celgene, Amgen, BMS, and Puma Technology; and nonfinancial support from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Amgen, and BMS. Dr. Ma reported consulting/advising, travel expenses, and institutional research funding from Novartis and others.

SOURCE: Jerusalem G et al. ASCO 2018 Abstract 1005

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Key clinical point: The combination of everolimus and exemestane had better efficacy than did everolimus alone in women with ER+/HER2– breast cancer resistant to endocrine therapy.

Major finding: Median PFS with everolimus/exemestane was 8.4 months vs 6.8 months for everolimus.

Study details: Randomized, open label, phase 2 trial of 309 women with ER-positive, HER2-negative breast cancer that progressed during nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor therapy.

Disclosures: Novartis funded the study. Dr Jerusalem received research funding from Novartis and Roche; honoraria from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Celgene, Amgen, BMS, and Puma Technology; and nonfinancial support from Novartis, Roche, Pfizer, Lilly, Amgen, and BMS. Dr. Ma reported consulting/advising, travel expenses, and institutional research funding from Novartis and others.

Source: Jerusalem G et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 1005.

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Pomalidomide triplet significantly extends PFS in R/R MM

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©ASCO/Scott Morgan 2018
Poster session at ASCO 2018

CHICAGO—The addition of pomalidomide to bortezomib and low‐dose dexamethasone (PVd) significantly improves progression-free survival (PFS) in lenalidomide-exposed patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) multiple myeloma (MM), a new study reveals.

Up until now, pomalidomide and dexamethasone (Pd) had been the only therapy investigated exclusively after lenalidomide therapy, according to Paul G. Richardson, MD.

Now, he said, “a triple combination of PVd demonstrated promising activity in early phase clinical trials of lenalidomide-refractory patients.”

Dr Richardson, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, presented the findings of the phase 3 OPTIMISMM trial (abstract 8001) at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting.

The oral immunomodulatory agent pomalidomide, a standard-of-care treatment in R/R MM, has demonstrated synergistic anti-myeloma activity with dexamethasone and proteasome inhibitors.

A combination of pomalidomide and dexamethasone is indicated for MM patients after 2 or more prior therapies, including lenalidomide and a proteasome inhibitor.

“Lenalidomide is an established therapy in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma,” Dr Richardson explained. “Therefore, patients for whom lenalidomide is no longer a treatment option represent a clinically relevant population with unmet need.”

Phase 3 OPTIMISMM trial (NCT01734928)

Dr Richardson reported the final PFS and safety data from the first phase 3 pomalidomide triplet trial comparing PVd against bortezomib and dexamethasone (Vd) in an entirely post-lenalidomide treated population.

The 559 patients had 1 to 3 prior lines of therapy and 2 or more cycles of prior lenalidomide. They were randomized to receive PVd (281 patients, median age 67 years) or Vd (278 patients, median age 68 years).

In 21-day cycles, patients received pomalidomide 4 mg per day on days 1-14 (PVd arm only); bortezomib 1.3 mg/m² on days 1, 4, 8, and 11 of cycles 1-8 and on day 1 and 8 of cycles 9 and higher; and dexamethasone 20 mg per day (10 mg for those over age 75) on the days of and after bortezomib.

The primary endpoint was PFS.

Results

After a median follow-up of 16 months, “PVd reduced the risk of progression or death by 39% compared with Vd,” Dr Richardson said.

Median PFS was 11.2 months in the PVd group and 7.1 months in the Vd group. Overall survival data are not mature.

The overall response rate was significantly higher with PVd (82.2%) vs Vd (50%).

And the overall response rate was even higher in patients with only 1 prior line of therapy (90.1% vs 54.8%, respectively).

“PVd led to deeper responses with higher stringent complete response/complete response and more very good partial responses than Vd,” Dr Richardson noted.

“PFS was improved with PVd vs Vd across patient subgroups and regardless of lenalidomide refractoriness. The PFS benefit with PVd was maintained through the next line of therapy.”

He reported longer treatment duration and exposure with PVd compared with Vd.

Safety

The safety profile was consistent with known toxicities associated with pomalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone, he said.

Most common grade 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse events were higher with PVd than Vd, including neutropenia (42% vs 9%) and infections (31% vs 18%).

In conclusion, Dr Richardson said, “These results support the use of PVd in first relapse in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma and prior exposure to lenalidomide.”

Future analyses of the data will include correlatives, minimal residual disease, and quality of life, he said.

The trial was sponsored by Celgene. 

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©ASCO/Scott Morgan 2018
Poster session at ASCO 2018

CHICAGO—The addition of pomalidomide to bortezomib and low‐dose dexamethasone (PVd) significantly improves progression-free survival (PFS) in lenalidomide-exposed patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) multiple myeloma (MM), a new study reveals.

Up until now, pomalidomide and dexamethasone (Pd) had been the only therapy investigated exclusively after lenalidomide therapy, according to Paul G. Richardson, MD.

Now, he said, “a triple combination of PVd demonstrated promising activity in early phase clinical trials of lenalidomide-refractory patients.”

Dr Richardson, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, presented the findings of the phase 3 OPTIMISMM trial (abstract 8001) at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting.

The oral immunomodulatory agent pomalidomide, a standard-of-care treatment in R/R MM, has demonstrated synergistic anti-myeloma activity with dexamethasone and proteasome inhibitors.

A combination of pomalidomide and dexamethasone is indicated for MM patients after 2 or more prior therapies, including lenalidomide and a proteasome inhibitor.

“Lenalidomide is an established therapy in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma,” Dr Richardson explained. “Therefore, patients for whom lenalidomide is no longer a treatment option represent a clinically relevant population with unmet need.”

Phase 3 OPTIMISMM trial (NCT01734928)

Dr Richardson reported the final PFS and safety data from the first phase 3 pomalidomide triplet trial comparing PVd against bortezomib and dexamethasone (Vd) in an entirely post-lenalidomide treated population.

The 559 patients had 1 to 3 prior lines of therapy and 2 or more cycles of prior lenalidomide. They were randomized to receive PVd (281 patients, median age 67 years) or Vd (278 patients, median age 68 years).

In 21-day cycles, patients received pomalidomide 4 mg per day on days 1-14 (PVd arm only); bortezomib 1.3 mg/m² on days 1, 4, 8, and 11 of cycles 1-8 and on day 1 and 8 of cycles 9 and higher; and dexamethasone 20 mg per day (10 mg for those over age 75) on the days of and after bortezomib.

The primary endpoint was PFS.

Results

After a median follow-up of 16 months, “PVd reduced the risk of progression or death by 39% compared with Vd,” Dr Richardson said.

Median PFS was 11.2 months in the PVd group and 7.1 months in the Vd group. Overall survival data are not mature.

The overall response rate was significantly higher with PVd (82.2%) vs Vd (50%).

And the overall response rate was even higher in patients with only 1 prior line of therapy (90.1% vs 54.8%, respectively).

“PVd led to deeper responses with higher stringent complete response/complete response and more very good partial responses than Vd,” Dr Richardson noted.

“PFS was improved with PVd vs Vd across patient subgroups and regardless of lenalidomide refractoriness. The PFS benefit with PVd was maintained through the next line of therapy.”

He reported longer treatment duration and exposure with PVd compared with Vd.

Safety

The safety profile was consistent with known toxicities associated with pomalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone, he said.

Most common grade 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse events were higher with PVd than Vd, including neutropenia (42% vs 9%) and infections (31% vs 18%).

In conclusion, Dr Richardson said, “These results support the use of PVd in first relapse in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma and prior exposure to lenalidomide.”

Future analyses of the data will include correlatives, minimal residual disease, and quality of life, he said.

The trial was sponsored by Celgene. 

©ASCO/Scott Morgan 2018
Poster session at ASCO 2018

CHICAGO—The addition of pomalidomide to bortezomib and low‐dose dexamethasone (PVd) significantly improves progression-free survival (PFS) in lenalidomide-exposed patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) multiple myeloma (MM), a new study reveals.

Up until now, pomalidomide and dexamethasone (Pd) had been the only therapy investigated exclusively after lenalidomide therapy, according to Paul G. Richardson, MD.

Now, he said, “a triple combination of PVd demonstrated promising activity in early phase clinical trials of lenalidomide-refractory patients.”

Dr Richardson, of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, presented the findings of the phase 3 OPTIMISMM trial (abstract 8001) at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting.

The oral immunomodulatory agent pomalidomide, a standard-of-care treatment in R/R MM, has demonstrated synergistic anti-myeloma activity with dexamethasone and proteasome inhibitors.

A combination of pomalidomide and dexamethasone is indicated for MM patients after 2 or more prior therapies, including lenalidomide and a proteasome inhibitor.

“Lenalidomide is an established therapy in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma,” Dr Richardson explained. “Therefore, patients for whom lenalidomide is no longer a treatment option represent a clinically relevant population with unmet need.”

Phase 3 OPTIMISMM trial (NCT01734928)

Dr Richardson reported the final PFS and safety data from the first phase 3 pomalidomide triplet trial comparing PVd against bortezomib and dexamethasone (Vd) in an entirely post-lenalidomide treated population.

The 559 patients had 1 to 3 prior lines of therapy and 2 or more cycles of prior lenalidomide. They were randomized to receive PVd (281 patients, median age 67 years) or Vd (278 patients, median age 68 years).

In 21-day cycles, patients received pomalidomide 4 mg per day on days 1-14 (PVd arm only); bortezomib 1.3 mg/m² on days 1, 4, 8, and 11 of cycles 1-8 and on day 1 and 8 of cycles 9 and higher; and dexamethasone 20 mg per day (10 mg for those over age 75) on the days of and after bortezomib.

The primary endpoint was PFS.

Results

After a median follow-up of 16 months, “PVd reduced the risk of progression or death by 39% compared with Vd,” Dr Richardson said.

Median PFS was 11.2 months in the PVd group and 7.1 months in the Vd group. Overall survival data are not mature.

The overall response rate was significantly higher with PVd (82.2%) vs Vd (50%).

And the overall response rate was even higher in patients with only 1 prior line of therapy (90.1% vs 54.8%, respectively).

“PVd led to deeper responses with higher stringent complete response/complete response and more very good partial responses than Vd,” Dr Richardson noted.

“PFS was improved with PVd vs Vd across patient subgroups and regardless of lenalidomide refractoriness. The PFS benefit with PVd was maintained through the next line of therapy.”

He reported longer treatment duration and exposure with PVd compared with Vd.

Safety

The safety profile was consistent with known toxicities associated with pomalidomide and low-dose dexamethasone, he said.

Most common grade 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse events were higher with PVd than Vd, including neutropenia (42% vs 9%) and infections (31% vs 18%).

In conclusion, Dr Richardson said, “These results support the use of PVd in first relapse in patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma and prior exposure to lenalidomide.”

Future analyses of the data will include correlatives, minimal residual disease, and quality of life, he said.

The trial was sponsored by Celgene. 

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Polatuzumab plus BR improves efficacy in DLBCL

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Attendees at ASCO 2018 ©ASCO/Zach Boyden-Holmes 2018

 

CHICAGO—Polatuzumab vedotin, when added to bendamustine (B) and rituximab (R), significantly improved response and survival rates in a cohort of patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), according to a phase 2 study.

 

By contrast, there were no such improvements in a cohort of follicular lymphoma (FL) patients, at least in short-term follow-up, investigator Laurie Helen Sehn, MD, of the BC Cancer Agency in Vancouver, Canada, said at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting.

 

However, the improvement in overall survival in DLBCL patients is “remarkable,” Dr Sehn affirmed in an oral presentation (abstract 7507).

 

“Based on these encouraging results, polatuzumab vedotin has received breakthrough therapy designation and priority medicines designation by the FDA and EMA for patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL,” she said.

 

Polatuzumab-BR study (NCT02257567)

 

The study by Dr Sehn and colleagues included a cohort of 80 DLBCL patients randomized to BR or polatuzumab-BR for 6 planned 21-day cycles.

 

Investigators randomized another cohort of 80 FL patients to BR or polatuzumab-BR for 6 planned 28-day cycles.

 

The primary endpoint was complete response (CR) assessed by fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) at 6 to 8 weeks after the end of treatment.

 

DLBCL patients

 

A total of 40% of polatuzumab-BR-treated DLBCL patients achieved CR at the end of treatment, versus 15% of BR-treated patients (P=0.012).

 

That CR improvement translated into a significantly higher progression-free survival (PFS) (6.7 months for polatuzumab-BR vs 2.0 months for BR, P<0.0001) and overall survival (11.8 months versus 4.7 months, P=0.0008), according to Dr Sehn.

 

The FDG-PET CR rates were higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm regardless of the number of prior lines of treatment for DLBCL, and regardless of relapsed versus refractory status, Dr. Sehn added.

 

FL patients

 

By contrast, in the FL cohort, the FDG-PET CR rate was high for both arms, at 69% for polatuzumab-BR and 63% for BR.

 

And there was no significant difference in progression-free survival (P=0.58) with “relatively short-term follow-up,” she said.

 

Adverse events

 

The most common grades 3 – 5 adverse events for both DLBCL and FL patients were higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm than the BR arm and included cytopenias, febrile neutropenia, and infections.

 

Serious AEs were also higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm and included febrile neutropenia for both FL and DLBCL patients and infection for FL patients.

 

Five percent of FL patients and 18% of DLBCL had a grade 5 event.

 

Commentary

 

Whether polatuzumab vedotin will change treatment paradigms for DLBCL patients may be answered by the ongoing POLARIX study, according to Alison Moskowitz, MD, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, NY.

 

The randomized phase 3 POLARIX study (abstract TPS7589) is comparing polatuzumab plus R-CHP to R-CHOP in patients with previously untreated DLBCL.

 

“Certainly, there are patients who do very well with R-CHOP chemotherapy alone, and so we need to learn whether this is necessary for all patients, or only the high-risk patients,” Dr Moskowitz said in a talk at ASCO commenting on the results of the polatuzumab-BR study.

 

Hoffman-LaRoche is the sponsor of the study. 

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Attendees at ASCO 2018 ©ASCO/Zach Boyden-Holmes 2018

 

CHICAGO—Polatuzumab vedotin, when added to bendamustine (B) and rituximab (R), significantly improved response and survival rates in a cohort of patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), according to a phase 2 study.

 

By contrast, there were no such improvements in a cohort of follicular lymphoma (FL) patients, at least in short-term follow-up, investigator Laurie Helen Sehn, MD, of the BC Cancer Agency in Vancouver, Canada, said at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting.

 

However, the improvement in overall survival in DLBCL patients is “remarkable,” Dr Sehn affirmed in an oral presentation (abstract 7507).

 

“Based on these encouraging results, polatuzumab vedotin has received breakthrough therapy designation and priority medicines designation by the FDA and EMA for patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL,” she said.

 

Polatuzumab-BR study (NCT02257567)

 

The study by Dr Sehn and colleagues included a cohort of 80 DLBCL patients randomized to BR or polatuzumab-BR for 6 planned 21-day cycles.

 

Investigators randomized another cohort of 80 FL patients to BR or polatuzumab-BR for 6 planned 28-day cycles.

 

The primary endpoint was complete response (CR) assessed by fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) at 6 to 8 weeks after the end of treatment.

 

DLBCL patients

 

A total of 40% of polatuzumab-BR-treated DLBCL patients achieved CR at the end of treatment, versus 15% of BR-treated patients (P=0.012).

 

That CR improvement translated into a significantly higher progression-free survival (PFS) (6.7 months for polatuzumab-BR vs 2.0 months for BR, P<0.0001) and overall survival (11.8 months versus 4.7 months, P=0.0008), according to Dr Sehn.

 

The FDG-PET CR rates were higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm regardless of the number of prior lines of treatment for DLBCL, and regardless of relapsed versus refractory status, Dr. Sehn added.

 

FL patients

 

By contrast, in the FL cohort, the FDG-PET CR rate was high for both arms, at 69% for polatuzumab-BR and 63% for BR.

 

And there was no significant difference in progression-free survival (P=0.58) with “relatively short-term follow-up,” she said.

 

Adverse events

 

The most common grades 3 – 5 adverse events for both DLBCL and FL patients were higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm than the BR arm and included cytopenias, febrile neutropenia, and infections.

 

Serious AEs were also higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm and included febrile neutropenia for both FL and DLBCL patients and infection for FL patients.

 

Five percent of FL patients and 18% of DLBCL had a grade 5 event.

 

Commentary

 

Whether polatuzumab vedotin will change treatment paradigms for DLBCL patients may be answered by the ongoing POLARIX study, according to Alison Moskowitz, MD, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, NY.

 

The randomized phase 3 POLARIX study (abstract TPS7589) is comparing polatuzumab plus R-CHP to R-CHOP in patients with previously untreated DLBCL.

 

“Certainly, there are patients who do very well with R-CHOP chemotherapy alone, and so we need to learn whether this is necessary for all patients, or only the high-risk patients,” Dr Moskowitz said in a talk at ASCO commenting on the results of the polatuzumab-BR study.

 

Hoffman-LaRoche is the sponsor of the study. 

 

Attendees at ASCO 2018 ©ASCO/Zach Boyden-Holmes 2018

 

CHICAGO—Polatuzumab vedotin, when added to bendamustine (B) and rituximab (R), significantly improved response and survival rates in a cohort of patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), according to a phase 2 study.

 

By contrast, there were no such improvements in a cohort of follicular lymphoma (FL) patients, at least in short-term follow-up, investigator Laurie Helen Sehn, MD, of the BC Cancer Agency in Vancouver, Canada, said at the 2018 ASCO Annual Meeting.

 

However, the improvement in overall survival in DLBCL patients is “remarkable,” Dr Sehn affirmed in an oral presentation (abstract 7507).

 

“Based on these encouraging results, polatuzumab vedotin has received breakthrough therapy designation and priority medicines designation by the FDA and EMA for patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL,” she said.

 

Polatuzumab-BR study (NCT02257567)

 

The study by Dr Sehn and colleagues included a cohort of 80 DLBCL patients randomized to BR or polatuzumab-BR for 6 planned 21-day cycles.

 

Investigators randomized another cohort of 80 FL patients to BR or polatuzumab-BR for 6 planned 28-day cycles.

 

The primary endpoint was complete response (CR) assessed by fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) at 6 to 8 weeks after the end of treatment.

 

DLBCL patients

 

A total of 40% of polatuzumab-BR-treated DLBCL patients achieved CR at the end of treatment, versus 15% of BR-treated patients (P=0.012).

 

That CR improvement translated into a significantly higher progression-free survival (PFS) (6.7 months for polatuzumab-BR vs 2.0 months for BR, P<0.0001) and overall survival (11.8 months versus 4.7 months, P=0.0008), according to Dr Sehn.

 

The FDG-PET CR rates were higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm regardless of the number of prior lines of treatment for DLBCL, and regardless of relapsed versus refractory status, Dr. Sehn added.

 

FL patients

 

By contrast, in the FL cohort, the FDG-PET CR rate was high for both arms, at 69% for polatuzumab-BR and 63% for BR.

 

And there was no significant difference in progression-free survival (P=0.58) with “relatively short-term follow-up,” she said.

 

Adverse events

 

The most common grades 3 – 5 adverse events for both DLBCL and FL patients were higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm than the BR arm and included cytopenias, febrile neutropenia, and infections.

 

Serious AEs were also higher in the polatuzumab-BR arm and included febrile neutropenia for both FL and DLBCL patients and infection for FL patients.

 

Five percent of FL patients and 18% of DLBCL had a grade 5 event.

 

Commentary

 

Whether polatuzumab vedotin will change treatment paradigms for DLBCL patients may be answered by the ongoing POLARIX study, according to Alison Moskowitz, MD, of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, NY.

 

The randomized phase 3 POLARIX study (abstract TPS7589) is comparing polatuzumab plus R-CHP to R-CHOP in patients with previously untreated DLBCL.

 

“Certainly, there are patients who do very well with R-CHOP chemotherapy alone, and so we need to learn whether this is necessary for all patients, or only the high-risk patients,” Dr Moskowitz said in a talk at ASCO commenting on the results of the polatuzumab-BR study.

 

Hoffman-LaRoche is the sponsor of the study. 

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Chemo-free regimen appears viable in previously untreated FL

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– Lenalidomide plus rituximab (R2) had comparable efficacy versus standard chemoimmunotherapy in patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma, according to results from a phase 3 trial.

RELEVANCE is the first randomized, phase 3 trial to examine a chemotherapy-free regimen in this setting.

Response and progression-free survival (PFS) results were similar for patients who received R2 followed by rituximab maintenance and patients assigned to chemotherapy plus rituximab and rituximab maintenance, in study results presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“These results show that lenalidomide plus rituximab, which is a novel immunomodulatory approach, is a potential first-line option for patients with follicular lymphoma that require treatment,” said investigator Nathan H. Fowler, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

But since the study was designed as a superiority trial, rather than a noninferiority trial, and it failed to meet its primary endpoint of superior complete remission (CR) or CR unconfirmed (CRu) at 120 weeks, said Bruce D. Cheson, MD, head of hematology at Georgetown University, Washington.

R2 had a similar PFS overall and in all major patient subgroups, similar overall survival, less nonhematologic toxicity aside from rash, less neutropenia, and fewer infections despite increased use of growth factors in the chemoimmunotherapy arm, Dr. Cheson said in a presentation commenting on the results. “Therefore, I agree with Dr. Fowler’s conclusion that R2 can be considered as an option for the front-line therapy of patients with follicular lymphoma,” Dr. Cheson said.

The RELEVANCE study included 1,030 patients (median age, 59 years) with previously untreated, advanced follicular lymphoma requiring treatment. They were randomized 1:1 to either lenalidomide plus rituximab followed by rituximab maintenance, or R-chemotherapy followed by rituximab maintenance.

 

 


For patients randomly assigned to R-chemotherapy, physicians could choose among three standard regimens: rituximab plus bendamustine (R-B), rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP), or rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CVP).

There was no statistical difference between treatment approaches in CR/CRu at 120 weeks, which was 48% in the R2 arm and 53% in the R-chemotherapy arm (P = 0.13). Best CR/CRu also was not statistically different between arms (59% and 67%, respectively), as was best overall response rate (84% and 89%). The 3-year duration of response was 77% in the R2 arm and 74% for R-chemotherapy.

With 37.9 months median follow-up, progression-free survival was “nearly identical” between the two groups, Dr. Fowler said, at 77% for R2 and 78% for R-chemotherapy (P = 0.48). The 3-year overall survival was 94% in both the R2 and R-chemotherapy arms, though survival data are still immature, Dr. Fowler noted.

Grade 3/4 neutropenia was more common in the R-chemotherapy arm, resulting in higher rates of febrile neutropenia, according to Dr. Fowler, who also noted that rash and cutaneous reactions were more common with R2. About 70% of patients in each arm were able to tolerate treatment, and reasons for discontinuation were “fairly similar” between arms, Dr. Fowler added.
 

 


Second primary malignancies occurred in 7% of patients in the R2 arm and 10% of the R-chemotherapy arm.

The study was sponsored was Celgene and the Lymphoma Academic Research Organisation. Dr. Fowler reported disclosures related to Abbvie, Celgene, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

SOURCE: Fowler NH et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7500.

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– Lenalidomide plus rituximab (R2) had comparable efficacy versus standard chemoimmunotherapy in patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma, according to results from a phase 3 trial.

RELEVANCE is the first randomized, phase 3 trial to examine a chemotherapy-free regimen in this setting.

Response and progression-free survival (PFS) results were similar for patients who received R2 followed by rituximab maintenance and patients assigned to chemotherapy plus rituximab and rituximab maintenance, in study results presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“These results show that lenalidomide plus rituximab, which is a novel immunomodulatory approach, is a potential first-line option for patients with follicular lymphoma that require treatment,” said investigator Nathan H. Fowler, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

But since the study was designed as a superiority trial, rather than a noninferiority trial, and it failed to meet its primary endpoint of superior complete remission (CR) or CR unconfirmed (CRu) at 120 weeks, said Bruce D. Cheson, MD, head of hematology at Georgetown University, Washington.

R2 had a similar PFS overall and in all major patient subgroups, similar overall survival, less nonhematologic toxicity aside from rash, less neutropenia, and fewer infections despite increased use of growth factors in the chemoimmunotherapy arm, Dr. Cheson said in a presentation commenting on the results. “Therefore, I agree with Dr. Fowler’s conclusion that R2 can be considered as an option for the front-line therapy of patients with follicular lymphoma,” Dr. Cheson said.

The RELEVANCE study included 1,030 patients (median age, 59 years) with previously untreated, advanced follicular lymphoma requiring treatment. They were randomized 1:1 to either lenalidomide plus rituximab followed by rituximab maintenance, or R-chemotherapy followed by rituximab maintenance.

 

 


For patients randomly assigned to R-chemotherapy, physicians could choose among three standard regimens: rituximab plus bendamustine (R-B), rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP), or rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CVP).

There was no statistical difference between treatment approaches in CR/CRu at 120 weeks, which was 48% in the R2 arm and 53% in the R-chemotherapy arm (P = 0.13). Best CR/CRu also was not statistically different between arms (59% and 67%, respectively), as was best overall response rate (84% and 89%). The 3-year duration of response was 77% in the R2 arm and 74% for R-chemotherapy.

With 37.9 months median follow-up, progression-free survival was “nearly identical” between the two groups, Dr. Fowler said, at 77% for R2 and 78% for R-chemotherapy (P = 0.48). The 3-year overall survival was 94% in both the R2 and R-chemotherapy arms, though survival data are still immature, Dr. Fowler noted.

Grade 3/4 neutropenia was more common in the R-chemotherapy arm, resulting in higher rates of febrile neutropenia, according to Dr. Fowler, who also noted that rash and cutaneous reactions were more common with R2. About 70% of patients in each arm were able to tolerate treatment, and reasons for discontinuation were “fairly similar” between arms, Dr. Fowler added.
 

 


Second primary malignancies occurred in 7% of patients in the R2 arm and 10% of the R-chemotherapy arm.

The study was sponsored was Celgene and the Lymphoma Academic Research Organisation. Dr. Fowler reported disclosures related to Abbvie, Celgene, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

SOURCE: Fowler NH et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7500.

 

– Lenalidomide plus rituximab (R2) had comparable efficacy versus standard chemoimmunotherapy in patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma, according to results from a phase 3 trial.

RELEVANCE is the first randomized, phase 3 trial to examine a chemotherapy-free regimen in this setting.

Response and progression-free survival (PFS) results were similar for patients who received R2 followed by rituximab maintenance and patients assigned to chemotherapy plus rituximab and rituximab maintenance, in study results presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“These results show that lenalidomide plus rituximab, which is a novel immunomodulatory approach, is a potential first-line option for patients with follicular lymphoma that require treatment,” said investigator Nathan H. Fowler, MD, of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.

But since the study was designed as a superiority trial, rather than a noninferiority trial, and it failed to meet its primary endpoint of superior complete remission (CR) or CR unconfirmed (CRu) at 120 weeks, said Bruce D. Cheson, MD, head of hematology at Georgetown University, Washington.

R2 had a similar PFS overall and in all major patient subgroups, similar overall survival, less nonhematologic toxicity aside from rash, less neutropenia, and fewer infections despite increased use of growth factors in the chemoimmunotherapy arm, Dr. Cheson said in a presentation commenting on the results. “Therefore, I agree with Dr. Fowler’s conclusion that R2 can be considered as an option for the front-line therapy of patients with follicular lymphoma,” Dr. Cheson said.

The RELEVANCE study included 1,030 patients (median age, 59 years) with previously untreated, advanced follicular lymphoma requiring treatment. They were randomized 1:1 to either lenalidomide plus rituximab followed by rituximab maintenance, or R-chemotherapy followed by rituximab maintenance.

 

 


For patients randomly assigned to R-chemotherapy, physicians could choose among three standard regimens: rituximab plus bendamustine (R-B), rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP), or rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CVP).

There was no statistical difference between treatment approaches in CR/CRu at 120 weeks, which was 48% in the R2 arm and 53% in the R-chemotherapy arm (P = 0.13). Best CR/CRu also was not statistically different between arms (59% and 67%, respectively), as was best overall response rate (84% and 89%). The 3-year duration of response was 77% in the R2 arm and 74% for R-chemotherapy.

With 37.9 months median follow-up, progression-free survival was “nearly identical” between the two groups, Dr. Fowler said, at 77% for R2 and 78% for R-chemotherapy (P = 0.48). The 3-year overall survival was 94% in both the R2 and R-chemotherapy arms, though survival data are still immature, Dr. Fowler noted.

Grade 3/4 neutropenia was more common in the R-chemotherapy arm, resulting in higher rates of febrile neutropenia, according to Dr. Fowler, who also noted that rash and cutaneous reactions were more common with R2. About 70% of patients in each arm were able to tolerate treatment, and reasons for discontinuation were “fairly similar” between arms, Dr. Fowler added.
 

 


Second primary malignancies occurred in 7% of patients in the R2 arm and 10% of the R-chemotherapy arm.

The study was sponsored was Celgene and the Lymphoma Academic Research Organisation. Dr. Fowler reported disclosures related to Abbvie, Celgene, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

SOURCE: Fowler NH et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7500.

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Key clinical point: Lenalidomide plus rituximab (R2) had comparable efficacy versus standard chemoimmunotherapy in patients with previously untreated follicular lymphoma.

Major finding: With 37.9 months’ median follow-up, progression-free survival was “nearly identical” between the two groups, at 77% for R2 and 78% for rituximab chemotherapy (P = 0.48).

Study details: RELEVANCE, a phase 3, randomized clinical trial including 1,030 patients with previously untreated, advanced follicular lymphoma requiring treatment.

Disclosures: The study was sponsored was Celgene and the Lymphoma Academic Research Organisation. Dr. Fowler reported disclosures related to AbbVie, Celgene, Janssen, Merck, and Roche.

Source: Fowler NH et al. ASCO 2018, Abstract 7500.

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