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‘Radically different’ PI3Kδ inhibitor lacks hepatotoxicity

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Tue, 01/17/2023 - 11:18
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‘Radically different’ PI3Kδ inhibitor lacks hepatotoxicity

 

 

 

Owen O’Connor, MD, PhD

Photo by Larry Young

 

LUGANO—Updated phase 1 results with TGR-1202 suggest this next-generation PI3kδ inhibitor lacks the hepatotoxicity associated with other PI3Kδ inhibitors.

 

Investigators also confirmed that no case of colitis has been reported to date with TGR-1202, and only 2% of evaluable patients on this trial have experienced grade 3-4 diarrhea.

 

The study is an ongoing, first-in-human trial in patients with relapsed or refractory hematologic malignancies.

 

Owen O’Connor, MD, PhD, of Columbia University Medical Center in New York, New York, shared results from this trial at the 13th International Congress on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 038*). The trial is sponsored by TG Therapeutics, Inc., the company developing TGR-1202.

 

“TGR-1202 is a radically different sort of PI3kδ inhibitor,” Dr O’Connor said. “[I]t’s really a unique chemical entity that is different from the previous 2 structures [idelalisib and duvelisib] that you’ve probably heard something about.”

 

Study design

 

This ongoing trial of TGR-1202 is open to patients with hematologic malignancies who relapsed after or were refractory to at least 1 prior treatment regimen. Patients are eligible if they have an ECOG performance status of 2 or less with adequate organ system function, including absolute neutrophil count of 750/μL or greater and platelets of 50,000/μL or greater.

 

TGR-1202 is dosed orally, once a day in continuous, 28-day cycles. The original dose-escalation portion of the study was a classic 3+3 design, starting at 50 mg and increasing to 1800 mg. Patients who received prior therapy with a PI3K and/or mTOR inhibitor were excluded from the dose-escalation cohorts but were allowed in the expansion cohorts.

 

Dr O’Connor pointed out that, through cohort 5, TGR-1202 was taken in the fasting state. However, pharmacokinetic studies performed in the fed state revealed that the area under the curve (AUC) and Cmax could be doubled by taking the drug with food. So the expansions in the ongoing 800 mg and 1200 mg cohorts are being conducted in the fed state.

 

Dr O’Connor also noted that a subsequent, micronized version of TGR-1202 was developed. The micronization “essentially increases the surface area of the formulation, allowing for better bioavailability and markedly increases the AUC and Cmax exposure,” he said.

 

So the investigators conducted a second escalation with the micronized formulation, starting at 200 mg and increasing to 800 mg. At present, they are enrolling patients to the 800 mg and 1200 mg cohorts conducted in the fed state with the micronized formulation.

 

Demographics

 

Dr O’Connor presented data on 66 patients who were evaluable for safety and 51 for efficacy. The patients’ median age was 66 (range, 22–85), and 46 were male.

 

In all, there were 20 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), 17 with follicular lymphoma, 10 with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 9 with Hodgkin lymphoma, 5 with mantle cell lymphoma, 3 with marginal zone lymphoma, 1 with Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, and 1 with hairy cell leukemia.

 

Patients had received a median of 3 prior therapies (range, 1–14), and 36 (55%) had 3 or more prior therapies. Thirty-four patients (52%) were refractory to their prior therapy.

 

Efficacy

 

Dr O’Connor reported that higher doses of TGR-1202—1200 mg of the initial formulation and 600 mg or more of the micronized version—demonstrated rapid and profound responses in CLL, follicular lymphoma, and marginal zone lymphoma.

 

Responses have been limited in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, Hodgkin lymphoma, and mantle cell lymphoma.

 

Eighty-eight percent of CLL patients achieved a nodal partial remission, and 63% achieved a response according to iwCLL criteria (Hallek 2008).

 

Safety and tolerability

 

 

 

Adverse events occurring in more than 10% of patients included nausea (41%), diarrhea (32%), fatigue (32%), headache (23%), vomiting (23%), cough (21%), decreased appetite (17%), rash (17%), constipation (14%), hypokalemia (14%), anemia, dizziness, dyspnea, neutropenia, and pyrexia (12% each), and abdominal pain (11%).

 

The most common grade 3-4 toxicity was neutropenia, occurring in 11% of patients.

 

“But other than that, the bulk of the toxicities in terms of grade 3-4 events were relatively modest,” Dr O’Connor said. “[I]t’s worth pointing out that diarrhea grade 3-4 only occurred in about 2% of patients in the population.”

 

Approximately 50% of patients (n=31) have been on study for more than 6 months, and approximately 30% taking a higher dose level have been on study for 6 months or more. Twenty-five of 37 patients exposed to 800 mg or more of the micronized formulation currently remain on study.

 

“So this gives you a sense that it is a very well-tolerated drug, with patients staying on for extended periods of time,” Dr O’Connor said.

 

He added that time on study becomes relevant in assessing some of the gastrointestinal toxicities seen with other PI3Kδ inhibitors, where it seems the median time to gastrointestinal toxicity is beyond 6 months.

 

“So far, and I’m willing to concede it’s early, but with half the patients being treated for over 6 months, [diarrhea/colitis] seems to be much lower than the experience with the other PI3 kinase inhibitors,” Dr O’Connor said.

 

“I think one of the more important features of [TGR-1202], and one that allows me to think we might be able to integrate this drug a little more readily into various combination regimens, are the discontinuations due to other adverse events.”

 

“Only 4% treated with [TGR-1202] had discontinuations secondary to adverse events. [A]nd it looks like the efficacy is in line with what we’d expect with some of the other drugs, but this [study] is actively accruing still.”

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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Owen O’Connor, MD, PhD

Photo by Larry Young

 

LUGANO—Updated phase 1 results with TGR-1202 suggest this next-generation PI3kδ inhibitor lacks the hepatotoxicity associated with other PI3Kδ inhibitors.

 

Investigators also confirmed that no case of colitis has been reported to date with TGR-1202, and only 2% of evaluable patients on this trial have experienced grade 3-4 diarrhea.

 

The study is an ongoing, first-in-human trial in patients with relapsed or refractory hematologic malignancies.

 

Owen O’Connor, MD, PhD, of Columbia University Medical Center in New York, New York, shared results from this trial at the 13th International Congress on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 038*). The trial is sponsored by TG Therapeutics, Inc., the company developing TGR-1202.

 

“TGR-1202 is a radically different sort of PI3kδ inhibitor,” Dr O’Connor said. “[I]t’s really a unique chemical entity that is different from the previous 2 structures [idelalisib and duvelisib] that you’ve probably heard something about.”

 

Study design

 

This ongoing trial of TGR-1202 is open to patients with hematologic malignancies who relapsed after or were refractory to at least 1 prior treatment regimen. Patients are eligible if they have an ECOG performance status of 2 or less with adequate organ system function, including absolute neutrophil count of 750/μL or greater and platelets of 50,000/μL or greater.

 

TGR-1202 is dosed orally, once a day in continuous, 28-day cycles. The original dose-escalation portion of the study was a classic 3+3 design, starting at 50 mg and increasing to 1800 mg. Patients who received prior therapy with a PI3K and/or mTOR inhibitor were excluded from the dose-escalation cohorts but were allowed in the expansion cohorts.

 

Dr O’Connor pointed out that, through cohort 5, TGR-1202 was taken in the fasting state. However, pharmacokinetic studies performed in the fed state revealed that the area under the curve (AUC) and Cmax could be doubled by taking the drug with food. So the expansions in the ongoing 800 mg and 1200 mg cohorts are being conducted in the fed state.

 

Dr O’Connor also noted that a subsequent, micronized version of TGR-1202 was developed. The micronization “essentially increases the surface area of the formulation, allowing for better bioavailability and markedly increases the AUC and Cmax exposure,” he said.

 

So the investigators conducted a second escalation with the micronized formulation, starting at 200 mg and increasing to 800 mg. At present, they are enrolling patients to the 800 mg and 1200 mg cohorts conducted in the fed state with the micronized formulation.

 

Demographics

 

Dr O’Connor presented data on 66 patients who were evaluable for safety and 51 for efficacy. The patients’ median age was 66 (range, 22–85), and 46 were male.

 

In all, there were 20 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), 17 with follicular lymphoma, 10 with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 9 with Hodgkin lymphoma, 5 with mantle cell lymphoma, 3 with marginal zone lymphoma, 1 with Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, and 1 with hairy cell leukemia.

 

Patients had received a median of 3 prior therapies (range, 1–14), and 36 (55%) had 3 or more prior therapies. Thirty-four patients (52%) were refractory to their prior therapy.

 

Efficacy

 

Dr O’Connor reported that higher doses of TGR-1202—1200 mg of the initial formulation and 600 mg or more of the micronized version—demonstrated rapid and profound responses in CLL, follicular lymphoma, and marginal zone lymphoma.

 

Responses have been limited in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, Hodgkin lymphoma, and mantle cell lymphoma.

 

Eighty-eight percent of CLL patients achieved a nodal partial remission, and 63% achieved a response according to iwCLL criteria (Hallek 2008).

 

Safety and tolerability

 

 

 

Adverse events occurring in more than 10% of patients included nausea (41%), diarrhea (32%), fatigue (32%), headache (23%), vomiting (23%), cough (21%), decreased appetite (17%), rash (17%), constipation (14%), hypokalemia (14%), anemia, dizziness, dyspnea, neutropenia, and pyrexia (12% each), and abdominal pain (11%).

 

The most common grade 3-4 toxicity was neutropenia, occurring in 11% of patients.

 

“But other than that, the bulk of the toxicities in terms of grade 3-4 events were relatively modest,” Dr O’Connor said. “[I]t’s worth pointing out that diarrhea grade 3-4 only occurred in about 2% of patients in the population.”

 

Approximately 50% of patients (n=31) have been on study for more than 6 months, and approximately 30% taking a higher dose level have been on study for 6 months or more. Twenty-five of 37 patients exposed to 800 mg or more of the micronized formulation currently remain on study.

 

“So this gives you a sense that it is a very well-tolerated drug, with patients staying on for extended periods of time,” Dr O’Connor said.

 

He added that time on study becomes relevant in assessing some of the gastrointestinal toxicities seen with other PI3Kδ inhibitors, where it seems the median time to gastrointestinal toxicity is beyond 6 months.

 

“So far, and I’m willing to concede it’s early, but with half the patients being treated for over 6 months, [diarrhea/colitis] seems to be much lower than the experience with the other PI3 kinase inhibitors,” Dr O’Connor said.

 

“I think one of the more important features of [TGR-1202], and one that allows me to think we might be able to integrate this drug a little more readily into various combination regimens, are the discontinuations due to other adverse events.”

 

“Only 4% treated with [TGR-1202] had discontinuations secondary to adverse events. [A]nd it looks like the efficacy is in line with what we’d expect with some of the other drugs, but this [study] is actively accruing still.”

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

 

 

 

Owen O’Connor, MD, PhD

Photo by Larry Young

 

LUGANO—Updated phase 1 results with TGR-1202 suggest this next-generation PI3kδ inhibitor lacks the hepatotoxicity associated with other PI3Kδ inhibitors.

 

Investigators also confirmed that no case of colitis has been reported to date with TGR-1202, and only 2% of evaluable patients on this trial have experienced grade 3-4 diarrhea.

 

The study is an ongoing, first-in-human trial in patients with relapsed or refractory hematologic malignancies.

 

Owen O’Connor, MD, PhD, of Columbia University Medical Center in New York, New York, shared results from this trial at the 13th International Congress on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 038*). The trial is sponsored by TG Therapeutics, Inc., the company developing TGR-1202.

 

“TGR-1202 is a radically different sort of PI3kδ inhibitor,” Dr O’Connor said. “[I]t’s really a unique chemical entity that is different from the previous 2 structures [idelalisib and duvelisib] that you’ve probably heard something about.”

 

Study design

 

This ongoing trial of TGR-1202 is open to patients with hematologic malignancies who relapsed after or were refractory to at least 1 prior treatment regimen. Patients are eligible if they have an ECOG performance status of 2 or less with adequate organ system function, including absolute neutrophil count of 750/μL or greater and platelets of 50,000/μL or greater.

 

TGR-1202 is dosed orally, once a day in continuous, 28-day cycles. The original dose-escalation portion of the study was a classic 3+3 design, starting at 50 mg and increasing to 1800 mg. Patients who received prior therapy with a PI3K and/or mTOR inhibitor were excluded from the dose-escalation cohorts but were allowed in the expansion cohorts.

 

Dr O’Connor pointed out that, through cohort 5, TGR-1202 was taken in the fasting state. However, pharmacokinetic studies performed in the fed state revealed that the area under the curve (AUC) and Cmax could be doubled by taking the drug with food. So the expansions in the ongoing 800 mg and 1200 mg cohorts are being conducted in the fed state.

 

Dr O’Connor also noted that a subsequent, micronized version of TGR-1202 was developed. The micronization “essentially increases the surface area of the formulation, allowing for better bioavailability and markedly increases the AUC and Cmax exposure,” he said.

 

So the investigators conducted a second escalation with the micronized formulation, starting at 200 mg and increasing to 800 mg. At present, they are enrolling patients to the 800 mg and 1200 mg cohorts conducted in the fed state with the micronized formulation.

 

Demographics

 

Dr O’Connor presented data on 66 patients who were evaluable for safety and 51 for efficacy. The patients’ median age was 66 (range, 22–85), and 46 were male.

 

In all, there were 20 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), 17 with follicular lymphoma, 10 with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, 9 with Hodgkin lymphoma, 5 with mantle cell lymphoma, 3 with marginal zone lymphoma, 1 with Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia, and 1 with hairy cell leukemia.

 

Patients had received a median of 3 prior therapies (range, 1–14), and 36 (55%) had 3 or more prior therapies. Thirty-four patients (52%) were refractory to their prior therapy.

 

Efficacy

 

Dr O’Connor reported that higher doses of TGR-1202—1200 mg of the initial formulation and 600 mg or more of the micronized version—demonstrated rapid and profound responses in CLL, follicular lymphoma, and marginal zone lymphoma.

 

Responses have been limited in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, Hodgkin lymphoma, and mantle cell lymphoma.

 

Eighty-eight percent of CLL patients achieved a nodal partial remission, and 63% achieved a response according to iwCLL criteria (Hallek 2008).

 

Safety and tolerability

 

 

 

Adverse events occurring in more than 10% of patients included nausea (41%), diarrhea (32%), fatigue (32%), headache (23%), vomiting (23%), cough (21%), decreased appetite (17%), rash (17%), constipation (14%), hypokalemia (14%), anemia, dizziness, dyspnea, neutropenia, and pyrexia (12% each), and abdominal pain (11%).

 

The most common grade 3-4 toxicity was neutropenia, occurring in 11% of patients.

 

“But other than that, the bulk of the toxicities in terms of grade 3-4 events were relatively modest,” Dr O’Connor said. “[I]t’s worth pointing out that diarrhea grade 3-4 only occurred in about 2% of patients in the population.”

 

Approximately 50% of patients (n=31) have been on study for more than 6 months, and approximately 30% taking a higher dose level have been on study for 6 months or more. Twenty-five of 37 patients exposed to 800 mg or more of the micronized formulation currently remain on study.

 

“So this gives you a sense that it is a very well-tolerated drug, with patients staying on for extended periods of time,” Dr O’Connor said.

 

He added that time on study becomes relevant in assessing some of the gastrointestinal toxicities seen with other PI3Kδ inhibitors, where it seems the median time to gastrointestinal toxicity is beyond 6 months.

 

“So far, and I’m willing to concede it’s early, but with half the patients being treated for over 6 months, [diarrhea/colitis] seems to be much lower than the experience with the other PI3 kinase inhibitors,” Dr O’Connor said.

 

“I think one of the more important features of [TGR-1202], and one that allows me to think we might be able to integrate this drug a little more readily into various combination regimens, are the discontinuations due to other adverse events.”

 

“Only 4% treated with [TGR-1202] had discontinuations secondary to adverse events. [A]nd it looks like the efficacy is in line with what we’d expect with some of the other drugs, but this [study] is actively accruing still.”

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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P13K inhibitors TGR-1202, duvelisib found clinically active in CLL

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P13K inhibitors TGR-1202, duvelisib found clinically active in CLL

VIENNA – The investigational P13K-delta inhibitor TGR-1202 was clinically active in relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia and other hematologic malignancies in an ongoing phase I trial.

TGR-1202 is entering an increasingly crowded field of P13 kinase inhibitors including idelalisib (Zydelig) and duvelisib, but a more benign safety profile may separate it from the pack.

“It has a different AE [adverse event] profile, compared with some of the other agents, with a little less on the hepatotoxicity side and, at least to date, we actually haven’t seen any evidence of colitis,” Dr. Owen O’Connor said at the annual congress of the European Hematology Association.

Citing recently reported data, grade 3/4 diarrhea/colitis occurs in 10%-22% of patients treated with idelalisib, idelalisib plus ofatumumab, or duvelisib versus just 1% of all 137 patients treated in TGR-1202 studies to date, he noted.

TGR-1202 also has less grade 3/4 pneumonia (4%) and elevated liver enzymes (2%), compared with rates of 13%-16% and 13%-17%, respectively, for the other P13K therapies.

Further, just 4% of all patients have discontinued TGR-1202 because of adverse events vs. 12% on idelalisib, 31% on idelalisib plus ofatumumab, and 33% on duvelisib.

“I think this may bode well as we think about how to combine P13 kinase inhibitors into other regimens to try to look at various combination regimens,” said Dr. O’Connor, director of the Center for Lymphoid Malignancies at Columbia University in New York.

 

Courtesy Columbia University Medical Center
Dr. Owen O'Connor

He presented data on 66 patients with relapsed or refractory B- or T-cell malignancies including non-Hodgkin lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic leukemia and Hodgkin lymphoma. More than half (55%) had received at least three prior therapies (range 1-14) and 52% were refractory to the most recent regimen.

The dose-escalation study evaluated TGR-1202 once-daily at doses of 50 mg to 1,800 mg and a micronized formulation dosed at 200 mg to 1,800 mg.

The most common adverse event of any grade was nausea (41%), diarrhea and fatigue (32% each), headache and vomiting (23% each), and cough (21%), Dr. O’Connor said. Grade 3 or 4 adverse events were neutropenia (11%), anemia (8%), hypokalemia and dyspnea (5% each), and diarrhea and constipation (2% each).

A strong dose-response relationship was observed among 51 patients evaluable for efficacy, with higher doses of TGR-1202 (1,200-mg initial formulation or ≥ 600 mg micronized) demonstrating rapid and profound responses, he said.

In the CLL subgroup, 14 of 16 patients (88%) achieved a nodal partial response and 10 (63%) achieved a response per International Workshop on CLL (iwCLL) criteria.

Of the 12 evaluable patients with follicular lymphoma, 5 achieved a partial response (nodal reduction > 50%), with 3 of the 6 patients treated at higher doses reaching a partial response.

A heavily pretreated patient with Hodgkin lymphoma also achieved a near-complete response, Dr. O’Connor said.

At the time of the analysis, 37 of 66 patients had received micronized TGR-1202 at doses ≥ 800 mg. Of these, 25 remain on study and have reached a median progression-free survival of 9.5 months.

Expansion cohorts are enrolling at 800 mg and 1,200 mg of the micronized formulation, and are the targeted doses for phase II studies in development, he said.

Duvelisib

In a separate presentation during the same session, phase I results showed twice-daily duvelisib 25 mg resulted in an overall response rate of 88%, including 15 partial responses in 17 evaluable patients with treatment-naive CLL.

 

Susan O'Brien

All but one of nine patients with a deleterious P53 mutation or 17p deletion achieved a partial response, Dr. Susan O’Brien of University of California, Irvine, reported.

“The advantage of duvelisib is that responses are more rapid than with other single agent B-cell receptors,” she said in an interview.

The median time to iwCLL response was 3.7 months, with 7 of the 15 responses occurring by the first assessment (cycle 3, day 1).

Pharmacodynamic and mechanism of action studies show duvelisib, an oral P13K-delta/gamma inhibitor, produces rapid inhibition of phosphorylation of AKT (pAKT) sustained through cycle 2, day 1 and near-complete inhibition of CLL proliferation (Ki67) following 1 cycle of duvelisib.

Key serum chemokines and cytokines known to contribute to CLL growth and survival also decreased following duvelisib, suggesting modulation of the tumor microenvironment, Dr. O’Brien said.

Of the 18 patients treated in the CLL expansion cohort, 10 remain on treatment and 8 discontinued treatment, including 6 patients who discontinued treatment because of adverse events. The median time on treatment was 14 months (range 1-20 months). Adverse events were mostly grade 1 or 2, reversible, and clinically manageable, she said.

 

 

The most common grade 3 adverse events were diarrhea (22%) and liver enzyme elevations (17%), with grade 4 neutropenia occurring in 28%.

In 16 patients with baseline computed tomography assessments, 88% achieved a nodal response (≥ 50% reduction in measurable area of disease) and all had a PR per iwCLL.

Median progression-free and overall survival had not been reached, with a 92% PFS rate and 94% survival rate at 18 months, Dr. O’Brien said. One patient died during follow-up, about 5 months after the last duvelisib dose.

Based on the pharmacodynamic/pharmacokinetic profile and clinical activity, the 25-mg twice-daily dose has been selected for phase III evaluation, she said.

[email protected]

On Twitter@pwendl

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VIENNA – The investigational P13K-delta inhibitor TGR-1202 was clinically active in relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia and other hematologic malignancies in an ongoing phase I trial.

TGR-1202 is entering an increasingly crowded field of P13 kinase inhibitors including idelalisib (Zydelig) and duvelisib, but a more benign safety profile may separate it from the pack.

“It has a different AE [adverse event] profile, compared with some of the other agents, with a little less on the hepatotoxicity side and, at least to date, we actually haven’t seen any evidence of colitis,” Dr. Owen O’Connor said at the annual congress of the European Hematology Association.

Citing recently reported data, grade 3/4 diarrhea/colitis occurs in 10%-22% of patients treated with idelalisib, idelalisib plus ofatumumab, or duvelisib versus just 1% of all 137 patients treated in TGR-1202 studies to date, he noted.

TGR-1202 also has less grade 3/4 pneumonia (4%) and elevated liver enzymes (2%), compared with rates of 13%-16% and 13%-17%, respectively, for the other P13K therapies.

Further, just 4% of all patients have discontinued TGR-1202 because of adverse events vs. 12% on idelalisib, 31% on idelalisib plus ofatumumab, and 33% on duvelisib.

“I think this may bode well as we think about how to combine P13 kinase inhibitors into other regimens to try to look at various combination regimens,” said Dr. O’Connor, director of the Center for Lymphoid Malignancies at Columbia University in New York.

 

Courtesy Columbia University Medical Center
Dr. Owen O'Connor

He presented data on 66 patients with relapsed or refractory B- or T-cell malignancies including non-Hodgkin lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic leukemia and Hodgkin lymphoma. More than half (55%) had received at least three prior therapies (range 1-14) and 52% were refractory to the most recent regimen.

The dose-escalation study evaluated TGR-1202 once-daily at doses of 50 mg to 1,800 mg and a micronized formulation dosed at 200 mg to 1,800 mg.

The most common adverse event of any grade was nausea (41%), diarrhea and fatigue (32% each), headache and vomiting (23% each), and cough (21%), Dr. O’Connor said. Grade 3 or 4 adverse events were neutropenia (11%), anemia (8%), hypokalemia and dyspnea (5% each), and diarrhea and constipation (2% each).

A strong dose-response relationship was observed among 51 patients evaluable for efficacy, with higher doses of TGR-1202 (1,200-mg initial formulation or ≥ 600 mg micronized) demonstrating rapid and profound responses, he said.

In the CLL subgroup, 14 of 16 patients (88%) achieved a nodal partial response and 10 (63%) achieved a response per International Workshop on CLL (iwCLL) criteria.

Of the 12 evaluable patients with follicular lymphoma, 5 achieved a partial response (nodal reduction > 50%), with 3 of the 6 patients treated at higher doses reaching a partial response.

A heavily pretreated patient with Hodgkin lymphoma also achieved a near-complete response, Dr. O’Connor said.

At the time of the analysis, 37 of 66 patients had received micronized TGR-1202 at doses ≥ 800 mg. Of these, 25 remain on study and have reached a median progression-free survival of 9.5 months.

Expansion cohorts are enrolling at 800 mg and 1,200 mg of the micronized formulation, and are the targeted doses for phase II studies in development, he said.

Duvelisib

In a separate presentation during the same session, phase I results showed twice-daily duvelisib 25 mg resulted in an overall response rate of 88%, including 15 partial responses in 17 evaluable patients with treatment-naive CLL.

 

Susan O'Brien

All but one of nine patients with a deleterious P53 mutation or 17p deletion achieved a partial response, Dr. Susan O’Brien of University of California, Irvine, reported.

“The advantage of duvelisib is that responses are more rapid than with other single agent B-cell receptors,” she said in an interview.

The median time to iwCLL response was 3.7 months, with 7 of the 15 responses occurring by the first assessment (cycle 3, day 1).

Pharmacodynamic and mechanism of action studies show duvelisib, an oral P13K-delta/gamma inhibitor, produces rapid inhibition of phosphorylation of AKT (pAKT) sustained through cycle 2, day 1 and near-complete inhibition of CLL proliferation (Ki67) following 1 cycle of duvelisib.

Key serum chemokines and cytokines known to contribute to CLL growth and survival also decreased following duvelisib, suggesting modulation of the tumor microenvironment, Dr. O’Brien said.

Of the 18 patients treated in the CLL expansion cohort, 10 remain on treatment and 8 discontinued treatment, including 6 patients who discontinued treatment because of adverse events. The median time on treatment was 14 months (range 1-20 months). Adverse events were mostly grade 1 or 2, reversible, and clinically manageable, she said.

 

 

The most common grade 3 adverse events were diarrhea (22%) and liver enzyme elevations (17%), with grade 4 neutropenia occurring in 28%.

In 16 patients with baseline computed tomography assessments, 88% achieved a nodal response (≥ 50% reduction in measurable area of disease) and all had a PR per iwCLL.

Median progression-free and overall survival had not been reached, with a 92% PFS rate and 94% survival rate at 18 months, Dr. O’Brien said. One patient died during follow-up, about 5 months after the last duvelisib dose.

Based on the pharmacodynamic/pharmacokinetic profile and clinical activity, the 25-mg twice-daily dose has been selected for phase III evaluation, she said.

[email protected]

On Twitter@pwendl

VIENNA – The investigational P13K-delta inhibitor TGR-1202 was clinically active in relapsed or refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia and other hematologic malignancies in an ongoing phase I trial.

TGR-1202 is entering an increasingly crowded field of P13 kinase inhibitors including idelalisib (Zydelig) and duvelisib, but a more benign safety profile may separate it from the pack.

“It has a different AE [adverse event] profile, compared with some of the other agents, with a little less on the hepatotoxicity side and, at least to date, we actually haven’t seen any evidence of colitis,” Dr. Owen O’Connor said at the annual congress of the European Hematology Association.

Citing recently reported data, grade 3/4 diarrhea/colitis occurs in 10%-22% of patients treated with idelalisib, idelalisib plus ofatumumab, or duvelisib versus just 1% of all 137 patients treated in TGR-1202 studies to date, he noted.

TGR-1202 also has less grade 3/4 pneumonia (4%) and elevated liver enzymes (2%), compared with rates of 13%-16% and 13%-17%, respectively, for the other P13K therapies.

Further, just 4% of all patients have discontinued TGR-1202 because of adverse events vs. 12% on idelalisib, 31% on idelalisib plus ofatumumab, and 33% on duvelisib.

“I think this may bode well as we think about how to combine P13 kinase inhibitors into other regimens to try to look at various combination regimens,” said Dr. O’Connor, director of the Center for Lymphoid Malignancies at Columbia University in New York.

 

Courtesy Columbia University Medical Center
Dr. Owen O'Connor

He presented data on 66 patients with relapsed or refractory B- or T-cell malignancies including non-Hodgkin lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic leukemia and Hodgkin lymphoma. More than half (55%) had received at least three prior therapies (range 1-14) and 52% were refractory to the most recent regimen.

The dose-escalation study evaluated TGR-1202 once-daily at doses of 50 mg to 1,800 mg and a micronized formulation dosed at 200 mg to 1,800 mg.

The most common adverse event of any grade was nausea (41%), diarrhea and fatigue (32% each), headache and vomiting (23% each), and cough (21%), Dr. O’Connor said. Grade 3 or 4 adverse events were neutropenia (11%), anemia (8%), hypokalemia and dyspnea (5% each), and diarrhea and constipation (2% each).

A strong dose-response relationship was observed among 51 patients evaluable for efficacy, with higher doses of TGR-1202 (1,200-mg initial formulation or ≥ 600 mg micronized) demonstrating rapid and profound responses, he said.

In the CLL subgroup, 14 of 16 patients (88%) achieved a nodal partial response and 10 (63%) achieved a response per International Workshop on CLL (iwCLL) criteria.

Of the 12 evaluable patients with follicular lymphoma, 5 achieved a partial response (nodal reduction > 50%), with 3 of the 6 patients treated at higher doses reaching a partial response.

A heavily pretreated patient with Hodgkin lymphoma also achieved a near-complete response, Dr. O’Connor said.

At the time of the analysis, 37 of 66 patients had received micronized TGR-1202 at doses ≥ 800 mg. Of these, 25 remain on study and have reached a median progression-free survival of 9.5 months.

Expansion cohorts are enrolling at 800 mg and 1,200 mg of the micronized formulation, and are the targeted doses for phase II studies in development, he said.

Duvelisib

In a separate presentation during the same session, phase I results showed twice-daily duvelisib 25 mg resulted in an overall response rate of 88%, including 15 partial responses in 17 evaluable patients with treatment-naive CLL.

 

Susan O'Brien

All but one of nine patients with a deleterious P53 mutation or 17p deletion achieved a partial response, Dr. Susan O’Brien of University of California, Irvine, reported.

“The advantage of duvelisib is that responses are more rapid than with other single agent B-cell receptors,” she said in an interview.

The median time to iwCLL response was 3.7 months, with 7 of the 15 responses occurring by the first assessment (cycle 3, day 1).

Pharmacodynamic and mechanism of action studies show duvelisib, an oral P13K-delta/gamma inhibitor, produces rapid inhibition of phosphorylation of AKT (pAKT) sustained through cycle 2, day 1 and near-complete inhibition of CLL proliferation (Ki67) following 1 cycle of duvelisib.

Key serum chemokines and cytokines known to contribute to CLL growth and survival also decreased following duvelisib, suggesting modulation of the tumor microenvironment, Dr. O’Brien said.

Of the 18 patients treated in the CLL expansion cohort, 10 remain on treatment and 8 discontinued treatment, including 6 patients who discontinued treatment because of adverse events. The median time on treatment was 14 months (range 1-20 months). Adverse events were mostly grade 1 or 2, reversible, and clinically manageable, she said.

 

 

The most common grade 3 adverse events were diarrhea (22%) and liver enzyme elevations (17%), with grade 4 neutropenia occurring in 28%.

In 16 patients with baseline computed tomography assessments, 88% achieved a nodal response (≥ 50% reduction in measurable area of disease) and all had a PR per iwCLL.

Median progression-free and overall survival had not been reached, with a 92% PFS rate and 94% survival rate at 18 months, Dr. O’Brien said. One patient died during follow-up, about 5 months after the last duvelisib dose.

Based on the pharmacodynamic/pharmacokinetic profile and clinical activity, the 25-mg twice-daily dose has been selected for phase III evaluation, she said.

[email protected]

On Twitter@pwendl

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Key clinical point: The investigational P13K inhibitors TGR-1202 and duvelisib were clinically active in phase I trials.

Major finding: TGR-1202 prompted an iwCLL response in 63% of 16 patients with relapsed or refractory CLL, while duvelisib did so in 88% of 17 treatment-naive CLL patients.

Data source: Two phase I studies in CLL and other hematologic malignancies.

Disclosures: TG Therapeutics sponsored the TGR-1202 study. Dr. Owen and several co-authors reported financial ties with TG Therapeutics. Infinity Pharmaceuticals sponsored the duvelisib study. Dr. O’Brien disclosed that eight coinvestigators are employees of Infinity.

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Targeted agent shows early promise for NHL

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follicular lymphoma

 

LUGANO—An anti-CD37 antibody-radionuclide conjugate provides sustained efficacy and a manageable safety profile in patients with relapsed, CD37+ non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), according to researchers.

 

The drug, 177Lu-DOTA-HH1 (Betalutin), consists of the tumor-specific antibody HH1, which targets the CD37 antigen on the surface of NHL cells, conjugated to the β-emitting isotope lutetium-177 (Lu-177) via the chemical linker DOTA.

 

In an ongoing, phase 1/2 trial, Betalutin has produced responses in 7 of 12 evaluable patients with relapsed NHL, and 5 of those responses are ongoing.

 

Grade 3/4 adverse events (AEs) were largely hematologic in nature, and many were transient and reversible. However, grade 3/4 AEs occurred at all 3 dose levels investigated in this study, as did serious AEs.

 

Arne Kolstad, MD, PhD, of Oslo University Hospital in Norway, and his colleagues reported these results at the 13th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 287*). The study was sponsored by Nordic Nanovector, the company developing Betalutin.

 

Thus far, the researchers have evaluated 13 patients with relapsed, CD37+ NHL. Twelve patients had a primary diagnosis of follicular lymphoma, and 1 had mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). The patients’ median age was 68 (range, 41-78), and they had received 1 to 8 prior treatments.

 

In this dose-finding study, the researchers investigated 3 dose levels of Betalutin. Four patients received Betalutin at 10 MBq/kg biweekly, 6 received 15 MBq/kg biweekly, and 3 (including the MCL patient) received 20 MBq/kg biweekly.

 

All patients received 50 mg of HH1 prior to Betalutin. Patients also received rituximab at 375 mg/m2 on days -28 and -21 (prior to Betalutin on day 0).

 

Safety and dosing

 

Dose-limiting toxicities occurred at the 20 MBq/kg biweekly dose, so researchers said 15 MBq/kg biweekly, with HH1 pre-dosing, is the current recommended dose of Betalutin.

 

Treatment-emergent grade 3 AEs in the 10 MBq/kg group included thrombocytopenia (n=1), neutropenia (n=2), pneumonia (n=1), and pulmonary embolism (n=1). There were no grade 4 AEs in this group.

 

In the 15 MBq/kg group, 2 patients had grade 3 thrombocytopenia, and 1 had grade 4. One patient each had grade 3 and 4 neutropenia.

 

Grade 3/4 AEs in the 20 MBq/kg group included grade 4 thrombocytopenia (n=3), grade 3 (n=1) and grade 4 (n=2) neutropenia, and grade 3 epistaxis (n=1).

 

Serious AEs included pulmonary embolism (1 in the 10 MBq/kg group), pneumonia (1 in the 10 MBq/kg group), atrial fibrillation (2 in the 15 MBq/kg group), thrombocytopenia (1 in the 20 MBq/kg group), and epistaxis (1 in the 20 MBq/kg group).

 

The researchers said all hematologic AEs were transient and reversible. They also pointed out that 6 patients in this trial have been followed for a year or more, and there have been no secondary malignancies or other events that would suggest long-term toxicity.

 

Efficacy and next steps

 

Twelve patients were evaluable for efficacy. Seven patients responded to treatment, including 4 complete responses (CRs) and 3 partial responses. Two patients had stable disease, and 3 progressed. Eight patients had a 50% or greater reduction in tumor volume.

 

The median response duration has not been reached, and 5 patients’ responses are ongoing. The duration of response in these patients ranges from 6 months to more than 21 months. All 4 patients who achieved a CR (including the MCL patient) are still in CR.

 

The researchers concluded that Betalutin delivers a highly favorable response rate, with durable clinical responses, and the drug has a predictable and manageable safety profile.

 

They have opened a new arm of this study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Betalutin at 15 MBq/kg biweekly and 17.5 MBq/kg biweekly without HH1 pre-dosing.

 

 

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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Micrograph showing

follicular lymphoma

 

LUGANO—An anti-CD37 antibody-radionuclide conjugate provides sustained efficacy and a manageable safety profile in patients with relapsed, CD37+ non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), according to researchers.

 

The drug, 177Lu-DOTA-HH1 (Betalutin), consists of the tumor-specific antibody HH1, which targets the CD37 antigen on the surface of NHL cells, conjugated to the β-emitting isotope lutetium-177 (Lu-177) via the chemical linker DOTA.

 

In an ongoing, phase 1/2 trial, Betalutin has produced responses in 7 of 12 evaluable patients with relapsed NHL, and 5 of those responses are ongoing.

 

Grade 3/4 adverse events (AEs) were largely hematologic in nature, and many were transient and reversible. However, grade 3/4 AEs occurred at all 3 dose levels investigated in this study, as did serious AEs.

 

Arne Kolstad, MD, PhD, of Oslo University Hospital in Norway, and his colleagues reported these results at the 13th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 287*). The study was sponsored by Nordic Nanovector, the company developing Betalutin.

 

Thus far, the researchers have evaluated 13 patients with relapsed, CD37+ NHL. Twelve patients had a primary diagnosis of follicular lymphoma, and 1 had mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). The patients’ median age was 68 (range, 41-78), and they had received 1 to 8 prior treatments.

 

In this dose-finding study, the researchers investigated 3 dose levels of Betalutin. Four patients received Betalutin at 10 MBq/kg biweekly, 6 received 15 MBq/kg biweekly, and 3 (including the MCL patient) received 20 MBq/kg biweekly.

 

All patients received 50 mg of HH1 prior to Betalutin. Patients also received rituximab at 375 mg/m2 on days -28 and -21 (prior to Betalutin on day 0).

 

Safety and dosing

 

Dose-limiting toxicities occurred at the 20 MBq/kg biweekly dose, so researchers said 15 MBq/kg biweekly, with HH1 pre-dosing, is the current recommended dose of Betalutin.

 

Treatment-emergent grade 3 AEs in the 10 MBq/kg group included thrombocytopenia (n=1), neutropenia (n=2), pneumonia (n=1), and pulmonary embolism (n=1). There were no grade 4 AEs in this group.

 

In the 15 MBq/kg group, 2 patients had grade 3 thrombocytopenia, and 1 had grade 4. One patient each had grade 3 and 4 neutropenia.

 

Grade 3/4 AEs in the 20 MBq/kg group included grade 4 thrombocytopenia (n=3), grade 3 (n=1) and grade 4 (n=2) neutropenia, and grade 3 epistaxis (n=1).

 

Serious AEs included pulmonary embolism (1 in the 10 MBq/kg group), pneumonia (1 in the 10 MBq/kg group), atrial fibrillation (2 in the 15 MBq/kg group), thrombocytopenia (1 in the 20 MBq/kg group), and epistaxis (1 in the 20 MBq/kg group).

 

The researchers said all hematologic AEs were transient and reversible. They also pointed out that 6 patients in this trial have been followed for a year or more, and there have been no secondary malignancies or other events that would suggest long-term toxicity.

 

Efficacy and next steps

 

Twelve patients were evaluable for efficacy. Seven patients responded to treatment, including 4 complete responses (CRs) and 3 partial responses. Two patients had stable disease, and 3 progressed. Eight patients had a 50% or greater reduction in tumor volume.

 

The median response duration has not been reached, and 5 patients’ responses are ongoing. The duration of response in these patients ranges from 6 months to more than 21 months. All 4 patients who achieved a CR (including the MCL patient) are still in CR.

 

The researchers concluded that Betalutin delivers a highly favorable response rate, with durable clinical responses, and the drug has a predictable and manageable safety profile.

 

They have opened a new arm of this study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Betalutin at 15 MBq/kg biweekly and 17.5 MBq/kg biweekly without HH1 pre-dosing.

 

 

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

 

 

 

Micrograph showing

follicular lymphoma

 

LUGANO—An anti-CD37 antibody-radionuclide conjugate provides sustained efficacy and a manageable safety profile in patients with relapsed, CD37+ non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), according to researchers.

 

The drug, 177Lu-DOTA-HH1 (Betalutin), consists of the tumor-specific antibody HH1, which targets the CD37 antigen on the surface of NHL cells, conjugated to the β-emitting isotope lutetium-177 (Lu-177) via the chemical linker DOTA.

 

In an ongoing, phase 1/2 trial, Betalutin has produced responses in 7 of 12 evaluable patients with relapsed NHL, and 5 of those responses are ongoing.

 

Grade 3/4 adverse events (AEs) were largely hematologic in nature, and many were transient and reversible. However, grade 3/4 AEs occurred at all 3 dose levels investigated in this study, as did serious AEs.

 

Arne Kolstad, MD, PhD, of Oslo University Hospital in Norway, and his colleagues reported these results at the 13th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 287*). The study was sponsored by Nordic Nanovector, the company developing Betalutin.

 

Thus far, the researchers have evaluated 13 patients with relapsed, CD37+ NHL. Twelve patients had a primary diagnosis of follicular lymphoma, and 1 had mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). The patients’ median age was 68 (range, 41-78), and they had received 1 to 8 prior treatments.

 

In this dose-finding study, the researchers investigated 3 dose levels of Betalutin. Four patients received Betalutin at 10 MBq/kg biweekly, 6 received 15 MBq/kg biweekly, and 3 (including the MCL patient) received 20 MBq/kg biweekly.

 

All patients received 50 mg of HH1 prior to Betalutin. Patients also received rituximab at 375 mg/m2 on days -28 and -21 (prior to Betalutin on day 0).

 

Safety and dosing

 

Dose-limiting toxicities occurred at the 20 MBq/kg biweekly dose, so researchers said 15 MBq/kg biweekly, with HH1 pre-dosing, is the current recommended dose of Betalutin.

 

Treatment-emergent grade 3 AEs in the 10 MBq/kg group included thrombocytopenia (n=1), neutropenia (n=2), pneumonia (n=1), and pulmonary embolism (n=1). There were no grade 4 AEs in this group.

 

In the 15 MBq/kg group, 2 patients had grade 3 thrombocytopenia, and 1 had grade 4. One patient each had grade 3 and 4 neutropenia.

 

Grade 3/4 AEs in the 20 MBq/kg group included grade 4 thrombocytopenia (n=3), grade 3 (n=1) and grade 4 (n=2) neutropenia, and grade 3 epistaxis (n=1).

 

Serious AEs included pulmonary embolism (1 in the 10 MBq/kg group), pneumonia (1 in the 10 MBq/kg group), atrial fibrillation (2 in the 15 MBq/kg group), thrombocytopenia (1 in the 20 MBq/kg group), and epistaxis (1 in the 20 MBq/kg group).

 

The researchers said all hematologic AEs were transient and reversible. They also pointed out that 6 patients in this trial have been followed for a year or more, and there have been no secondary malignancies or other events that would suggest long-term toxicity.

 

Efficacy and next steps

 

Twelve patients were evaluable for efficacy. Seven patients responded to treatment, including 4 complete responses (CRs) and 3 partial responses. Two patients had stable disease, and 3 progressed. Eight patients had a 50% or greater reduction in tumor volume.

 

The median response duration has not been reached, and 5 patients’ responses are ongoing. The duration of response in these patients ranges from 6 months to more than 21 months. All 4 patients who achieved a CR (including the MCL patient) are still in CR.

 

The researchers concluded that Betalutin delivers a highly favorable response rate, with durable clinical responses, and the drug has a predictable and manageable safety profile.

 

They have opened a new arm of this study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Betalutin at 15 MBq/kg biweekly and 17.5 MBq/kg biweekly without HH1 pre-dosing.

 

 

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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EZH2 inhibitor proves active in rel/ref NHL

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Micrograph showing FL

 

LUGANO—The EZH2 inhibitor tazemetostat (EPZ-6438) has shown “meaningful clinical activity” as monotherapy in patients with advanced non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), according to researchers.

 

In a phase 1 trial, 9 of the 15 evaluable NHL patients achieved an objective response to tazemetostat.

 

This included 2 ongoing complete responses (CRs), 1 in a patient with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and 1 in a patient with follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

It also included a partial response (PR) in the first treated patient with an EZH2 mutation.

 

And researchers said the drug was largely well-tolerated, as most adverse events were grade 1 or 2.

 

“The breadth, depth, and durability of responses seen in NHL patients among multiple histologies continue to impress, as does the safety and tolerability of tazemetostat in this phase 1 study,” said Vincent Ribrag, MD, of Institut Gustave Roussy in Villejuif, France.

 

“Among the patients in the dose-escalation cohorts, we have seen a noteworthy deepening of responses over time, and, in the first treated patient with an EZH2 tumor mutation, we have seen a partial response, which is very encouraging.”

 

Dr Ribrag presented these results at the 13th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 145*). The study, which was previously presented at the 26th EORTC-NCI-AACR Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics, was sponsored by Epizyme, Inc., the company developing tazemetostat.

 

The phase 1 trial has enrolled 19 patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell NHL and 26 patients with advanced solid tumors.

 

Researchers have evaluated 5 cohorts of patients in the dose-escalation portion of the study—100 mg, 200 mg, 400 mg, 800 mg, and 1600 mg—and 2 cohorts—800 mg and 1600 mg—in the dose-expansion phase. All doses of tazemetostat were given twice daily.

 

The 19 NHL patients had a median age of 61 (range, 24-84) and were heavily pretreated. Eighty-five percent had received 3 or more prior therapies, and 37% had received 5 or more prior therapies.

 

Thirty-seven percent of patients were refractory to their last prior regimen, and 26% had received a prior autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant.

 

Dosing and efficacy

 

As of June 8, 2015, 15 NHL patients were evaluable for efficacy. Nine had achieved an objective response, including 2 patients with an ongoing CR. All responses were observed between 2 and 10 months on therapy.

 

Five of the 9 evaluable patients with DLBCL achieved an objective response. One DLBCL patient with a CR remains on study at 18 months of treatment.

 

Three of 5 evaluable patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) achieved an objective response. One FL patient with a CR remains on study at 13 months, and 1 FL patient with a PR remains on study at 13 months.

 

The only patient with marginal zone lymphoma achieved a PR and continues on study at 11 months.

 

One of the 14 patients evaluated for EZH2 status has a specific EZH2 tumor mutation (Y646H). This patient, who had DLBCL that relapsed or was refractory to 6 previous treatment regimens, achieved a PR after 16 weeks of therapy and remains on study.

 

The recommended phase 2 dose of tazemetostat is 800 mg twice daily.

 

Adverse events and next steps

 

All of the 45 enrolled patients were evaluable for safety. Treatment-related adverse events included asthenia (n=10), nausea (n=6), dyspepsia (n=5), thrombocytopenia (n=4), anorexia (n=4), anemia (n=4), vomiting (n=3), constipation (n=2), muscle spasm (n=2), hypertension (n=2), neutropenia (n=2), and elevated transaminase (n=1).

 

There were 5 grade 3 or higher adverse events related to treatment, including grade 3 anorexia, grade 3 hypertension, grade 3 transaminase elevation, grade 4 thrombocytopenia, and grade 4 neutropenia.

 

 

 

Epizyme plans to report a further update from this trial by the end of this year. The company is now enrolling patients in a phase 2 study of tazemetostat monotherapy in patients with relapsed or refractory NHL, stratified by cell of origin and EZH2 mutation status.

 

Epizyme is also planning a phase 2 trial of tazemetostat in adults with INI1-deficient solid tumors, a phase 1 study of pediatric patients with INI1-deficient solid tumors, a combination study of tazemetostat with R-CHOP in patients with DLBCL, and a combination study of tazemetostat with a B-cell signaling agent or other emerging targeted therapies for B-cell lymphomas.

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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Micrograph showing FL

 

LUGANO—The EZH2 inhibitor tazemetostat (EPZ-6438) has shown “meaningful clinical activity” as monotherapy in patients with advanced non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), according to researchers.

 

In a phase 1 trial, 9 of the 15 evaluable NHL patients achieved an objective response to tazemetostat.

 

This included 2 ongoing complete responses (CRs), 1 in a patient with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and 1 in a patient with follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

It also included a partial response (PR) in the first treated patient with an EZH2 mutation.

 

And researchers said the drug was largely well-tolerated, as most adverse events were grade 1 or 2.

 

“The breadth, depth, and durability of responses seen in NHL patients among multiple histologies continue to impress, as does the safety and tolerability of tazemetostat in this phase 1 study,” said Vincent Ribrag, MD, of Institut Gustave Roussy in Villejuif, France.

 

“Among the patients in the dose-escalation cohorts, we have seen a noteworthy deepening of responses over time, and, in the first treated patient with an EZH2 tumor mutation, we have seen a partial response, which is very encouraging.”

 

Dr Ribrag presented these results at the 13th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 145*). The study, which was previously presented at the 26th EORTC-NCI-AACR Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics, was sponsored by Epizyme, Inc., the company developing tazemetostat.

 

The phase 1 trial has enrolled 19 patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell NHL and 26 patients with advanced solid tumors.

 

Researchers have evaluated 5 cohorts of patients in the dose-escalation portion of the study—100 mg, 200 mg, 400 mg, 800 mg, and 1600 mg—and 2 cohorts—800 mg and 1600 mg—in the dose-expansion phase. All doses of tazemetostat were given twice daily.

 

The 19 NHL patients had a median age of 61 (range, 24-84) and were heavily pretreated. Eighty-five percent had received 3 or more prior therapies, and 37% had received 5 or more prior therapies.

 

Thirty-seven percent of patients were refractory to their last prior regimen, and 26% had received a prior autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant.

 

Dosing and efficacy

 

As of June 8, 2015, 15 NHL patients were evaluable for efficacy. Nine had achieved an objective response, including 2 patients with an ongoing CR. All responses were observed between 2 and 10 months on therapy.

 

Five of the 9 evaluable patients with DLBCL achieved an objective response. One DLBCL patient with a CR remains on study at 18 months of treatment.

 

Three of 5 evaluable patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) achieved an objective response. One FL patient with a CR remains on study at 13 months, and 1 FL patient with a PR remains on study at 13 months.

 

The only patient with marginal zone lymphoma achieved a PR and continues on study at 11 months.

 

One of the 14 patients evaluated for EZH2 status has a specific EZH2 tumor mutation (Y646H). This patient, who had DLBCL that relapsed or was refractory to 6 previous treatment regimens, achieved a PR after 16 weeks of therapy and remains on study.

 

The recommended phase 2 dose of tazemetostat is 800 mg twice daily.

 

Adverse events and next steps

 

All of the 45 enrolled patients were evaluable for safety. Treatment-related adverse events included asthenia (n=10), nausea (n=6), dyspepsia (n=5), thrombocytopenia (n=4), anorexia (n=4), anemia (n=4), vomiting (n=3), constipation (n=2), muscle spasm (n=2), hypertension (n=2), neutropenia (n=2), and elevated transaminase (n=1).

 

There were 5 grade 3 or higher adverse events related to treatment, including grade 3 anorexia, grade 3 hypertension, grade 3 transaminase elevation, grade 4 thrombocytopenia, and grade 4 neutropenia.

 

 

 

Epizyme plans to report a further update from this trial by the end of this year. The company is now enrolling patients in a phase 2 study of tazemetostat monotherapy in patients with relapsed or refractory NHL, stratified by cell of origin and EZH2 mutation status.

 

Epizyme is also planning a phase 2 trial of tazemetostat in adults with INI1-deficient solid tumors, a phase 1 study of pediatric patients with INI1-deficient solid tumors, a combination study of tazemetostat with R-CHOP in patients with DLBCL, and a combination study of tazemetostat with a B-cell signaling agent or other emerging targeted therapies for B-cell lymphomas.

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

 

 

 

Micrograph showing FL

 

LUGANO—The EZH2 inhibitor tazemetostat (EPZ-6438) has shown “meaningful clinical activity” as monotherapy in patients with advanced non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), according to researchers.

 

In a phase 1 trial, 9 of the 15 evaluable NHL patients achieved an objective response to tazemetostat.

 

This included 2 ongoing complete responses (CRs), 1 in a patient with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and 1 in a patient with follicular lymphoma (FL).

 

It also included a partial response (PR) in the first treated patient with an EZH2 mutation.

 

And researchers said the drug was largely well-tolerated, as most adverse events were grade 1 or 2.

 

“The breadth, depth, and durability of responses seen in NHL patients among multiple histologies continue to impress, as does the safety and tolerability of tazemetostat in this phase 1 study,” said Vincent Ribrag, MD, of Institut Gustave Roussy in Villejuif, France.

 

“Among the patients in the dose-escalation cohorts, we have seen a noteworthy deepening of responses over time, and, in the first treated patient with an EZH2 tumor mutation, we have seen a partial response, which is very encouraging.”

 

Dr Ribrag presented these results at the 13th International Conference on Malignant Lymphoma (abstract 145*). The study, which was previously presented at the 26th EORTC-NCI-AACR Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics, was sponsored by Epizyme, Inc., the company developing tazemetostat.

 

The phase 1 trial has enrolled 19 patients with relapsed or refractory B-cell NHL and 26 patients with advanced solid tumors.

 

Researchers have evaluated 5 cohorts of patients in the dose-escalation portion of the study—100 mg, 200 mg, 400 mg, 800 mg, and 1600 mg—and 2 cohorts—800 mg and 1600 mg—in the dose-expansion phase. All doses of tazemetostat were given twice daily.

 

The 19 NHL patients had a median age of 61 (range, 24-84) and were heavily pretreated. Eighty-five percent had received 3 or more prior therapies, and 37% had received 5 or more prior therapies.

 

Thirty-seven percent of patients were refractory to their last prior regimen, and 26% had received a prior autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant.

 

Dosing and efficacy

 

As of June 8, 2015, 15 NHL patients were evaluable for efficacy. Nine had achieved an objective response, including 2 patients with an ongoing CR. All responses were observed between 2 and 10 months on therapy.

 

Five of the 9 evaluable patients with DLBCL achieved an objective response. One DLBCL patient with a CR remains on study at 18 months of treatment.

 

Three of 5 evaluable patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) achieved an objective response. One FL patient with a CR remains on study at 13 months, and 1 FL patient with a PR remains on study at 13 months.

 

The only patient with marginal zone lymphoma achieved a PR and continues on study at 11 months.

 

One of the 14 patients evaluated for EZH2 status has a specific EZH2 tumor mutation (Y646H). This patient, who had DLBCL that relapsed or was refractory to 6 previous treatment regimens, achieved a PR after 16 weeks of therapy and remains on study.

 

The recommended phase 2 dose of tazemetostat is 800 mg twice daily.

 

Adverse events and next steps

 

All of the 45 enrolled patients were evaluable for safety. Treatment-related adverse events included asthenia (n=10), nausea (n=6), dyspepsia (n=5), thrombocytopenia (n=4), anorexia (n=4), anemia (n=4), vomiting (n=3), constipation (n=2), muscle spasm (n=2), hypertension (n=2), neutropenia (n=2), and elevated transaminase (n=1).

 

There were 5 grade 3 or higher adverse events related to treatment, including grade 3 anorexia, grade 3 hypertension, grade 3 transaminase elevation, grade 4 thrombocytopenia, and grade 4 neutropenia.

 

 

 

Epizyme plans to report a further update from this trial by the end of this year. The company is now enrolling patients in a phase 2 study of tazemetostat monotherapy in patients with relapsed or refractory NHL, stratified by cell of origin and EZH2 mutation status.

 

Epizyme is also planning a phase 2 trial of tazemetostat in adults with INI1-deficient solid tumors, a phase 1 study of pediatric patients with INI1-deficient solid tumors, a combination study of tazemetostat with R-CHOP in patients with DLBCL, and a combination study of tazemetostat with a B-cell signaling agent or other emerging targeted therapies for B-cell lymphomas.

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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CAR T-cell therapy seems feasible for NHL, MM

 

 

 

Attendees at ASCO 2015

©ASCO/Rodney White

 

CHICAGO—The CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy CTL019 has shown promise for treating non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and may be a feasible treatment option for multiple myeloma (MM) as well, according to researchers.

 

In an ongoing phase 2 trial, CTL019 has produced durable responses in patients with relapsed or refractory NHL.

 

And early results of a phase 1 trial suggest CTL019 can provide clinical benefit in heavily pretreated patients with MM.

 

Both studies were presented at the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting. The University of Pennsylvania and Novartis have an exclusive global collaboration to research, develop, and commercialize CTL019.

 

CTL019 in NHL

 

Stephen Schuster, MD, of the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, presented results of the phase 2 NHL trial (abstract 8516*).

 

The trial included 20 evaluable patients, 13 with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and 7 with follicular lymphoma (FL). At the time of presentation, the median follow-up was 274 days for the patients with DLBCL and 290 days for those with FL.

 

The overall response rate was 100% in patients with FL and 50% in those with DLBCL. Thirteen patients responded to the therapy, including 11 who achieved a complete response and 2 who experienced a partial response.

 

Six patients with a partial response to treatment at 3 months achieved a complete response by 6 months. Two patients with a partial response experienced disease progression at 6 and 12 months after treatment.

 

The researchers said toxicity appeared to be acceptable, with primarily grade 2 cytokine release syndrome (CRS). Two patients developed CRS of grade 3 or higher at peak T-cell expansion. There were no deaths from CRS.

 

“The results from this ongoing study of CTL019 are encouraging, as we now have data through 6 months showing that patients may have achieved durable overall response rates,” Dr Schuster said. “These data support our ongoing efforts to determine the potential role of CTL019 in improving outcomes for patients with certain types of B-cell lymphomas.”

 

CTL019 in MM

 

Alfred Garfall, MD, of the Abramson Cancer Center, presented preliminary results of an ongoing phase 1 study investigating CTL019 in patients with MM (abstract 8517*).

 

Dr Garfall and his colleagues hypothesized that CTL019 would exhibit efficacy in MM due to low-level CD19 expression on MM plasma cells or CD19 expression in drug-resistant, disease-propagating subsets of the MM clone.

 

The study included 5 patients who experienced disease progression within a year of a prior autologous stem cell transplant and were medically fit to undergo a second autologous transplant. The patients had received a median of 7.5 prior lines of therapy.

 

“We found potential evidence of clinical benefit in 3 of 4 patients with more than 100 days of follow-up,” Dr Garfall said.

 

Two patients experienced longer, deeper responses, and 1 patient experienced CRS.

 

The data suggest “it is safe and feasible to manufacture and administered CTL019 to refractory multiple myeloma patients,” Dr Garfall said.

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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Attendees at ASCO 2015

©ASCO/Rodney White

 

CHICAGO—The CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy CTL019 has shown promise for treating non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and may be a feasible treatment option for multiple myeloma (MM) as well, according to researchers.

 

In an ongoing phase 2 trial, CTL019 has produced durable responses in patients with relapsed or refractory NHL.

 

And early results of a phase 1 trial suggest CTL019 can provide clinical benefit in heavily pretreated patients with MM.

 

Both studies were presented at the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting. The University of Pennsylvania and Novartis have an exclusive global collaboration to research, develop, and commercialize CTL019.

 

CTL019 in NHL

 

Stephen Schuster, MD, of the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, presented results of the phase 2 NHL trial (abstract 8516*).

 

The trial included 20 evaluable patients, 13 with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and 7 with follicular lymphoma (FL). At the time of presentation, the median follow-up was 274 days for the patients with DLBCL and 290 days for those with FL.

 

The overall response rate was 100% in patients with FL and 50% in those with DLBCL. Thirteen patients responded to the therapy, including 11 who achieved a complete response and 2 who experienced a partial response.

 

Six patients with a partial response to treatment at 3 months achieved a complete response by 6 months. Two patients with a partial response experienced disease progression at 6 and 12 months after treatment.

 

The researchers said toxicity appeared to be acceptable, with primarily grade 2 cytokine release syndrome (CRS). Two patients developed CRS of grade 3 or higher at peak T-cell expansion. There were no deaths from CRS.

 

“The results from this ongoing study of CTL019 are encouraging, as we now have data through 6 months showing that patients may have achieved durable overall response rates,” Dr Schuster said. “These data support our ongoing efforts to determine the potential role of CTL019 in improving outcomes for patients with certain types of B-cell lymphomas.”

 

CTL019 in MM

 

Alfred Garfall, MD, of the Abramson Cancer Center, presented preliminary results of an ongoing phase 1 study investigating CTL019 in patients with MM (abstract 8517*).

 

Dr Garfall and his colleagues hypothesized that CTL019 would exhibit efficacy in MM due to low-level CD19 expression on MM plasma cells or CD19 expression in drug-resistant, disease-propagating subsets of the MM clone.

 

The study included 5 patients who experienced disease progression within a year of a prior autologous stem cell transplant and were medically fit to undergo a second autologous transplant. The patients had received a median of 7.5 prior lines of therapy.

 

“We found potential evidence of clinical benefit in 3 of 4 patients with more than 100 days of follow-up,” Dr Garfall said.

 

Two patients experienced longer, deeper responses, and 1 patient experienced CRS.

 

The data suggest “it is safe and feasible to manufacture and administered CTL019 to refractory multiple myeloma patients,” Dr Garfall said.

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

 

 

 

Attendees at ASCO 2015

©ASCO/Rodney White

 

CHICAGO—The CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy CTL019 has shown promise for treating non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and may be a feasible treatment option for multiple myeloma (MM) as well, according to researchers.

 

In an ongoing phase 2 trial, CTL019 has produced durable responses in patients with relapsed or refractory NHL.

 

And early results of a phase 1 trial suggest CTL019 can provide clinical benefit in heavily pretreated patients with MM.

 

Both studies were presented at the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting. The University of Pennsylvania and Novartis have an exclusive global collaboration to research, develop, and commercialize CTL019.

 

CTL019 in NHL

 

Stephen Schuster, MD, of the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, presented results of the phase 2 NHL trial (abstract 8516*).

 

The trial included 20 evaluable patients, 13 with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and 7 with follicular lymphoma (FL). At the time of presentation, the median follow-up was 274 days for the patients with DLBCL and 290 days for those with FL.

 

The overall response rate was 100% in patients with FL and 50% in those with DLBCL. Thirteen patients responded to the therapy, including 11 who achieved a complete response and 2 who experienced a partial response.

 

Six patients with a partial response to treatment at 3 months achieved a complete response by 6 months. Two patients with a partial response experienced disease progression at 6 and 12 months after treatment.

 

The researchers said toxicity appeared to be acceptable, with primarily grade 2 cytokine release syndrome (CRS). Two patients developed CRS of grade 3 or higher at peak T-cell expansion. There were no deaths from CRS.

 

“The results from this ongoing study of CTL019 are encouraging, as we now have data through 6 months showing that patients may have achieved durable overall response rates,” Dr Schuster said. “These data support our ongoing efforts to determine the potential role of CTL019 in improving outcomes for patients with certain types of B-cell lymphomas.”

 

CTL019 in MM

 

Alfred Garfall, MD, of the Abramson Cancer Center, presented preliminary results of an ongoing phase 1 study investigating CTL019 in patients with MM (abstract 8517*).

 

Dr Garfall and his colleagues hypothesized that CTL019 would exhibit efficacy in MM due to low-level CD19 expression on MM plasma cells or CD19 expression in drug-resistant, disease-propagating subsets of the MM clone.

 

The study included 5 patients who experienced disease progression within a year of a prior autologous stem cell transplant and were medically fit to undergo a second autologous transplant. The patients had received a median of 7.5 prior lines of therapy.

 

“We found potential evidence of clinical benefit in 3 of 4 patients with more than 100 days of follow-up,” Dr Garfall said.

 

Two patients experienced longer, deeper responses, and 1 patient experienced CRS.

 

The data suggest “it is safe and feasible to manufacture and administered CTL019 to refractory multiple myeloma patients,” Dr Garfall said.

 

*Information in the abstract differs from that presented at the meeting.

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Prenatal test can detect lymphoma in mothers

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Prenatal test can detect lymphoma in mothers

 

 

 

Blood samples

Photo by Graham Colm

 

GLASGOW—A non-invasive prenatal test (NIPT) used to identify chromosomal fetal disorders can detect maternal cancers before symptoms appear, a new study has shown.

 

Testing revealed chromosomal abnormalities in 3 women that bore a resemblance to abnormalities observed in cancers. And additional testing confirmed the women had cancer—Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), follicular lymphoma (FL), and ovarian carcinoma.

 

This research was presented at the European Human Genetics Conference 2015 and published simultaneously in JAMA Oncology.

 

Nathalie Brison, PhD, of University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium, and her colleagues conducted this research with the goal of improving the NIPT test. They wanted to overcome some of the technical problems that can cause the test to produce false-negative or false-positive results.

 

“Even though it is very reliable, we believed that we could make it even better, and, in doing so, we could also find other chromosomal abnormalities apart from the traditional trisomy syndromes—Down’s [trisomy 21], Edward’s [trisomy 18], and Patau [trisomy 13],” Dr Brison said.

 

“Using the new, adapted test in over 6000 pregnancies, and looking at other chromosomes, we identified 3 different genomic abnormalities in 3 women that could not be linked to either the maternal or fetal genomic profile. We realized that the abnormalities bore a resemblance to those found in cancer and referred the women to the oncology unit.”

 

Further examination, including whole-body MRI scanning and pathological and genetic investigations, revealed the presence of 3 different early stage cancers in the women: ovarian carcinoma, FL, and HL.

 

The researchers said that, without NIPT, these cancers likely would not have been detected until the women developed symptoms.

 

“Considering the bad prognosis of some cancers when detected later, and given that we know that it is both possible and safe to treat the disease during pregnancy, this is an important added advantage of NIPT,” said study author Joris Vermeesch, PhD, also of University Hospitals Leuven.

 

“During pregnancy, cancer-related symptoms may well be masked. Fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain, and vaginal blood loss are easily interpretable as a normal part of being pregnant. NIPT offers an opportunity for the accurate screening of high-risk women for cancer, allowing us to overcome the challenge of early diagnosis in pregnant women.”

 

Two of the 3 women diagnosed with cancer were treated. The woman with ovarian cancer was treated after delivery.

 

The woman with HL was treated during pregnancy and ultimately gave birth to a healthy girl. The woman with FL has indolent disease and may not require treatment for years, according to the researchers.

 

Follow-up investigations in the treated women showed that NIPT had the additional advantage of allowing for treatment monitoring. The researchers were able to see that chromosomal profiles became normal during and after chemotherapy.

 

Because NIPT involves looking at chromosomes other than 13, 18, and 21, the women taking part in this study were informed about the possibility of incidental findings.

 

“However, our study feeds into the ethical debate about whether or not to report incidental findings to patients and also has implications for the current political discussions concerning reimbursement and funding of NIPT by national healthcare systems,” Dr Vermeesch said.

 

The results also suggest that NIPT might enable the detection of pre-symptomatic cancers in the general population.

 

“We now know that it is possible to offer the accurate detection of chromosomally imbalanced cancers to the general population via minimally invasive screening methods,” Dr Brison said. “The normalization of the NIPT profile in these patients following treatment indicates that we can also measure response to treatment as early as after the first administration of chemotherapy.”

 

 

 

“Of course, larger-scale studies will be required to validate these results further, but we are confident that we have made an important step towards the possibility of wide-scale, effective, non-invasive cancer screening capable of detecting disease at an early stage.”

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Blood samples

Photo by Graham Colm

 

GLASGOW—A non-invasive prenatal test (NIPT) used to identify chromosomal fetal disorders can detect maternal cancers before symptoms appear, a new study has shown.

 

Testing revealed chromosomal abnormalities in 3 women that bore a resemblance to abnormalities observed in cancers. And additional testing confirmed the women had cancer—Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), follicular lymphoma (FL), and ovarian carcinoma.

 

This research was presented at the European Human Genetics Conference 2015 and published simultaneously in JAMA Oncology.

 

Nathalie Brison, PhD, of University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium, and her colleagues conducted this research with the goal of improving the NIPT test. They wanted to overcome some of the technical problems that can cause the test to produce false-negative or false-positive results.

 

“Even though it is very reliable, we believed that we could make it even better, and, in doing so, we could also find other chromosomal abnormalities apart from the traditional trisomy syndromes—Down’s [trisomy 21], Edward’s [trisomy 18], and Patau [trisomy 13],” Dr Brison said.

 

“Using the new, adapted test in over 6000 pregnancies, and looking at other chromosomes, we identified 3 different genomic abnormalities in 3 women that could not be linked to either the maternal or fetal genomic profile. We realized that the abnormalities bore a resemblance to those found in cancer and referred the women to the oncology unit.”

 

Further examination, including whole-body MRI scanning and pathological and genetic investigations, revealed the presence of 3 different early stage cancers in the women: ovarian carcinoma, FL, and HL.

 

The researchers said that, without NIPT, these cancers likely would not have been detected until the women developed symptoms.

 

“Considering the bad prognosis of some cancers when detected later, and given that we know that it is both possible and safe to treat the disease during pregnancy, this is an important added advantage of NIPT,” said study author Joris Vermeesch, PhD, also of University Hospitals Leuven.

 

“During pregnancy, cancer-related symptoms may well be masked. Fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain, and vaginal blood loss are easily interpretable as a normal part of being pregnant. NIPT offers an opportunity for the accurate screening of high-risk women for cancer, allowing us to overcome the challenge of early diagnosis in pregnant women.”

 

Two of the 3 women diagnosed with cancer were treated. The woman with ovarian cancer was treated after delivery.

 

The woman with HL was treated during pregnancy and ultimately gave birth to a healthy girl. The woman with FL has indolent disease and may not require treatment for years, according to the researchers.

 

Follow-up investigations in the treated women showed that NIPT had the additional advantage of allowing for treatment monitoring. The researchers were able to see that chromosomal profiles became normal during and after chemotherapy.

 

Because NIPT involves looking at chromosomes other than 13, 18, and 21, the women taking part in this study were informed about the possibility of incidental findings.

 

“However, our study feeds into the ethical debate about whether or not to report incidental findings to patients and also has implications for the current political discussions concerning reimbursement and funding of NIPT by national healthcare systems,” Dr Vermeesch said.

 

The results also suggest that NIPT might enable the detection of pre-symptomatic cancers in the general population.

 

“We now know that it is possible to offer the accurate detection of chromosomally imbalanced cancers to the general population via minimally invasive screening methods,” Dr Brison said. “The normalization of the NIPT profile in these patients following treatment indicates that we can also measure response to treatment as early as after the first administration of chemotherapy.”

 

 

 

“Of course, larger-scale studies will be required to validate these results further, but we are confident that we have made an important step towards the possibility of wide-scale, effective, non-invasive cancer screening capable of detecting disease at an early stage.”

 

 

 

Blood samples

Photo by Graham Colm

 

GLASGOW—A non-invasive prenatal test (NIPT) used to identify chromosomal fetal disorders can detect maternal cancers before symptoms appear, a new study has shown.

 

Testing revealed chromosomal abnormalities in 3 women that bore a resemblance to abnormalities observed in cancers. And additional testing confirmed the women had cancer—Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), follicular lymphoma (FL), and ovarian carcinoma.

 

This research was presented at the European Human Genetics Conference 2015 and published simultaneously in JAMA Oncology.

 

Nathalie Brison, PhD, of University Hospitals Leuven in Belgium, and her colleagues conducted this research with the goal of improving the NIPT test. They wanted to overcome some of the technical problems that can cause the test to produce false-negative or false-positive results.

 

“Even though it is very reliable, we believed that we could make it even better, and, in doing so, we could also find other chromosomal abnormalities apart from the traditional trisomy syndromes—Down’s [trisomy 21], Edward’s [trisomy 18], and Patau [trisomy 13],” Dr Brison said.

 

“Using the new, adapted test in over 6000 pregnancies, and looking at other chromosomes, we identified 3 different genomic abnormalities in 3 women that could not be linked to either the maternal or fetal genomic profile. We realized that the abnormalities bore a resemblance to those found in cancer and referred the women to the oncology unit.”

 

Further examination, including whole-body MRI scanning and pathological and genetic investigations, revealed the presence of 3 different early stage cancers in the women: ovarian carcinoma, FL, and HL.

 

The researchers said that, without NIPT, these cancers likely would not have been detected until the women developed symptoms.

 

“Considering the bad prognosis of some cancers when detected later, and given that we know that it is both possible and safe to treat the disease during pregnancy, this is an important added advantage of NIPT,” said study author Joris Vermeesch, PhD, also of University Hospitals Leuven.

 

“During pregnancy, cancer-related symptoms may well be masked. Fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain, and vaginal blood loss are easily interpretable as a normal part of being pregnant. NIPT offers an opportunity for the accurate screening of high-risk women for cancer, allowing us to overcome the challenge of early diagnosis in pregnant women.”

 

Two of the 3 women diagnosed with cancer were treated. The woman with ovarian cancer was treated after delivery.

 

The woman with HL was treated during pregnancy and ultimately gave birth to a healthy girl. The woman with FL has indolent disease and may not require treatment for years, according to the researchers.

 

Follow-up investigations in the treated women showed that NIPT had the additional advantage of allowing for treatment monitoring. The researchers were able to see that chromosomal profiles became normal during and after chemotherapy.

 

Because NIPT involves looking at chromosomes other than 13, 18, and 21, the women taking part in this study were informed about the possibility of incidental findings.

 

“However, our study feeds into the ethical debate about whether or not to report incidental findings to patients and also has implications for the current political discussions concerning reimbursement and funding of NIPT by national healthcare systems,” Dr Vermeesch said.

 

The results also suggest that NIPT might enable the detection of pre-symptomatic cancers in the general population.

 

“We now know that it is possible to offer the accurate detection of chromosomally imbalanced cancers to the general population via minimally invasive screening methods,” Dr Brison said. “The normalization of the NIPT profile in these patients following treatment indicates that we can also measure response to treatment as early as after the first administration of chemotherapy.”

 

 

 

“Of course, larger-scale studies will be required to validate these results further, but we are confident that we have made an important step towards the possibility of wide-scale, effective, non-invasive cancer screening capable of detecting disease at an early stage.”

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Drug prolongs PFS in indolent, refractory NHL

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Drug prolongs PFS in indolent, refractory NHL

 

 

 

Inside McCormick Place, site of

the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting

 

CHICAGO—Adding obinutuzumab to treatment with bendamustine improves progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with rituximab-refractory, indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), interim results of the phase 3 GADOLIN trial suggest.

 

Study investigators said patients who received obinutuzumab and bendamustine followed by obinutuzumab maintenance had roughly double the PFS of patients who received bendamustine alone.

 

There was no significant difference between the treatment groups with regard to response rates or overall survival (OS), but the investigators said longer follow-up is needed to determine if obinutuzumab confers a benefit in OS.

 

This trial was stopped before its protocol-specified final analysis because of the PFS benefit observed in the obinutuzumab arm.

 

Laurie Sehn, MD, of the BC Cancer Agency in Vancouver, Canada, presented these results at the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract LBA8502). Genentech Inc. and F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. funded this research.

 

The trial included 413 patients with rituximab-refractory NHL, including follicular lymphoma (FL), marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL), and Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia (WM).

 

The patients were randomized to receive bendamustine alone (120 mg/m2/day on days 1 and 2 for up to six 28-day cycles) or a combination of bendamustine (90 mg/m2/day on days 1 and 2 for up to six 28-day cycles) plus obinutuzumab (1000 mg on days 1, 8, and 15 for cycle 1, followed by 1 dose for up to six 28-day cycles), followed by obinutuzumab maintenance (1000 mg every 2 months for 2 years or until progression).

 

Dr Sehn said there were no significant differences in baseline characteristics between the treatment arms. Patients in both arms had received a median of 2 prior treatments, and the median time from last treatment was about 4 months.

 

Of the 194 patients randomized to treatment in the obinutuzumab-bendamustine (OB) arm, 79.9% had FL, 13.9% had MZL, and 6.2% had SLL. Of the 202 patients randomized to the bendamustine-alone (control) arm, 82.2% had FL, 9.4% had MZL, 7.9% had SLL, and 0.5% had WM.

 

Ultimately, 156 patients completed induction in the OB arm, as did 129 patients in the control arm. Thirty-six patients completed maintenance with obinutuzumab, and 46 were still receiving maintenance at the time of analysis.

 

Safety results

 

Dr Sehn said there were no unexpected safety signals among patients in the OB arm.

 

About 99% of patients in the OB arm experienced at least 1 adverse event (AE), as did 98% of patients in the control arm. Severe AEs occurred in 38.1% and 32.8% of patients, respectively, and grade 3/4 AEs occurred in 67% and 62.1%, respectively.

 

AEs leading to treatment withdrawal occurred in 18% and 15.7% of patients, respectively. And AEs leading to death occurred in 6.2% and 6.1%, respectively.

 

Grade 3/4 AEs that occurred in at least 2% of patients in the OB and control arms, respectively, were neutropenia (33% vs 26.3%), thrombocytopenia (10.8% vs 16.2%), infusion-related reactions (10.8% vs 5.6%), anemia (7.7% vs 10.1%), febrile neutropenia (4.6% vs 3.5%), nausea (1% vs 3%), fatigue (1.5% vs 2.5%), diarrhea (1% vs 2.5%), and vomiting (2.1% vs 1%).

 

Response and survival

 

According to an independent radiology facility, 69.2% of patients in the OB arm had responded to treatment at the end of induction, as had 63% of the control arm. The best overall response by the 12-month mark was 78.7% and 76.6%, respectively.

 

The median follow-up was 21 months. At that point, the median PFS had not been reached in the OB arm but was 14.9 months in the control arm (P<0.0001), according to the independent radiology facility.

 

 

 

According to investigators, the median PFS was 29.2 months and 14 months, respectively (P<0.0001).

 

The median OS has not been reached in either arm (P=0.4017). Thirty-four patients (18%) in the OB arm died, as did 41 (20%) in the control arm.

 

Dr Sehn said longer follow-up is needed to determine the potential OS benefit associated with obinutuzumab, but the PFS benefit of OB is clinically meaningful.

 

“The fact that this new approach doubled average remission time marks a major step forward for our patients,” she said. “Obinutuzumab may offer patients the chance to stay well for a significantly longer period of time, putting off the need for additional chemotherapy.”

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Inside McCormick Place, site of

the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting

 

CHICAGO—Adding obinutuzumab to treatment with bendamustine improves progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with rituximab-refractory, indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), interim results of the phase 3 GADOLIN trial suggest.

 

Study investigators said patients who received obinutuzumab and bendamustine followed by obinutuzumab maintenance had roughly double the PFS of patients who received bendamustine alone.

 

There was no significant difference between the treatment groups with regard to response rates or overall survival (OS), but the investigators said longer follow-up is needed to determine if obinutuzumab confers a benefit in OS.

 

This trial was stopped before its protocol-specified final analysis because of the PFS benefit observed in the obinutuzumab arm.

 

Laurie Sehn, MD, of the BC Cancer Agency in Vancouver, Canada, presented these results at the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract LBA8502). Genentech Inc. and F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. funded this research.

 

The trial included 413 patients with rituximab-refractory NHL, including follicular lymphoma (FL), marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL), and Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia (WM).

 

The patients were randomized to receive bendamustine alone (120 mg/m2/day on days 1 and 2 for up to six 28-day cycles) or a combination of bendamustine (90 mg/m2/day on days 1 and 2 for up to six 28-day cycles) plus obinutuzumab (1000 mg on days 1, 8, and 15 for cycle 1, followed by 1 dose for up to six 28-day cycles), followed by obinutuzumab maintenance (1000 mg every 2 months for 2 years or until progression).

 

Dr Sehn said there were no significant differences in baseline characteristics between the treatment arms. Patients in both arms had received a median of 2 prior treatments, and the median time from last treatment was about 4 months.

 

Of the 194 patients randomized to treatment in the obinutuzumab-bendamustine (OB) arm, 79.9% had FL, 13.9% had MZL, and 6.2% had SLL. Of the 202 patients randomized to the bendamustine-alone (control) arm, 82.2% had FL, 9.4% had MZL, 7.9% had SLL, and 0.5% had WM.

 

Ultimately, 156 patients completed induction in the OB arm, as did 129 patients in the control arm. Thirty-six patients completed maintenance with obinutuzumab, and 46 were still receiving maintenance at the time of analysis.

 

Safety results

 

Dr Sehn said there were no unexpected safety signals among patients in the OB arm.

 

About 99% of patients in the OB arm experienced at least 1 adverse event (AE), as did 98% of patients in the control arm. Severe AEs occurred in 38.1% and 32.8% of patients, respectively, and grade 3/4 AEs occurred in 67% and 62.1%, respectively.

 

AEs leading to treatment withdrawal occurred in 18% and 15.7% of patients, respectively. And AEs leading to death occurred in 6.2% and 6.1%, respectively.

 

Grade 3/4 AEs that occurred in at least 2% of patients in the OB and control arms, respectively, were neutropenia (33% vs 26.3%), thrombocytopenia (10.8% vs 16.2%), infusion-related reactions (10.8% vs 5.6%), anemia (7.7% vs 10.1%), febrile neutropenia (4.6% vs 3.5%), nausea (1% vs 3%), fatigue (1.5% vs 2.5%), diarrhea (1% vs 2.5%), and vomiting (2.1% vs 1%).

 

Response and survival

 

According to an independent radiology facility, 69.2% of patients in the OB arm had responded to treatment at the end of induction, as had 63% of the control arm. The best overall response by the 12-month mark was 78.7% and 76.6%, respectively.

 

The median follow-up was 21 months. At that point, the median PFS had not been reached in the OB arm but was 14.9 months in the control arm (P<0.0001), according to the independent radiology facility.

 

 

 

According to investigators, the median PFS was 29.2 months and 14 months, respectively (P<0.0001).

 

The median OS has not been reached in either arm (P=0.4017). Thirty-four patients (18%) in the OB arm died, as did 41 (20%) in the control arm.

 

Dr Sehn said longer follow-up is needed to determine the potential OS benefit associated with obinutuzumab, but the PFS benefit of OB is clinically meaningful.

 

“The fact that this new approach doubled average remission time marks a major step forward for our patients,” she said. “Obinutuzumab may offer patients the chance to stay well for a significantly longer period of time, putting off the need for additional chemotherapy.”

 

 

 

Inside McCormick Place, site of

the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting

 

CHICAGO—Adding obinutuzumab to treatment with bendamustine improves progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with rituximab-refractory, indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), interim results of the phase 3 GADOLIN trial suggest.

 

Study investigators said patients who received obinutuzumab and bendamustine followed by obinutuzumab maintenance had roughly double the PFS of patients who received bendamustine alone.

 

There was no significant difference between the treatment groups with regard to response rates or overall survival (OS), but the investigators said longer follow-up is needed to determine if obinutuzumab confers a benefit in OS.

 

This trial was stopped before its protocol-specified final analysis because of the PFS benefit observed in the obinutuzumab arm.

 

Laurie Sehn, MD, of the BC Cancer Agency in Vancouver, Canada, presented these results at the 2015 ASCO Annual Meeting (abstract LBA8502). Genentech Inc. and F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. funded this research.

 

The trial included 413 patients with rituximab-refractory NHL, including follicular lymphoma (FL), marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL), and Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia (WM).

 

The patients were randomized to receive bendamustine alone (120 mg/m2/day on days 1 and 2 for up to six 28-day cycles) or a combination of bendamustine (90 mg/m2/day on days 1 and 2 for up to six 28-day cycles) plus obinutuzumab (1000 mg on days 1, 8, and 15 for cycle 1, followed by 1 dose for up to six 28-day cycles), followed by obinutuzumab maintenance (1000 mg every 2 months for 2 years or until progression).

 

Dr Sehn said there were no significant differences in baseline characteristics between the treatment arms. Patients in both arms had received a median of 2 prior treatments, and the median time from last treatment was about 4 months.

 

Of the 194 patients randomized to treatment in the obinutuzumab-bendamustine (OB) arm, 79.9% had FL, 13.9% had MZL, and 6.2% had SLL. Of the 202 patients randomized to the bendamustine-alone (control) arm, 82.2% had FL, 9.4% had MZL, 7.9% had SLL, and 0.5% had WM.

 

Ultimately, 156 patients completed induction in the OB arm, as did 129 patients in the control arm. Thirty-six patients completed maintenance with obinutuzumab, and 46 were still receiving maintenance at the time of analysis.

 

Safety results

 

Dr Sehn said there were no unexpected safety signals among patients in the OB arm.

 

About 99% of patients in the OB arm experienced at least 1 adverse event (AE), as did 98% of patients in the control arm. Severe AEs occurred in 38.1% and 32.8% of patients, respectively, and grade 3/4 AEs occurred in 67% and 62.1%, respectively.

 

AEs leading to treatment withdrawal occurred in 18% and 15.7% of patients, respectively. And AEs leading to death occurred in 6.2% and 6.1%, respectively.

 

Grade 3/4 AEs that occurred in at least 2% of patients in the OB and control arms, respectively, were neutropenia (33% vs 26.3%), thrombocytopenia (10.8% vs 16.2%), infusion-related reactions (10.8% vs 5.6%), anemia (7.7% vs 10.1%), febrile neutropenia (4.6% vs 3.5%), nausea (1% vs 3%), fatigue (1.5% vs 2.5%), diarrhea (1% vs 2.5%), and vomiting (2.1% vs 1%).

 

Response and survival

 

According to an independent radiology facility, 69.2% of patients in the OB arm had responded to treatment at the end of induction, as had 63% of the control arm. The best overall response by the 12-month mark was 78.7% and 76.6%, respectively.

 

The median follow-up was 21 months. At that point, the median PFS had not been reached in the OB arm but was 14.9 months in the control arm (P<0.0001), according to the independent radiology facility.

 

 

 

According to investigators, the median PFS was 29.2 months and 14 months, respectively (P<0.0001).

 

The median OS has not been reached in either arm (P=0.4017). Thirty-four patients (18%) in the OB arm died, as did 41 (20%) in the control arm.

 

Dr Sehn said longer follow-up is needed to determine the potential OS benefit associated with obinutuzumab, but the PFS benefit of OB is clinically meaningful.

 

“The fact that this new approach doubled average remission time marks a major step forward for our patients,” she said. “Obinutuzumab may offer patients the chance to stay well for a significantly longer period of time, putting off the need for additional chemotherapy.”

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GADOLIN: Combination improves PFS in rituximab-refractory indolent NHL

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CHICAGO – Progression-free survival for patients with rituximab-refractory indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma was effectively doubled with a combination of obinutuzumab and bendamustine, compared with bendamustine alone.

In a randomized trial halted early because of the evident superiority of the combination over bendamustine monotherapy, at a median follow-up of 20 months the median progression-free survival as assessed by an independent radiology facility had not been reached for patients treated with obinutuzumab (Gazyva) and bendamustine, vs. 14.9 months for bendamustine alone. As assessed by the investigators, the median PFS rates were 29 months and 14 months, respectively, reported Dr. Laurie Helen Sehn, a medical oncologist at the British Columbia (Canada) Cancer Agency in Vancouver.

 

Dr. Laurie Helen Sehn

“The combination of obinutuzumab [and bendamustine], followed by obinutuzumab maintenance, resulted in a statistically significant, but more importantly, a clinically meaningful increase in progression-free survival compared with bendamustine alone,” Dr. Sehn said at a briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“This study is remarkable, because it does demonstrate the first randomized evidence of a clinical benefit of a novel anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody for patients who are rituximab refractory,” she added.

The advent of the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab in the later 1990s transformed treatment of hematologic malignancies, including indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas. However, some patients have disease that is resistant to rituximab or recurs after rituximab therapy, and for these patients treatment options are limited.

Bendamustine (Treanda) has been shown to be effective in patients with rituximab-refractory indolent NHL, but with remission durations of only 7-9 months.

Obinutuzumab is a glycoengineered anti-CD20 antibody that ASCO expert Dr. Merry-Jennifer Markham from the University of Florida in Gainesville called “a super-rituximab.”  It has been shown in preclinical studies to have activity against malignancies when combined with bendamustine.

In the GADOLIN trial, 413 patients with rituximab-refractory indolent NHL histologies were randomly assigned to receive either obinutuzumab 1,000 mg on days 1, 8 and 15 of the first 28-day cycle and then on day 1 of subsequent cycles plus bendamustine 90 mg/m2 per day on days 1 and 2 of the first six cycles, or only bendamustine 120 mg/m2 per day on the same schedule.
The NHL subtypes treated included follicular lymphomas, marginal zone lymphomas and small lymphocytic lymphomas.

For patients assigned to obinutuzumab, treatment continued until a determination of complete or partial response or stable disease, and were then continued on obinutuzumab maintenance, at a dose of 1,000 mg every 2 months for up to 2 years, or until disease progression.

Median follow-up was 23 months for the combination arm, and 20 months in the  bendamustine only arm.

At the first planned interim analysis, the median PFS by independent radiology review, the primary endpoint, was not reached among patients in the combination, compared with 14.9 months for bendamustine. This translated into a hazard ratio of 0.55 (P = .0001), and prompted the data safety monitoring committee to recommend ending the trial.

The safety analysis showed that the overall rates of adverse events, serious adverse events, grade 3 or great events, deaths and withdrawals were similar between the two trial arms, Dr. Sehn said.

“The safety profile revealed no new safety finding and was in keeping with what was expected with the combination of drugs,” Dr. Sehn said.

“The fact that these responses and the progression-free survival responses were so robust in a population that has already received an anti-CD20 agent is remarkable, and I think this really does open up the therapies that will lead to substantial time for these patients, who are all incurable,” Dr. Markham said in an interview. She was not involved in the GADOLIN trial.
 

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CHICAGO – Progression-free survival for patients with rituximab-refractory indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma was effectively doubled with a combination of obinutuzumab and bendamustine, compared with bendamustine alone.

In a randomized trial halted early because of the evident superiority of the combination over bendamustine monotherapy, at a median follow-up of 20 months the median progression-free survival as assessed by an independent radiology facility had not been reached for patients treated with obinutuzumab (Gazyva) and bendamustine, vs. 14.9 months for bendamustine alone. As assessed by the investigators, the median PFS rates were 29 months and 14 months, respectively, reported Dr. Laurie Helen Sehn, a medical oncologist at the British Columbia (Canada) Cancer Agency in Vancouver.

 

Dr. Laurie Helen Sehn

“The combination of obinutuzumab [and bendamustine], followed by obinutuzumab maintenance, resulted in a statistically significant, but more importantly, a clinically meaningful increase in progression-free survival compared with bendamustine alone,” Dr. Sehn said at a briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“This study is remarkable, because it does demonstrate the first randomized evidence of a clinical benefit of a novel anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody for patients who are rituximab refractory,” she added.

The advent of the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab in the later 1990s transformed treatment of hematologic malignancies, including indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas. However, some patients have disease that is resistant to rituximab or recurs after rituximab therapy, and for these patients treatment options are limited.

Bendamustine (Treanda) has been shown to be effective in patients with rituximab-refractory indolent NHL, but with remission durations of only 7-9 months.

Obinutuzumab is a glycoengineered anti-CD20 antibody that ASCO expert Dr. Merry-Jennifer Markham from the University of Florida in Gainesville called “a super-rituximab.”  It has been shown in preclinical studies to have activity against malignancies when combined with bendamustine.

In the GADOLIN trial, 413 patients with rituximab-refractory indolent NHL histologies were randomly assigned to receive either obinutuzumab 1,000 mg on days 1, 8 and 15 of the first 28-day cycle and then on day 1 of subsequent cycles plus bendamustine 90 mg/m2 per day on days 1 and 2 of the first six cycles, or only bendamustine 120 mg/m2 per day on the same schedule.
The NHL subtypes treated included follicular lymphomas, marginal zone lymphomas and small lymphocytic lymphomas.

For patients assigned to obinutuzumab, treatment continued until a determination of complete or partial response or stable disease, and were then continued on obinutuzumab maintenance, at a dose of 1,000 mg every 2 months for up to 2 years, or until disease progression.

Median follow-up was 23 months for the combination arm, and 20 months in the  bendamustine only arm.

At the first planned interim analysis, the median PFS by independent radiology review, the primary endpoint, was not reached among patients in the combination, compared with 14.9 months for bendamustine. This translated into a hazard ratio of 0.55 (P = .0001), and prompted the data safety monitoring committee to recommend ending the trial.

The safety analysis showed that the overall rates of adverse events, serious adverse events, grade 3 or great events, deaths and withdrawals were similar between the two trial arms, Dr. Sehn said.

“The safety profile revealed no new safety finding and was in keeping with what was expected with the combination of drugs,” Dr. Sehn said.

“The fact that these responses and the progression-free survival responses were so robust in a population that has already received an anti-CD20 agent is remarkable, and I think this really does open up the therapies that will lead to substantial time for these patients, who are all incurable,” Dr. Markham said in an interview. She was not involved in the GADOLIN trial.
 

CHICAGO – Progression-free survival for patients with rituximab-refractory indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma was effectively doubled with a combination of obinutuzumab and bendamustine, compared with bendamustine alone.

In a randomized trial halted early because of the evident superiority of the combination over bendamustine monotherapy, at a median follow-up of 20 months the median progression-free survival as assessed by an independent radiology facility had not been reached for patients treated with obinutuzumab (Gazyva) and bendamustine, vs. 14.9 months for bendamustine alone. As assessed by the investigators, the median PFS rates were 29 months and 14 months, respectively, reported Dr. Laurie Helen Sehn, a medical oncologist at the British Columbia (Canada) Cancer Agency in Vancouver.

 

Dr. Laurie Helen Sehn

“The combination of obinutuzumab [and bendamustine], followed by obinutuzumab maintenance, resulted in a statistically significant, but more importantly, a clinically meaningful increase in progression-free survival compared with bendamustine alone,” Dr. Sehn said at a briefing at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

“This study is remarkable, because it does demonstrate the first randomized evidence of a clinical benefit of a novel anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody for patients who are rituximab refractory,” she added.

The advent of the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab in the later 1990s transformed treatment of hematologic malignancies, including indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas. However, some patients have disease that is resistant to rituximab or recurs after rituximab therapy, and for these patients treatment options are limited.

Bendamustine (Treanda) has been shown to be effective in patients with rituximab-refractory indolent NHL, but with remission durations of only 7-9 months.

Obinutuzumab is a glycoengineered anti-CD20 antibody that ASCO expert Dr. Merry-Jennifer Markham from the University of Florida in Gainesville called “a super-rituximab.”  It has been shown in preclinical studies to have activity against malignancies when combined with bendamustine.

In the GADOLIN trial, 413 patients with rituximab-refractory indolent NHL histologies were randomly assigned to receive either obinutuzumab 1,000 mg on days 1, 8 and 15 of the first 28-day cycle and then on day 1 of subsequent cycles plus bendamustine 90 mg/m2 per day on days 1 and 2 of the first six cycles, or only bendamustine 120 mg/m2 per day on the same schedule.
The NHL subtypes treated included follicular lymphomas, marginal zone lymphomas and small lymphocytic lymphomas.

For patients assigned to obinutuzumab, treatment continued until a determination of complete or partial response or stable disease, and were then continued on obinutuzumab maintenance, at a dose of 1,000 mg every 2 months for up to 2 years, or until disease progression.

Median follow-up was 23 months for the combination arm, and 20 months in the  bendamustine only arm.

At the first planned interim analysis, the median PFS by independent radiology review, the primary endpoint, was not reached among patients in the combination, compared with 14.9 months for bendamustine. This translated into a hazard ratio of 0.55 (P = .0001), and prompted the data safety monitoring committee to recommend ending the trial.

The safety analysis showed that the overall rates of adverse events, serious adverse events, grade 3 or great events, deaths and withdrawals were similar between the two trial arms, Dr. Sehn said.

“The safety profile revealed no new safety finding and was in keeping with what was expected with the combination of drugs,” Dr. Sehn said.

“The fact that these responses and the progression-free survival responses were so robust in a population that has already received an anti-CD20 agent is remarkable, and I think this really does open up the therapies that will lead to substantial time for these patients, who are all incurable,” Dr. Markham said in an interview. She was not involved in the GADOLIN trial.
 

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Key clinical point: Adding obinutuzumab to bendamustine extended progression-free survival in patients with rituximab-refractory indolent non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Major finding: The hazard ratio for progression-free survival was 0.55 with the combination compared with bendamustine monotherapy.

Data source: Randomized controlled trial in 413 patients with rituximab-refractory indolent NHL.

Disclosures: The study was supported by Genetech and F. Hoffman-La Roche, Ltd. Dr. Sehn has received honoraria and research funding and has served as an advisor to the companies.

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Susceptibility to 2nd cancers in WM/LPL survivors

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AACR Annual Meeting 2015

 

PHILADELPHIA—A retrospective study has revealed factors that appear to influence a person’s susceptibility to Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM)/lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) and other malignancies.

 

Study investigators looked at patients diagnosed with WM or LPL over a 20-year period and found about a 50% excess of second primary cancers in this population.

 

The patients had a significantly increased risk of multiple hematologic and solid tumor malignancies, and a few of these malignancies had shared susceptibility factors with WM/LPL.

 

The investigators believe that identifying these factors may prove useful for determining genetic susceptibility to WM/LPL.

 

Mary L. McMaster, MD, of the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and her colleagues presented these findings at the AACR Annual Meeting 2015 (abstract 3709).

 

The team used data from the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SSER) database to evaluate the risk of subsequent primary cancer in 3825 patients diagnosed with WM (n=2163) or LPL (n=1662) from 1992 to 2011. The patients’ median age was 70, most of them were male (n=2221), and most were white (n=3153).

 

Dr McMaster said she and her colleagues looked at both WM and LPL in this study because SEER does not include information about immunoglobulin subtype, which makes it difficult to identify all WM cases with absolute certainty.

 

“[D]epending on what information a pathologist has when they review a bone marrow biopsy, for example, they may or may not know whether there’s IgM present,” Dr McMaster said. “So you may have a diagnosis of LPL and not have the information required to make the diagnosis of WM. For that reason, we combined both entities for this study.”

 

Dr McMaster and her colleagues calculated the observed-to-expected standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) for invasive cancers. After adjusting for multiple comparisons, the team found that survivors of WM/LPL had a significantly increased risk of developing a second primary malignancy (SIR=1.49).

 

This increased risk was seen for males and females and persisted throughout follow-up. The risk was higher for patients younger than 65 years of age (SIR=1.95).

 

Hematologic malignancies

 

WM/LPL survivors had a significantly increased risk of several hematologic malignancies. The SIR was 4.09 for all hematologic malignancies, 4.29 for lymphomas, and 3.16 for leukemias.

 

Dr McMaster pointed out that several lymphoma subtypes can have lymphoplasmacytic differentiation, the most common being marginal zone lymphoma. And this could potentially result in misclassification.

 

“So we actually ran the study with and without marginal zone lymphoma and saw no difference in the results,” she said. “So we don’t think misclassification accounts for the majority of what we’re seeing.”

 

The investigators found that WM/LPL survivors had the highest risk of developing Burkitt lymphoma (SIR=13.45), followed by Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=9.80), T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=6.62), mantle cell lymphoma (SIR=5.37), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL, SIR=4.76), multiple myeloma (SIR=4.40), any non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=4.08), and acute myeloid leukemia (AML, SIR=3.27).

 

“Waldenström’s is known to transform, on occasion, to DLBCL,” Dr McMaster said. “So that may well account for the excess of DLBCL that we see in this population.”

 

She also noted that, prior to the early 2000s, WM was typically treated with alkylating agents. And alkylating agents have been linked to an increased risk of AML.

 

In this population, the risk of AML peaked 5 to 10 years after WM/LPL diagnosis and was only present in patients treated prior to 2002. This suggests the AML observed in this study was likely treatment-related.

 

Dr McMaster and her colleagues also found that WM/LPL survivors did not have a significantly increased risk of developing acute lymphocytic leukemia (SIR=0), hairy cell leukemia (SIR=0), chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SIR=0.97), or follicular lymphoma (SIR=2.25).

 

 

 

Solid tumors

 

WM/LPL survivors did have a significantly increased risk of certain solid tumor malignancies. The overall SIR for solid tumors was 1.21.

 

The risk was significant for non-epithelial skin cancers (SIR=5.15), thyroid cancers (SIR=3.13), melanoma (SIR=1.72), and cancers of the lung and bronchus (SIR=1.44) or respiratory system (SIR=1.42).

 

“Melanoma has an immunological basis, as does Waldenström’s, so we think there may be some shared etiology there,” Dr McMaster said.

 

She also noted that a strong risk factor for thyroid cancer, particularly papillary thyroid cancer, is a history of autoimmune thyroid disease.

 

“Autoimmune disease of any sort is a risk factor for Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia,” she said. “So again, we think there might be a basis for shared susceptibility there.”

 

Dr McMaster said this research suggests that multiple primary cancers may occur in a single individual because of shared genetic susceptibility, shared environmental exposures, treatment effects, or chance. She believes future research will show that both genetic and environmental factors contribute to WM.

 

Investigators are currently conducting whole-exome sequencing studies and genome-wide association studies in patients with familial and spontaneous WM, with the hopes of identifying genes that contribute to WM susceptibility.

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AACR Annual Meeting 2015

 

PHILADELPHIA—A retrospective study has revealed factors that appear to influence a person’s susceptibility to Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM)/lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) and other malignancies.

 

Study investigators looked at patients diagnosed with WM or LPL over a 20-year period and found about a 50% excess of second primary cancers in this population.

 

The patients had a significantly increased risk of multiple hematologic and solid tumor malignancies, and a few of these malignancies had shared susceptibility factors with WM/LPL.

 

The investigators believe that identifying these factors may prove useful for determining genetic susceptibility to WM/LPL.

 

Mary L. McMaster, MD, of the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and her colleagues presented these findings at the AACR Annual Meeting 2015 (abstract 3709).

 

The team used data from the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SSER) database to evaluate the risk of subsequent primary cancer in 3825 patients diagnosed with WM (n=2163) or LPL (n=1662) from 1992 to 2011. The patients’ median age was 70, most of them were male (n=2221), and most were white (n=3153).

 

Dr McMaster said she and her colleagues looked at both WM and LPL in this study because SEER does not include information about immunoglobulin subtype, which makes it difficult to identify all WM cases with absolute certainty.

 

“[D]epending on what information a pathologist has when they review a bone marrow biopsy, for example, they may or may not know whether there’s IgM present,” Dr McMaster said. “So you may have a diagnosis of LPL and not have the information required to make the diagnosis of WM. For that reason, we combined both entities for this study.”

 

Dr McMaster and her colleagues calculated the observed-to-expected standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) for invasive cancers. After adjusting for multiple comparisons, the team found that survivors of WM/LPL had a significantly increased risk of developing a second primary malignancy (SIR=1.49).

 

This increased risk was seen for males and females and persisted throughout follow-up. The risk was higher for patients younger than 65 years of age (SIR=1.95).

 

Hematologic malignancies

 

WM/LPL survivors had a significantly increased risk of several hematologic malignancies. The SIR was 4.09 for all hematologic malignancies, 4.29 for lymphomas, and 3.16 for leukemias.

 

Dr McMaster pointed out that several lymphoma subtypes can have lymphoplasmacytic differentiation, the most common being marginal zone lymphoma. And this could potentially result in misclassification.

 

“So we actually ran the study with and without marginal zone lymphoma and saw no difference in the results,” she said. “So we don’t think misclassification accounts for the majority of what we’re seeing.”

 

The investigators found that WM/LPL survivors had the highest risk of developing Burkitt lymphoma (SIR=13.45), followed by Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=9.80), T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=6.62), mantle cell lymphoma (SIR=5.37), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL, SIR=4.76), multiple myeloma (SIR=4.40), any non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=4.08), and acute myeloid leukemia (AML, SIR=3.27).

 

“Waldenström’s is known to transform, on occasion, to DLBCL,” Dr McMaster said. “So that may well account for the excess of DLBCL that we see in this population.”

 

She also noted that, prior to the early 2000s, WM was typically treated with alkylating agents. And alkylating agents have been linked to an increased risk of AML.

 

In this population, the risk of AML peaked 5 to 10 years after WM/LPL diagnosis and was only present in patients treated prior to 2002. This suggests the AML observed in this study was likely treatment-related.

 

Dr McMaster and her colleagues also found that WM/LPL survivors did not have a significantly increased risk of developing acute lymphocytic leukemia (SIR=0), hairy cell leukemia (SIR=0), chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SIR=0.97), or follicular lymphoma (SIR=2.25).

 

 

 

Solid tumors

 

WM/LPL survivors did have a significantly increased risk of certain solid tumor malignancies. The overall SIR for solid tumors was 1.21.

 

The risk was significant for non-epithelial skin cancers (SIR=5.15), thyroid cancers (SIR=3.13), melanoma (SIR=1.72), and cancers of the lung and bronchus (SIR=1.44) or respiratory system (SIR=1.42).

 

“Melanoma has an immunological basis, as does Waldenström’s, so we think there may be some shared etiology there,” Dr McMaster said.

 

She also noted that a strong risk factor for thyroid cancer, particularly papillary thyroid cancer, is a history of autoimmune thyroid disease.

 

“Autoimmune disease of any sort is a risk factor for Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia,” she said. “So again, we think there might be a basis for shared susceptibility there.”

 

Dr McMaster said this research suggests that multiple primary cancers may occur in a single individual because of shared genetic susceptibility, shared environmental exposures, treatment effects, or chance. She believes future research will show that both genetic and environmental factors contribute to WM.

 

Investigators are currently conducting whole-exome sequencing studies and genome-wide association studies in patients with familial and spontaneous WM, with the hopes of identifying genes that contribute to WM susceptibility.

 

 

 

AACR Annual Meeting 2015

 

PHILADELPHIA—A retrospective study has revealed factors that appear to influence a person’s susceptibility to Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (WM)/lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL) and other malignancies.

 

Study investigators looked at patients diagnosed with WM or LPL over a 20-year period and found about a 50% excess of second primary cancers in this population.

 

The patients had a significantly increased risk of multiple hematologic and solid tumor malignancies, and a few of these malignancies had shared susceptibility factors with WM/LPL.

 

The investigators believe that identifying these factors may prove useful for determining genetic susceptibility to WM/LPL.

 

Mary L. McMaster, MD, of the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and her colleagues presented these findings at the AACR Annual Meeting 2015 (abstract 3709).

 

The team used data from the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SSER) database to evaluate the risk of subsequent primary cancer in 3825 patients diagnosed with WM (n=2163) or LPL (n=1662) from 1992 to 2011. The patients’ median age was 70, most of them were male (n=2221), and most were white (n=3153).

 

Dr McMaster said she and her colleagues looked at both WM and LPL in this study because SEER does not include information about immunoglobulin subtype, which makes it difficult to identify all WM cases with absolute certainty.

 

“[D]epending on what information a pathologist has when they review a bone marrow biopsy, for example, they may or may not know whether there’s IgM present,” Dr McMaster said. “So you may have a diagnosis of LPL and not have the information required to make the diagnosis of WM. For that reason, we combined both entities for this study.”

 

Dr McMaster and her colleagues calculated the observed-to-expected standardized incidence ratios (SIRs) for invasive cancers. After adjusting for multiple comparisons, the team found that survivors of WM/LPL had a significantly increased risk of developing a second primary malignancy (SIR=1.49).

 

This increased risk was seen for males and females and persisted throughout follow-up. The risk was higher for patients younger than 65 years of age (SIR=1.95).

 

Hematologic malignancies

 

WM/LPL survivors had a significantly increased risk of several hematologic malignancies. The SIR was 4.09 for all hematologic malignancies, 4.29 for lymphomas, and 3.16 for leukemias.

 

Dr McMaster pointed out that several lymphoma subtypes can have lymphoplasmacytic differentiation, the most common being marginal zone lymphoma. And this could potentially result in misclassification.

 

“So we actually ran the study with and without marginal zone lymphoma and saw no difference in the results,” she said. “So we don’t think misclassification accounts for the majority of what we’re seeing.”

 

The investigators found that WM/LPL survivors had the highest risk of developing Burkitt lymphoma (SIR=13.45), followed by Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=9.80), T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=6.62), mantle cell lymphoma (SIR=5.37), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL, SIR=4.76), multiple myeloma (SIR=4.40), any non-Hodgkin lymphoma (SIR=4.08), and acute myeloid leukemia (AML, SIR=3.27).

 

“Waldenström’s is known to transform, on occasion, to DLBCL,” Dr McMaster said. “So that may well account for the excess of DLBCL that we see in this population.”

 

She also noted that, prior to the early 2000s, WM was typically treated with alkylating agents. And alkylating agents have been linked to an increased risk of AML.

 

In this population, the risk of AML peaked 5 to 10 years after WM/LPL diagnosis and was only present in patients treated prior to 2002. This suggests the AML observed in this study was likely treatment-related.

 

Dr McMaster and her colleagues also found that WM/LPL survivors did not have a significantly increased risk of developing acute lymphocytic leukemia (SIR=0), hairy cell leukemia (SIR=0), chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (SIR=0.97), or follicular lymphoma (SIR=2.25).

 

 

 

Solid tumors

 

WM/LPL survivors did have a significantly increased risk of certain solid tumor malignancies. The overall SIR for solid tumors was 1.21.

 

The risk was significant for non-epithelial skin cancers (SIR=5.15), thyroid cancers (SIR=3.13), melanoma (SIR=1.72), and cancers of the lung and bronchus (SIR=1.44) or respiratory system (SIR=1.42).

 

“Melanoma has an immunological basis, as does Waldenström’s, so we think there may be some shared etiology there,” Dr McMaster said.

 

She also noted that a strong risk factor for thyroid cancer, particularly papillary thyroid cancer, is a history of autoimmune thyroid disease.

 

“Autoimmune disease of any sort is a risk factor for Waldenström’s macroglobulinemia,” she said. “So again, we think there might be a basis for shared susceptibility there.”

 

Dr McMaster said this research suggests that multiple primary cancers may occur in a single individual because of shared genetic susceptibility, shared environmental exposures, treatment effects, or chance. She believes future research will show that both genetic and environmental factors contribute to WM.

 

Investigators are currently conducting whole-exome sequencing studies and genome-wide association studies in patients with familial and spontaneous WM, with the hopes of identifying genes that contribute to WM susceptibility.

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Inhibitor gets orphan designation for DLBCL

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Inhibitor gets orphan designation for DLBCL

 

 

 

Micrograph showing DLBCL

 

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation to CUDC-907 for the treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

 

CUDC-907 is an oral, dual inhibitor of histone deacetylase and phosphoinositide 3-kinase enzymes. It is currently under investigation in phase 1 trials in patients with relapsed or refractory lymphomas, multiple myeloma, and advanced/relapsed solid tumors.

 

The FDA grants orphan status to products intended for treating diseases that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US. Orphan designation qualifies the drug’s developer—in this case, Curis, Inc.—with incentives such as tax credits for qualified trials, the ability to apply for annual grant funding, and 7 years of market exclusivity once the drug is approved.

 

Phase 1 data

 

At the 2013 ASH Annual Meeting, researchers presented interim data from a phase 1, dose-escalation trial of CUDC-907 in patients with advanced lymphoma or multiple myeloma.

 

Thirteen patients had received CUDC-907 on either once-daily (QD) or twice-weekly (BIW) schedules at doses of 30 mg QD (n=7), 60 mg QD (n=3), or 60 mg BIW (n=3).

 

Dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) of grade 3 diarrhea and grade 4 hyperglycemia were reported in 1 patient at the 60 mg QD dose. The most frequent grade 3 or 4 adverse events reported in 2 or more patients included thrombocytopenia, diarrhea, and neutropenia. Tolerability limited the ability to further dose escalate using the QD schedule.

 

No DLTs or dose interruptions were reported for patients enrolled on the BIW schedule. So dose escalation is ongoing with the BIW schedule as well as a separate, thrice-weekly treatment schedule.

 

Of the 13 patients treated, 11 were evaluable for response. One patient with mixed follicular lymphoma/DLBCL achieved a partial response, with a 70% reduction in a single target lesion observed at the 30 mg QD dose level.

 

Seven other patients met criteria for stable disease, including 4 with stable disease lasting at least 4 cycles of treatment.

 

Following the ASH presentation, Curis reported additional data from a subset of patients that suggest CUDC-907 has antitumor activity in patients with DLBCL.

 

For the November 10, 2014, data cutoff period, 8 patients with DLBCL were evaluable. One of these patients had a complete response, 2 had a partial response (tumor shrinkage greater than 50%), and 4 had tumor shrinkage ranging from 5% to 46%.

 

The dose-escalation stage of the trial is nearing completion, and Curis expects to present full data this year. Curis has also initiated an expansion cohort to further evaluate CUDC-907 in patients with DLBCL or multiple myeloma at the recommended phase 2 dose.

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Micrograph showing DLBCL

 

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation to CUDC-907 for the treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

 

CUDC-907 is an oral, dual inhibitor of histone deacetylase and phosphoinositide 3-kinase enzymes. It is currently under investigation in phase 1 trials in patients with relapsed or refractory lymphomas, multiple myeloma, and advanced/relapsed solid tumors.

 

The FDA grants orphan status to products intended for treating diseases that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US. Orphan designation qualifies the drug’s developer—in this case, Curis, Inc.—with incentives such as tax credits for qualified trials, the ability to apply for annual grant funding, and 7 years of market exclusivity once the drug is approved.

 

Phase 1 data

 

At the 2013 ASH Annual Meeting, researchers presented interim data from a phase 1, dose-escalation trial of CUDC-907 in patients with advanced lymphoma or multiple myeloma.

 

Thirteen patients had received CUDC-907 on either once-daily (QD) or twice-weekly (BIW) schedules at doses of 30 mg QD (n=7), 60 mg QD (n=3), or 60 mg BIW (n=3).

 

Dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) of grade 3 diarrhea and grade 4 hyperglycemia were reported in 1 patient at the 60 mg QD dose. The most frequent grade 3 or 4 adverse events reported in 2 or more patients included thrombocytopenia, diarrhea, and neutropenia. Tolerability limited the ability to further dose escalate using the QD schedule.

 

No DLTs or dose interruptions were reported for patients enrolled on the BIW schedule. So dose escalation is ongoing with the BIW schedule as well as a separate, thrice-weekly treatment schedule.

 

Of the 13 patients treated, 11 were evaluable for response. One patient with mixed follicular lymphoma/DLBCL achieved a partial response, with a 70% reduction in a single target lesion observed at the 30 mg QD dose level.

 

Seven other patients met criteria for stable disease, including 4 with stable disease lasting at least 4 cycles of treatment.

 

Following the ASH presentation, Curis reported additional data from a subset of patients that suggest CUDC-907 has antitumor activity in patients with DLBCL.

 

For the November 10, 2014, data cutoff period, 8 patients with DLBCL were evaluable. One of these patients had a complete response, 2 had a partial response (tumor shrinkage greater than 50%), and 4 had tumor shrinkage ranging from 5% to 46%.

 

The dose-escalation stage of the trial is nearing completion, and Curis expects to present full data this year. Curis has also initiated an expansion cohort to further evaluate CUDC-907 in patients with DLBCL or multiple myeloma at the recommended phase 2 dose.

 

 

 

Micrograph showing DLBCL

 

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted orphan drug designation to CUDC-907 for the treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).

 

CUDC-907 is an oral, dual inhibitor of histone deacetylase and phosphoinositide 3-kinase enzymes. It is currently under investigation in phase 1 trials in patients with relapsed or refractory lymphomas, multiple myeloma, and advanced/relapsed solid tumors.

 

The FDA grants orphan status to products intended for treating diseases that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the US. Orphan designation qualifies the drug’s developer—in this case, Curis, Inc.—with incentives such as tax credits for qualified trials, the ability to apply for annual grant funding, and 7 years of market exclusivity once the drug is approved.

 

Phase 1 data

 

At the 2013 ASH Annual Meeting, researchers presented interim data from a phase 1, dose-escalation trial of CUDC-907 in patients with advanced lymphoma or multiple myeloma.

 

Thirteen patients had received CUDC-907 on either once-daily (QD) or twice-weekly (BIW) schedules at doses of 30 mg QD (n=7), 60 mg QD (n=3), or 60 mg BIW (n=3).

 

Dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) of grade 3 diarrhea and grade 4 hyperglycemia were reported in 1 patient at the 60 mg QD dose. The most frequent grade 3 or 4 adverse events reported in 2 or more patients included thrombocytopenia, diarrhea, and neutropenia. Tolerability limited the ability to further dose escalate using the QD schedule.

 

No DLTs or dose interruptions were reported for patients enrolled on the BIW schedule. So dose escalation is ongoing with the BIW schedule as well as a separate, thrice-weekly treatment schedule.

 

Of the 13 patients treated, 11 were evaluable for response. One patient with mixed follicular lymphoma/DLBCL achieved a partial response, with a 70% reduction in a single target lesion observed at the 30 mg QD dose level.

 

Seven other patients met criteria for stable disease, including 4 with stable disease lasting at least 4 cycles of treatment.

 

Following the ASH presentation, Curis reported additional data from a subset of patients that suggest CUDC-907 has antitumor activity in patients with DLBCL.

 

For the November 10, 2014, data cutoff period, 8 patients with DLBCL were evaluable. One of these patients had a complete response, 2 had a partial response (tumor shrinkage greater than 50%), and 4 had tumor shrinkage ranging from 5% to 46%.

 

The dose-escalation stage of the trial is nearing completion, and Curis expects to present full data this year. Curis has also initiated an expansion cohort to further evaluate CUDC-907 in patients with DLBCL or multiple myeloma at the recommended phase 2 dose.

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