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PT-Cy bests conventional GVHD prophylaxis

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Changed
Tue, 12/10/2019 - 11:54

– Posttransplant cyclophosphamide may be superior to conventional immunosuppression as graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis, according to findings presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Jennifer Smith/MDedge News
Dr. Annoek E.C. Broers

A phase 3 trial showed that posttransplant cyclophosphamide (PT-Cy) reduced graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) without affecting relapse. Rates of acute and chronic GVHD were significantly lower among patients who received PT-Cy than among those who received conventional immunosuppression (CIS). Rates of progression/relapse, progression-free survival, and overall survival were similar between the PT-Cy and CIS arms.

These results suggest PT-Cy provides a “long-term benefit and positive impact on quality of life” for patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant, according to Annoek E.C. Broers, MD, PhD, of Erasmus Medical Center Cancer Institute in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Dr. Broers presented the results during the plenary session at ASH 2019.

The trial enrolled 160 patients with leukemias, lymphomas, myelomas, and other hematologic malignancies. All patients had a matched, related donor or an 8/8 or greater matched, unrelated donor.

The patients were randomized to receive CIS (n = 55) or PT-Cy (n = 105) as GVHD prophylaxis. The CIS regimen consisted of cyclosporine A (from day –3 to 180) and mycophenolic acid (from day 0 to 84). Patients in the PT-Cy arm received cyclophosphamide at 50 mg/kg (days 3 and 4) and cyclosporine A (from day 5 to 70).

Baseline characteristics were similar between the treatment arms. The median age was 58 years in the CIS arm and 57 years in the PT-Cy arm. A majority of patients were men – 63% and 67%, respectively.

Two patients in the CIS arm received myeloablative conditioning, but all other patients received reduced-intensity conditioning. Most patients in the CIS arm (67%) and the PT-Cy arm (70%) had a matched, unrelated donor. All patients in the CIS arm and 96% in the PT-Cy arm received peripheral blood cell grafts.

PT-Cy significantly reduced the cumulative incidence of acute and chronic GVHD. The incidence of grade 2-4 acute GVHD at 6 months was 48% in the CIS arm and 32% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .014). The incidence of chronic extensive GVHD at 24 months was 50% and 19%, respectively (P = .001).

There were no significant between-arm differences for any other individual endpoint assessed.

“With a median follow-up of 3.2 years, so far, there’s no difference in the cumulative incidence of progression or relapse, nor is there a difference in progression-free or overall survival,” Dr. Broers said.

At 60 months, the rate of relapse/progression was 32% in the PT-Cy arm and 26% in the CIS arm (P = .36). The rate of nonrelapse mortality was 11% and 14%, respectively (P = .53).

At 60 months, the progression-free survival was 60% in the CIS arm and 58% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .67). The overall survival was 69% and 63%, respectively (P = .63).

In addition to assessing endpoints that “determine the success of our transplant strategy,” Dr. Broers said she and her colleagues also looked at a combined endpoint to account for “the effect GVHD has on morbidity and quality of life.” That endpoint is GVHD- and relapse-free survival.

The researchers found that PT-Cy improved GVHD- and relapse-free survival at 12 months. It was 22% in the CIS arm and 45% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .001). PT-Cy conferred this benefit irrespective of donor type, Dr. Broers noted.

Overall, the incidence of adverse events was somewhat higher in the PT-Cy arm (60%) than in the CIS arm (42%). The incidence of infections also was higher in the PT-Cy arm (41%) than in the CIS arm (21%), and this was largely caused by a greater incidence of neutropenic fever with PT-Cy (25% vs. 15%).

The study was funded by the Dutch Cancer Society, and Novartis provided the mycophenolic acid used in the study. Dr. Broers reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Broers AEC et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 1.
 

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– Posttransplant cyclophosphamide may be superior to conventional immunosuppression as graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis, according to findings presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Jennifer Smith/MDedge News
Dr. Annoek E.C. Broers

A phase 3 trial showed that posttransplant cyclophosphamide (PT-Cy) reduced graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) without affecting relapse. Rates of acute and chronic GVHD were significantly lower among patients who received PT-Cy than among those who received conventional immunosuppression (CIS). Rates of progression/relapse, progression-free survival, and overall survival were similar between the PT-Cy and CIS arms.

These results suggest PT-Cy provides a “long-term benefit and positive impact on quality of life” for patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant, according to Annoek E.C. Broers, MD, PhD, of Erasmus Medical Center Cancer Institute in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Dr. Broers presented the results during the plenary session at ASH 2019.

The trial enrolled 160 patients with leukemias, lymphomas, myelomas, and other hematologic malignancies. All patients had a matched, related donor or an 8/8 or greater matched, unrelated donor.

The patients were randomized to receive CIS (n = 55) or PT-Cy (n = 105) as GVHD prophylaxis. The CIS regimen consisted of cyclosporine A (from day –3 to 180) and mycophenolic acid (from day 0 to 84). Patients in the PT-Cy arm received cyclophosphamide at 50 mg/kg (days 3 and 4) and cyclosporine A (from day 5 to 70).

Baseline characteristics were similar between the treatment arms. The median age was 58 years in the CIS arm and 57 years in the PT-Cy arm. A majority of patients were men – 63% and 67%, respectively.

Two patients in the CIS arm received myeloablative conditioning, but all other patients received reduced-intensity conditioning. Most patients in the CIS arm (67%) and the PT-Cy arm (70%) had a matched, unrelated donor. All patients in the CIS arm and 96% in the PT-Cy arm received peripheral blood cell grafts.

PT-Cy significantly reduced the cumulative incidence of acute and chronic GVHD. The incidence of grade 2-4 acute GVHD at 6 months was 48% in the CIS arm and 32% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .014). The incidence of chronic extensive GVHD at 24 months was 50% and 19%, respectively (P = .001).

There were no significant between-arm differences for any other individual endpoint assessed.

“With a median follow-up of 3.2 years, so far, there’s no difference in the cumulative incidence of progression or relapse, nor is there a difference in progression-free or overall survival,” Dr. Broers said.

At 60 months, the rate of relapse/progression was 32% in the PT-Cy arm and 26% in the CIS arm (P = .36). The rate of nonrelapse mortality was 11% and 14%, respectively (P = .53).

At 60 months, the progression-free survival was 60% in the CIS arm and 58% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .67). The overall survival was 69% and 63%, respectively (P = .63).

In addition to assessing endpoints that “determine the success of our transplant strategy,” Dr. Broers said she and her colleagues also looked at a combined endpoint to account for “the effect GVHD has on morbidity and quality of life.” That endpoint is GVHD- and relapse-free survival.

The researchers found that PT-Cy improved GVHD- and relapse-free survival at 12 months. It was 22% in the CIS arm and 45% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .001). PT-Cy conferred this benefit irrespective of donor type, Dr. Broers noted.

Overall, the incidence of adverse events was somewhat higher in the PT-Cy arm (60%) than in the CIS arm (42%). The incidence of infections also was higher in the PT-Cy arm (41%) than in the CIS arm (21%), and this was largely caused by a greater incidence of neutropenic fever with PT-Cy (25% vs. 15%).

The study was funded by the Dutch Cancer Society, and Novartis provided the mycophenolic acid used in the study. Dr. Broers reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Broers AEC et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 1.
 

– Posttransplant cyclophosphamide may be superior to conventional immunosuppression as graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis, according to findings presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Jennifer Smith/MDedge News
Dr. Annoek E.C. Broers

A phase 3 trial showed that posttransplant cyclophosphamide (PT-Cy) reduced graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) without affecting relapse. Rates of acute and chronic GVHD were significantly lower among patients who received PT-Cy than among those who received conventional immunosuppression (CIS). Rates of progression/relapse, progression-free survival, and overall survival were similar between the PT-Cy and CIS arms.

These results suggest PT-Cy provides a “long-term benefit and positive impact on quality of life” for patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant, according to Annoek E.C. Broers, MD, PhD, of Erasmus Medical Center Cancer Institute in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Dr. Broers presented the results during the plenary session at ASH 2019.

The trial enrolled 160 patients with leukemias, lymphomas, myelomas, and other hematologic malignancies. All patients had a matched, related donor or an 8/8 or greater matched, unrelated donor.

The patients were randomized to receive CIS (n = 55) or PT-Cy (n = 105) as GVHD prophylaxis. The CIS regimen consisted of cyclosporine A (from day –3 to 180) and mycophenolic acid (from day 0 to 84). Patients in the PT-Cy arm received cyclophosphamide at 50 mg/kg (days 3 and 4) and cyclosporine A (from day 5 to 70).

Baseline characteristics were similar between the treatment arms. The median age was 58 years in the CIS arm and 57 years in the PT-Cy arm. A majority of patients were men – 63% and 67%, respectively.

Two patients in the CIS arm received myeloablative conditioning, but all other patients received reduced-intensity conditioning. Most patients in the CIS arm (67%) and the PT-Cy arm (70%) had a matched, unrelated donor. All patients in the CIS arm and 96% in the PT-Cy arm received peripheral blood cell grafts.

PT-Cy significantly reduced the cumulative incidence of acute and chronic GVHD. The incidence of grade 2-4 acute GVHD at 6 months was 48% in the CIS arm and 32% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .014). The incidence of chronic extensive GVHD at 24 months was 50% and 19%, respectively (P = .001).

There were no significant between-arm differences for any other individual endpoint assessed.

“With a median follow-up of 3.2 years, so far, there’s no difference in the cumulative incidence of progression or relapse, nor is there a difference in progression-free or overall survival,” Dr. Broers said.

At 60 months, the rate of relapse/progression was 32% in the PT-Cy arm and 26% in the CIS arm (P = .36). The rate of nonrelapse mortality was 11% and 14%, respectively (P = .53).

At 60 months, the progression-free survival was 60% in the CIS arm and 58% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .67). The overall survival was 69% and 63%, respectively (P = .63).

In addition to assessing endpoints that “determine the success of our transplant strategy,” Dr. Broers said she and her colleagues also looked at a combined endpoint to account for “the effect GVHD has on morbidity and quality of life.” That endpoint is GVHD- and relapse-free survival.

The researchers found that PT-Cy improved GVHD- and relapse-free survival at 12 months. It was 22% in the CIS arm and 45% in the PT-Cy arm (P = .001). PT-Cy conferred this benefit irrespective of donor type, Dr. Broers noted.

Overall, the incidence of adverse events was somewhat higher in the PT-Cy arm (60%) than in the CIS arm (42%). The incidence of infections also was higher in the PT-Cy arm (41%) than in the CIS arm (21%), and this was largely caused by a greater incidence of neutropenic fever with PT-Cy (25% vs. 15%).

The study was funded by the Dutch Cancer Society, and Novartis provided the mycophenolic acid used in the study. Dr. Broers reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Broers AEC et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 1.
 

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Study halted; ‘hyperprogression’ seen with nivolumab for R/R PTCL

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Changed
Wed, 12/11/2019 - 13:11

– There is an urgent need for new therapies to treat relapsed or refractory peripheral T-cell lymphoma, but results of a phase 2 study suggest that monotherapy with the immune checkpoint inhibitor nivolumab (Opdivo) is not the hoped-for salvage treatment.

Neil Osterweil/MDedge News
Dr. N. Nora Bennani

An interim analysis of data on 12 patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) treated with nivolumab monotherapy showed an overall response rate of 33%, consisting of 2 complete responses and 2 partial responses. But the responses were short lived, and one patient had hyperprogressive disease – dramatic progression within one cycle of treatment – while two more had progression within two cycles, leading to a trial halt, reported N. Nora Bennani, MD, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

“These findings likely reflect the distinct biology of PTCL and should be considered when designing future studies using checkpoint inhibitors in these diseases,” she said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

The rationale for using an immune checkpoint inhibitor directed against the programmed death–1 protein and its ligands (PD and PD-L1/2) is that malignant cells in PTCL induce a profoundly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Checkpoint inhibitors have shown strong activity against relapsed Hodgkin lymphoma, and the Mayo Clinic researchers speculated that an anti-PD-1 agent could have a similar effect in PTCL.

They had originally planned to enroll 29 patients into a phase 2 trial with nivolumab delivered 240 mg every 2 weeks for eight cycles, followed by a dose of 480 mg given every 4 weeks until disease progression or intolerable toxicities.

Patients were eligible if they had biopsy-confirmed relapsed or refractory PTCL, measurable disease on cross-sectional imaging of at least 1.5 cm, and prior systemic chemoimmunotherapy and/or autologous stem cell transplantation.

The interim analysis included 12 patients who received at least one dose of nivolumab. Of the 12 patients, 6 had angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL), 3 had PTCL not otherwise specified, and 1 each had ALK-negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALK-ALCL), enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma (EATL), or hepatosplenic gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma.

All patients had Ann Arbor stage III/IV disease, and 11 had extranodal involvement.

As noted, there were 4 responses among the 12 patients, consisting of 1 complete response in the patient with ALK-ALCL and 1 in a patient with AITL, and 2 partial responses – 1 in a patient with PTCL-NOS, and 1 in the patient with EATL.

The median progression-free survival for all 12 patients was short at 2.7 months, and the median overall survival was estimated at 6.7 months.

“It was staggering to see this: The duration of response was significantly short, less than 2 months,” Dr. Bennani said.

Nonhematologic toxicities were seen in 5 of the 12 patients (42%), and hematologic adverse events occurred in 3 (25%). All patients are now off treatment, 10 because of disease progression, 1 because of acute pancreatitis, and the aforementioned patient with hyperprogressive disease.

The patient with hyperprogressive disease had significant progression in tonsillar and cervical lymphadenopathy within 7-10 days of nivolumab infusion, with biopsy-proven AITL in the involved nodes.

“I believe that, in this patient population, combination therapies will be key. I think checkpoint blockers alone are not going to be sufficient to see meaningful outcomes in these patients,” Dr. Bennani said in an interview.

“An overall response rate of 33% is significant, because most other agents that were FDA approved in this patient population have response rates around 30%,” she said, adding that it’s possible that the patients with rapid progression had disease too advanced to be effectively treated with a checkpoint inhibitor.

“Ideally however, if we want to move forward, it will need to be with combinations of checkpoint inhibitors with HDAC [histone deacetylase] inhibitors, hypomethylating agents, or even PI3 kinase inhibitors,” she said.

­The study was supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr. Bennani reported research funding and advisory board activities for Bristol-Myers Squibb and others.

SOURCE: Bennani NN et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 467.

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– There is an urgent need for new therapies to treat relapsed or refractory peripheral T-cell lymphoma, but results of a phase 2 study suggest that monotherapy with the immune checkpoint inhibitor nivolumab (Opdivo) is not the hoped-for salvage treatment.

Neil Osterweil/MDedge News
Dr. N. Nora Bennani

An interim analysis of data on 12 patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) treated with nivolumab monotherapy showed an overall response rate of 33%, consisting of 2 complete responses and 2 partial responses. But the responses were short lived, and one patient had hyperprogressive disease – dramatic progression within one cycle of treatment – while two more had progression within two cycles, leading to a trial halt, reported N. Nora Bennani, MD, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

“These findings likely reflect the distinct biology of PTCL and should be considered when designing future studies using checkpoint inhibitors in these diseases,” she said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

The rationale for using an immune checkpoint inhibitor directed against the programmed death–1 protein and its ligands (PD and PD-L1/2) is that malignant cells in PTCL induce a profoundly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Checkpoint inhibitors have shown strong activity against relapsed Hodgkin lymphoma, and the Mayo Clinic researchers speculated that an anti-PD-1 agent could have a similar effect in PTCL.

They had originally planned to enroll 29 patients into a phase 2 trial with nivolumab delivered 240 mg every 2 weeks for eight cycles, followed by a dose of 480 mg given every 4 weeks until disease progression or intolerable toxicities.

Patients were eligible if they had biopsy-confirmed relapsed or refractory PTCL, measurable disease on cross-sectional imaging of at least 1.5 cm, and prior systemic chemoimmunotherapy and/or autologous stem cell transplantation.

The interim analysis included 12 patients who received at least one dose of nivolumab. Of the 12 patients, 6 had angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL), 3 had PTCL not otherwise specified, and 1 each had ALK-negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALK-ALCL), enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma (EATL), or hepatosplenic gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma.

All patients had Ann Arbor stage III/IV disease, and 11 had extranodal involvement.

As noted, there were 4 responses among the 12 patients, consisting of 1 complete response in the patient with ALK-ALCL and 1 in a patient with AITL, and 2 partial responses – 1 in a patient with PTCL-NOS, and 1 in the patient with EATL.

The median progression-free survival for all 12 patients was short at 2.7 months, and the median overall survival was estimated at 6.7 months.

“It was staggering to see this: The duration of response was significantly short, less than 2 months,” Dr. Bennani said.

Nonhematologic toxicities were seen in 5 of the 12 patients (42%), and hematologic adverse events occurred in 3 (25%). All patients are now off treatment, 10 because of disease progression, 1 because of acute pancreatitis, and the aforementioned patient with hyperprogressive disease.

The patient with hyperprogressive disease had significant progression in tonsillar and cervical lymphadenopathy within 7-10 days of nivolumab infusion, with biopsy-proven AITL in the involved nodes.

“I believe that, in this patient population, combination therapies will be key. I think checkpoint blockers alone are not going to be sufficient to see meaningful outcomes in these patients,” Dr. Bennani said in an interview.

“An overall response rate of 33% is significant, because most other agents that were FDA approved in this patient population have response rates around 30%,” she said, adding that it’s possible that the patients with rapid progression had disease too advanced to be effectively treated with a checkpoint inhibitor.

“Ideally however, if we want to move forward, it will need to be with combinations of checkpoint inhibitors with HDAC [histone deacetylase] inhibitors, hypomethylating agents, or even PI3 kinase inhibitors,” she said.

­The study was supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr. Bennani reported research funding and advisory board activities for Bristol-Myers Squibb and others.

SOURCE: Bennani NN et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 467.

– There is an urgent need for new therapies to treat relapsed or refractory peripheral T-cell lymphoma, but results of a phase 2 study suggest that monotherapy with the immune checkpoint inhibitor nivolumab (Opdivo) is not the hoped-for salvage treatment.

Neil Osterweil/MDedge News
Dr. N. Nora Bennani

An interim analysis of data on 12 patients with peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL) treated with nivolumab monotherapy showed an overall response rate of 33%, consisting of 2 complete responses and 2 partial responses. But the responses were short lived, and one patient had hyperprogressive disease – dramatic progression within one cycle of treatment – while two more had progression within two cycles, leading to a trial halt, reported N. Nora Bennani, MD, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

“These findings likely reflect the distinct biology of PTCL and should be considered when designing future studies using checkpoint inhibitors in these diseases,” she said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

The rationale for using an immune checkpoint inhibitor directed against the programmed death–1 protein and its ligands (PD and PD-L1/2) is that malignant cells in PTCL induce a profoundly immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Checkpoint inhibitors have shown strong activity against relapsed Hodgkin lymphoma, and the Mayo Clinic researchers speculated that an anti-PD-1 agent could have a similar effect in PTCL.

They had originally planned to enroll 29 patients into a phase 2 trial with nivolumab delivered 240 mg every 2 weeks for eight cycles, followed by a dose of 480 mg given every 4 weeks until disease progression or intolerable toxicities.

Patients were eligible if they had biopsy-confirmed relapsed or refractory PTCL, measurable disease on cross-sectional imaging of at least 1.5 cm, and prior systemic chemoimmunotherapy and/or autologous stem cell transplantation.

The interim analysis included 12 patients who received at least one dose of nivolumab. Of the 12 patients, 6 had angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL), 3 had PTCL not otherwise specified, and 1 each had ALK-negative anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALK-ALCL), enteropathy-associated T-cell lymphoma (EATL), or hepatosplenic gamma/delta T-cell lymphoma.

All patients had Ann Arbor stage III/IV disease, and 11 had extranodal involvement.

As noted, there were 4 responses among the 12 patients, consisting of 1 complete response in the patient with ALK-ALCL and 1 in a patient with AITL, and 2 partial responses – 1 in a patient with PTCL-NOS, and 1 in the patient with EATL.

The median progression-free survival for all 12 patients was short at 2.7 months, and the median overall survival was estimated at 6.7 months.

“It was staggering to see this: The duration of response was significantly short, less than 2 months,” Dr. Bennani said.

Nonhematologic toxicities were seen in 5 of the 12 patients (42%), and hematologic adverse events occurred in 3 (25%). All patients are now off treatment, 10 because of disease progression, 1 because of acute pancreatitis, and the aforementioned patient with hyperprogressive disease.

The patient with hyperprogressive disease had significant progression in tonsillar and cervical lymphadenopathy within 7-10 days of nivolumab infusion, with biopsy-proven AITL in the involved nodes.

“I believe that, in this patient population, combination therapies will be key. I think checkpoint blockers alone are not going to be sufficient to see meaningful outcomes in these patients,” Dr. Bennani said in an interview.

“An overall response rate of 33% is significant, because most other agents that were FDA approved in this patient population have response rates around 30%,” she said, adding that it’s possible that the patients with rapid progression had disease too advanced to be effectively treated with a checkpoint inhibitor.

“Ideally however, if we want to move forward, it will need to be with combinations of checkpoint inhibitors with HDAC [histone deacetylase] inhibitors, hypomethylating agents, or even PI3 kinase inhibitors,” she said.

­The study was supported by Bristol-Myers Squibb. Dr. Bennani reported research funding and advisory board activities for Bristol-Myers Squibb and others.

SOURCE: Bennani NN et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 467.

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Fragmentation of sickle cell disease care starts in young adulthood

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Sun, 12/08/2019 - 15:21

– While most children with sickle cell disease receive inpatient care at a single center, care starts to become fragmented in young adulthood, with patients admitted to as many as five centers or more over time, results of a retrospective study suggest.

Andrew D. Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Anjlee Mahajan

Nearly 60% of children between aged10-17 years were seen at just one facility over the course of 7 years in the analysis, which was based on analysis of data for nearly 7,000 patients seen in California during 1991-2016.

That contrasted sharply with young adults, aged 18-25 years, only about 20% of whom were admitted to one facility, said senior study author Anjlee Mahajan, MD, of the University of California, Davis, adding that another 20% were seen at five or more centers over a 7-year follow-up period.

Fragmentation of care didn’t increase the risk of death in this study, as investigators hypothesized it might. However, the outcomes and the quality of care among young adults with SCD who received inpatient care at multiple facilities nevertheless was likely to be affected, Dr. Mahajan said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

“Imagine what that would be like to have a chronic, debilitating illness and to have to go to multiple different hospitals, during this vulnerable time period in your life, and being seen by different care providers who may not know you and may not have all of your records as well,” she said in a press conference at the meeting.

Providers and the health care system need to work harder to ensure young adults receive comprehensive and coordinated care, especially at a time when therapeutic advances are improving the treatment of this disease, according to the investigator.

“When you’re seen at one center, you can have a specific pain plan, and maybe when you are going into the emergency room and being admitted, your sickle cell care provider might come and visit you in the hospital or at least be in contact with your team,” Dr. Mahajan said in an interview. “That may not happen if you’re going to be seen at five different hospitals in 7 years.”

Encouraging the concept of “medical home” for SCD may be help ease transition from pediatric to adult care, thereby reducing fragmentation of care for young adults, according to Julie A. Panepinto, MD, professor of pediatric hematology and the director of the center for clinical effectiveness research at the Children’s Research Institute, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“That 18- to 30-year-old age group historically and repeatedly over time is shown to be the age that relies on the emergency department and that has a higher mortality as they transition,” Dr. Panepinto said in an interview. “So ideally, you would have a pediatric program that’s comprehensive and that can transition an adult patient to a very similar setting with knowledgeable providers in SCD across the spectrum, from the emergency department to the hospital to the outpatient clinic.”

Dr. Mahajan reported no disclosures related to her group’s study. Coauthors provided disclosures related to Pfizer and Janssen.

SOURCE: Shatola A et al. ASH 2019. Abstract 4667.

 

 

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– While most children with sickle cell disease receive inpatient care at a single center, care starts to become fragmented in young adulthood, with patients admitted to as many as five centers or more over time, results of a retrospective study suggest.

Andrew D. Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Anjlee Mahajan

Nearly 60% of children between aged10-17 years were seen at just one facility over the course of 7 years in the analysis, which was based on analysis of data for nearly 7,000 patients seen in California during 1991-2016.

That contrasted sharply with young adults, aged 18-25 years, only about 20% of whom were admitted to one facility, said senior study author Anjlee Mahajan, MD, of the University of California, Davis, adding that another 20% were seen at five or more centers over a 7-year follow-up period.

Fragmentation of care didn’t increase the risk of death in this study, as investigators hypothesized it might. However, the outcomes and the quality of care among young adults with SCD who received inpatient care at multiple facilities nevertheless was likely to be affected, Dr. Mahajan said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

“Imagine what that would be like to have a chronic, debilitating illness and to have to go to multiple different hospitals, during this vulnerable time period in your life, and being seen by different care providers who may not know you and may not have all of your records as well,” she said in a press conference at the meeting.

Providers and the health care system need to work harder to ensure young adults receive comprehensive and coordinated care, especially at a time when therapeutic advances are improving the treatment of this disease, according to the investigator.

“When you’re seen at one center, you can have a specific pain plan, and maybe when you are going into the emergency room and being admitted, your sickle cell care provider might come and visit you in the hospital or at least be in contact with your team,” Dr. Mahajan said in an interview. “That may not happen if you’re going to be seen at five different hospitals in 7 years.”

Encouraging the concept of “medical home” for SCD may be help ease transition from pediatric to adult care, thereby reducing fragmentation of care for young adults, according to Julie A. Panepinto, MD, professor of pediatric hematology and the director of the center for clinical effectiveness research at the Children’s Research Institute, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“That 18- to 30-year-old age group historically and repeatedly over time is shown to be the age that relies on the emergency department and that has a higher mortality as they transition,” Dr. Panepinto said in an interview. “So ideally, you would have a pediatric program that’s comprehensive and that can transition an adult patient to a very similar setting with knowledgeable providers in SCD across the spectrum, from the emergency department to the hospital to the outpatient clinic.”

Dr. Mahajan reported no disclosures related to her group’s study. Coauthors provided disclosures related to Pfizer and Janssen.

SOURCE: Shatola A et al. ASH 2019. Abstract 4667.

 

 

– While most children with sickle cell disease receive inpatient care at a single center, care starts to become fragmented in young adulthood, with patients admitted to as many as five centers or more over time, results of a retrospective study suggest.

Andrew D. Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Anjlee Mahajan

Nearly 60% of children between aged10-17 years were seen at just one facility over the course of 7 years in the analysis, which was based on analysis of data for nearly 7,000 patients seen in California during 1991-2016.

That contrasted sharply with young adults, aged 18-25 years, only about 20% of whom were admitted to one facility, said senior study author Anjlee Mahajan, MD, of the University of California, Davis, adding that another 20% were seen at five or more centers over a 7-year follow-up period.

Fragmentation of care didn’t increase the risk of death in this study, as investigators hypothesized it might. However, the outcomes and the quality of care among young adults with SCD who received inpatient care at multiple facilities nevertheless was likely to be affected, Dr. Mahajan said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

“Imagine what that would be like to have a chronic, debilitating illness and to have to go to multiple different hospitals, during this vulnerable time period in your life, and being seen by different care providers who may not know you and may not have all of your records as well,” she said in a press conference at the meeting.

Providers and the health care system need to work harder to ensure young adults receive comprehensive and coordinated care, especially at a time when therapeutic advances are improving the treatment of this disease, according to the investigator.

“When you’re seen at one center, you can have a specific pain plan, and maybe when you are going into the emergency room and being admitted, your sickle cell care provider might come and visit you in the hospital or at least be in contact with your team,” Dr. Mahajan said in an interview. “That may not happen if you’re going to be seen at five different hospitals in 7 years.”

Encouraging the concept of “medical home” for SCD may be help ease transition from pediatric to adult care, thereby reducing fragmentation of care for young adults, according to Julie A. Panepinto, MD, professor of pediatric hematology and the director of the center for clinical effectiveness research at the Children’s Research Institute, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

“That 18- to 30-year-old age group historically and repeatedly over time is shown to be the age that relies on the emergency department and that has a higher mortality as they transition,” Dr. Panepinto said in an interview. “So ideally, you would have a pediatric program that’s comprehensive and that can transition an adult patient to a very similar setting with knowledgeable providers in SCD across the spectrum, from the emergency department to the hospital to the outpatient clinic.”

Dr. Mahajan reported no disclosures related to her group’s study. Coauthors provided disclosures related to Pfizer and Janssen.

SOURCE: Shatola A et al. ASH 2019. Abstract 4667.

 

 

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Care coordination, equity can eliminate disparities for nonwhite patients with DLBCL

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Changed
Tue, 01/17/2023 - 11:04

– Patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) who are members of an ethnic or racial minority do not have worse outcomes than whites when they receive appropriate treatment and institutional support, a study on disparities in cancer care shows.

Neil Osterweil/MDedge News
Dr. Nilanjan Ghosh

Although previous studies have shown that minorities with DLBCL have worse outcomes than do whites, results of a study comparing outcomes from 155 patients of white heritage with those of 41 patients from black, Hispanic, or other minority backgrounds found no significant differences in either progression-free survival (PFS) or overall survival in 2 years over follow-up, reported Nilanjan Ghosh, MD, PhD, from the Levine Cancer Institute, Atrium Health, in Charlotte, N.C.

He attributes the results to his center’s robust nurse navigation program, equal access among all patients – regardless of ability to pay – to standard treatments, and to the availability of clinical trial participation and stem cell transplantation.

“I think a key message is that if you are able to offer the same treatment and clinical trials to people irrespective of their race or socioeconomic status and can provide support, you can get equal outcomes as long as the biology is the same in both groups,” he said at a briefing prior to presentation of data in an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Ghosh pointed to four separate studies that showed that minority populations with DLBCL have worse outcomes than did whites, and noted that both uninsured and Medicaid-insured patients have also been shown to have poorer results, suggesting a role of socioeconomic factors in determining who gets optimum care and who does not.

The investigators compared PFS and OS among white and nonwhite patients with DLBCL treated in their institution, which has a safety-net cancer center. They also looked at the frequencies of clinical trial participation and stem cell transplantation between the groups.

The study included all patients with de novo DLBCL who presented to their center during January 2016–January 2019. They used patient-reported descriptors of race/ethnicity to create one of two cohorts: either self-identified whites (155 patients) or nonwhites (41), a group that included black patients, Hispanic patients, Asian Americans, and Native Americans.

The authors collected data on demographics, disease characteristics (including revised International Prognostic Index and double-hit status), insurance data, treatment, trial enrollment, progression, and death.

They found that nonwhites were significantly younger at diagnosis (median 56 vs. 64 years; P = .007), with an even distribution between the sexes in each group.

Two-thirds of both white and nonwhite patients had government insurance (Medicare or Medicaid). Of the remaining patients, 33% of white had private insurance, compared with 27% of nonwhites. No whites were uninsured, but 3 of the 41 nonwhites (7%) had no insurance.

Of the 155 white patients, 121 (86%) received nurse navigation services, as did 33 of 41 (81%) of nonwhites. The services include lodging assistance for homeless patients, transportation services for patients without cars, and care coordination among primary care physicians, oncologists, and other specialists. The services are part of the center’s standard practice, with excess costs, if any, folded into the budget, Dr. Ghosh said.

Looking at disease characteristics and treatment, the investigators found that risk profiles were similar between the groups. A higher percentage of whites had double-hit lymphoma (11% vs. 7%), but this difference was not statistically significant.

The investigators also found that in their program race was not a barrier to optimum therapy, with 96% of whites and 98% of nonwhites receiving frontline therapy with an anthracycline and rituximab-based regimen, and 4% and 2%, respectively received a non–anthracycline based regimen.

In each group, 39% of patients had disease that either relapsed or was refractory to frontline therapy.

In all, 11% of whites and 12% of nonwhites enrolled in clinical trials, 11% and 19%, respectively, underwent stem cell transplantation.

For patients with relapsed/refractory disease, the 2-year PFS rates were 60% for whites, and 63% for nonwhites, and the 2-year OS rates were 74% and 81%, respectively.

Dr. Ghosh and colleagues concluded that “our safety net cancer center, with extensive nurse navigator support and access to standard treatments, stem cell transplants, and cutting-edge clinical trials may abrogate the inferior outcomes in minority populations that have been previously reported.”

The study was internally funded. Dr. Ghosh reported consulting fees, research funding, speakers bureau activity, and/or honoraria from multiple companies.

SOURCE: Hu B et al. ASH 2019. Abstract 425.

 

 

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– Patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) who are members of an ethnic or racial minority do not have worse outcomes than whites when they receive appropriate treatment and institutional support, a study on disparities in cancer care shows.

Neil Osterweil/MDedge News
Dr. Nilanjan Ghosh

Although previous studies have shown that minorities with DLBCL have worse outcomes than do whites, results of a study comparing outcomes from 155 patients of white heritage with those of 41 patients from black, Hispanic, or other minority backgrounds found no significant differences in either progression-free survival (PFS) or overall survival in 2 years over follow-up, reported Nilanjan Ghosh, MD, PhD, from the Levine Cancer Institute, Atrium Health, in Charlotte, N.C.

He attributes the results to his center’s robust nurse navigation program, equal access among all patients – regardless of ability to pay – to standard treatments, and to the availability of clinical trial participation and stem cell transplantation.

“I think a key message is that if you are able to offer the same treatment and clinical trials to people irrespective of their race or socioeconomic status and can provide support, you can get equal outcomes as long as the biology is the same in both groups,” he said at a briefing prior to presentation of data in an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Ghosh pointed to four separate studies that showed that minority populations with DLBCL have worse outcomes than did whites, and noted that both uninsured and Medicaid-insured patients have also been shown to have poorer results, suggesting a role of socioeconomic factors in determining who gets optimum care and who does not.

The investigators compared PFS and OS among white and nonwhite patients with DLBCL treated in their institution, which has a safety-net cancer center. They also looked at the frequencies of clinical trial participation and stem cell transplantation between the groups.

The study included all patients with de novo DLBCL who presented to their center during January 2016–January 2019. They used patient-reported descriptors of race/ethnicity to create one of two cohorts: either self-identified whites (155 patients) or nonwhites (41), a group that included black patients, Hispanic patients, Asian Americans, and Native Americans.

The authors collected data on demographics, disease characteristics (including revised International Prognostic Index and double-hit status), insurance data, treatment, trial enrollment, progression, and death.

They found that nonwhites were significantly younger at diagnosis (median 56 vs. 64 years; P = .007), with an even distribution between the sexes in each group.

Two-thirds of both white and nonwhite patients had government insurance (Medicare or Medicaid). Of the remaining patients, 33% of white had private insurance, compared with 27% of nonwhites. No whites were uninsured, but 3 of the 41 nonwhites (7%) had no insurance.

Of the 155 white patients, 121 (86%) received nurse navigation services, as did 33 of 41 (81%) of nonwhites. The services include lodging assistance for homeless patients, transportation services for patients without cars, and care coordination among primary care physicians, oncologists, and other specialists. The services are part of the center’s standard practice, with excess costs, if any, folded into the budget, Dr. Ghosh said.

Looking at disease characteristics and treatment, the investigators found that risk profiles were similar between the groups. A higher percentage of whites had double-hit lymphoma (11% vs. 7%), but this difference was not statistically significant.

The investigators also found that in their program race was not a barrier to optimum therapy, with 96% of whites and 98% of nonwhites receiving frontline therapy with an anthracycline and rituximab-based regimen, and 4% and 2%, respectively received a non–anthracycline based regimen.

In each group, 39% of patients had disease that either relapsed or was refractory to frontline therapy.

In all, 11% of whites and 12% of nonwhites enrolled in clinical trials, 11% and 19%, respectively, underwent stem cell transplantation.

For patients with relapsed/refractory disease, the 2-year PFS rates were 60% for whites, and 63% for nonwhites, and the 2-year OS rates were 74% and 81%, respectively.

Dr. Ghosh and colleagues concluded that “our safety net cancer center, with extensive nurse navigator support and access to standard treatments, stem cell transplants, and cutting-edge clinical trials may abrogate the inferior outcomes in minority populations that have been previously reported.”

The study was internally funded. Dr. Ghosh reported consulting fees, research funding, speakers bureau activity, and/or honoraria from multiple companies.

SOURCE: Hu B et al. ASH 2019. Abstract 425.

 

 

– Patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) who are members of an ethnic or racial minority do not have worse outcomes than whites when they receive appropriate treatment and institutional support, a study on disparities in cancer care shows.

Neil Osterweil/MDedge News
Dr. Nilanjan Ghosh

Although previous studies have shown that minorities with DLBCL have worse outcomes than do whites, results of a study comparing outcomes from 155 patients of white heritage with those of 41 patients from black, Hispanic, or other minority backgrounds found no significant differences in either progression-free survival (PFS) or overall survival in 2 years over follow-up, reported Nilanjan Ghosh, MD, PhD, from the Levine Cancer Institute, Atrium Health, in Charlotte, N.C.

He attributes the results to his center’s robust nurse navigation program, equal access among all patients – regardless of ability to pay – to standard treatments, and to the availability of clinical trial participation and stem cell transplantation.

“I think a key message is that if you are able to offer the same treatment and clinical trials to people irrespective of their race or socioeconomic status and can provide support, you can get equal outcomes as long as the biology is the same in both groups,” he said at a briefing prior to presentation of data in an oral abstract session at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Dr. Ghosh pointed to four separate studies that showed that minority populations with DLBCL have worse outcomes than did whites, and noted that both uninsured and Medicaid-insured patients have also been shown to have poorer results, suggesting a role of socioeconomic factors in determining who gets optimum care and who does not.

The investigators compared PFS and OS among white and nonwhite patients with DLBCL treated in their institution, which has a safety-net cancer center. They also looked at the frequencies of clinical trial participation and stem cell transplantation between the groups.

The study included all patients with de novo DLBCL who presented to their center during January 2016–January 2019. They used patient-reported descriptors of race/ethnicity to create one of two cohorts: either self-identified whites (155 patients) or nonwhites (41), a group that included black patients, Hispanic patients, Asian Americans, and Native Americans.

The authors collected data on demographics, disease characteristics (including revised International Prognostic Index and double-hit status), insurance data, treatment, trial enrollment, progression, and death.

They found that nonwhites were significantly younger at diagnosis (median 56 vs. 64 years; P = .007), with an even distribution between the sexes in each group.

Two-thirds of both white and nonwhite patients had government insurance (Medicare or Medicaid). Of the remaining patients, 33% of white had private insurance, compared with 27% of nonwhites. No whites were uninsured, but 3 of the 41 nonwhites (7%) had no insurance.

Of the 155 white patients, 121 (86%) received nurse navigation services, as did 33 of 41 (81%) of nonwhites. The services include lodging assistance for homeless patients, transportation services for patients without cars, and care coordination among primary care physicians, oncologists, and other specialists. The services are part of the center’s standard practice, with excess costs, if any, folded into the budget, Dr. Ghosh said.

Looking at disease characteristics and treatment, the investigators found that risk profiles were similar between the groups. A higher percentage of whites had double-hit lymphoma (11% vs. 7%), but this difference was not statistically significant.

The investigators also found that in their program race was not a barrier to optimum therapy, with 96% of whites and 98% of nonwhites receiving frontline therapy with an anthracycline and rituximab-based regimen, and 4% and 2%, respectively received a non–anthracycline based regimen.

In each group, 39% of patients had disease that either relapsed or was refractory to frontline therapy.

In all, 11% of whites and 12% of nonwhites enrolled in clinical trials, 11% and 19%, respectively, underwent stem cell transplantation.

For patients with relapsed/refractory disease, the 2-year PFS rates were 60% for whites, and 63% for nonwhites, and the 2-year OS rates were 74% and 81%, respectively.

Dr. Ghosh and colleagues concluded that “our safety net cancer center, with extensive nurse navigator support and access to standard treatments, stem cell transplants, and cutting-edge clinical trials may abrogate the inferior outcomes in minority populations that have been previously reported.”

The study was internally funded. Dr. Ghosh reported consulting fees, research funding, speakers bureau activity, and/or honoraria from multiple companies.

SOURCE: Hu B et al. ASH 2019. Abstract 425.

 

 

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Kidney function in African American AML patients not linked to reduced survival compared with whites

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Changed
Mon, 12/09/2019 - 08:14

– While African Americans with acute myeloid leukemia were more likely to have evidence of abnormal kidney function, the excess of this comorbidity didn’t affect overall survival, compared with whites, according to a study of more than 1,000 patients.

Andrew Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Abby Statler

A total of 63% of African Americans with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) presented with a renal function abnormality that could have excluded them from a clinical trial, compared with 56% in the overall cohort; however, analysis of outcomes data suggested that renal function abnormalities were not associated with decreased survival in African Americans versus whites, said Abby Statler, PhD, MPH, of the Cleveland Clinic.

The findings may have implications for the design of clinical trials that might exclude patients on the basis of comorbidities that don’t actually affect survival, according to Dr. Statler.

“If we’re able to liberalize renal function eligibility criteria ... this may reduce racial disparities in clinical trial enrollment, which might be a major step in improving the diversity of cancer patient populations,” Dr. Statler said in a press conference at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Overly restrictive criteria could be a significant barrier to clinical trial enrollment among minority patient populations, according to Dr. Statler.

Eligibility criteria are generally biased toward “fit” patient populations, which means they may discriminate against less-fit groups, such as African Americans who, compared with whites, have higher rates of comorbidities and report poorer overall health, according to Dr. Statler.

Laura Michaelis, MD, who chaired the press conference, said these findings suggest current clinical trial designs may be “too restrictive.”

“Once it’s published and validated, [these] data should definitely make us think twice about when you limit a patient’s enrollment in a trial,” Dr. Michaelis said in an interview.

Restrictive eligibility criteria may not only limit access to minority populations, but also may slow clinical trial accrual and completion, and make it harder to generalize clinical trial findings to the overall population, said Dr. Michaelis, associate professor of medicine in the division of hematology and oncology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

 

 


The study by Dr. Statler and colleagues included 1,040 AML patients who received chemotherapy at Cleveland Clinic between 2003 and 2019. About 10% of the patients in the analysis were African American and 90% were white.

Median overall survival was not significantly different by race, at 13.7 months for African Americans and 14.9 months for whites (P = 0.89), according to results published in the study abstract.

Mild creatinine elevation did not appear to affect survival in this study, according to the investigator. Survival was not significantly different between patients with normal creatinine and those with creatinine up to 1.5 times the upper limit of normal. However, higher levels of creatinine were significantly associated with worse survival, Dr. Statler said.

Further analyses showed that these survival findings by creatinine level held up specifically in the African American subgroup as well, Dr. Statler said in the press conference.

Dr. Statler provided no disclosures related to the presentation. Study coauthors described disclosures related to Amgen, SimulStat, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Pfizer, Novartis, Celgene Corporation, Abbvie, and Incyte, among others.

SOURCE: Statler A et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 381.

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– While African Americans with acute myeloid leukemia were more likely to have evidence of abnormal kidney function, the excess of this comorbidity didn’t affect overall survival, compared with whites, according to a study of more than 1,000 patients.

Andrew Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Abby Statler

A total of 63% of African Americans with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) presented with a renal function abnormality that could have excluded them from a clinical trial, compared with 56% in the overall cohort; however, analysis of outcomes data suggested that renal function abnormalities were not associated with decreased survival in African Americans versus whites, said Abby Statler, PhD, MPH, of the Cleveland Clinic.

The findings may have implications for the design of clinical trials that might exclude patients on the basis of comorbidities that don’t actually affect survival, according to Dr. Statler.

“If we’re able to liberalize renal function eligibility criteria ... this may reduce racial disparities in clinical trial enrollment, which might be a major step in improving the diversity of cancer patient populations,” Dr. Statler said in a press conference at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Overly restrictive criteria could be a significant barrier to clinical trial enrollment among minority patient populations, according to Dr. Statler.

Eligibility criteria are generally biased toward “fit” patient populations, which means they may discriminate against less-fit groups, such as African Americans who, compared with whites, have higher rates of comorbidities and report poorer overall health, according to Dr. Statler.

Laura Michaelis, MD, who chaired the press conference, said these findings suggest current clinical trial designs may be “too restrictive.”

“Once it’s published and validated, [these] data should definitely make us think twice about when you limit a patient’s enrollment in a trial,” Dr. Michaelis said in an interview.

Restrictive eligibility criteria may not only limit access to minority populations, but also may slow clinical trial accrual and completion, and make it harder to generalize clinical trial findings to the overall population, said Dr. Michaelis, associate professor of medicine in the division of hematology and oncology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

 

 


The study by Dr. Statler and colleagues included 1,040 AML patients who received chemotherapy at Cleveland Clinic between 2003 and 2019. About 10% of the patients in the analysis were African American and 90% were white.

Median overall survival was not significantly different by race, at 13.7 months for African Americans and 14.9 months for whites (P = 0.89), according to results published in the study abstract.

Mild creatinine elevation did not appear to affect survival in this study, according to the investigator. Survival was not significantly different between patients with normal creatinine and those with creatinine up to 1.5 times the upper limit of normal. However, higher levels of creatinine were significantly associated with worse survival, Dr. Statler said.

Further analyses showed that these survival findings by creatinine level held up specifically in the African American subgroup as well, Dr. Statler said in the press conference.

Dr. Statler provided no disclosures related to the presentation. Study coauthors described disclosures related to Amgen, SimulStat, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Pfizer, Novartis, Celgene Corporation, Abbvie, and Incyte, among others.

SOURCE: Statler A et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 381.

– While African Americans with acute myeloid leukemia were more likely to have evidence of abnormal kidney function, the excess of this comorbidity didn’t affect overall survival, compared with whites, according to a study of more than 1,000 patients.

Andrew Bowser/MDedge News
Dr. Abby Statler

A total of 63% of African Americans with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) presented with a renal function abnormality that could have excluded them from a clinical trial, compared with 56% in the overall cohort; however, analysis of outcomes data suggested that renal function abnormalities were not associated with decreased survival in African Americans versus whites, said Abby Statler, PhD, MPH, of the Cleveland Clinic.

The findings may have implications for the design of clinical trials that might exclude patients on the basis of comorbidities that don’t actually affect survival, according to Dr. Statler.

“If we’re able to liberalize renal function eligibility criteria ... this may reduce racial disparities in clinical trial enrollment, which might be a major step in improving the diversity of cancer patient populations,” Dr. Statler said in a press conference at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

Overly restrictive criteria could be a significant barrier to clinical trial enrollment among minority patient populations, according to Dr. Statler.

Eligibility criteria are generally biased toward “fit” patient populations, which means they may discriminate against less-fit groups, such as African Americans who, compared with whites, have higher rates of comorbidities and report poorer overall health, according to Dr. Statler.

Laura Michaelis, MD, who chaired the press conference, said these findings suggest current clinical trial designs may be “too restrictive.”

“Once it’s published and validated, [these] data should definitely make us think twice about when you limit a patient’s enrollment in a trial,” Dr. Michaelis said in an interview.

Restrictive eligibility criteria may not only limit access to minority populations, but also may slow clinical trial accrual and completion, and make it harder to generalize clinical trial findings to the overall population, said Dr. Michaelis, associate professor of medicine in the division of hematology and oncology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.

 

 


The study by Dr. Statler and colleagues included 1,040 AML patients who received chemotherapy at Cleveland Clinic between 2003 and 2019. About 10% of the patients in the analysis were African American and 90% were white.

Median overall survival was not significantly different by race, at 13.7 months for African Americans and 14.9 months for whites (P = 0.89), according to results published in the study abstract.

Mild creatinine elevation did not appear to affect survival in this study, according to the investigator. Survival was not significantly different between patients with normal creatinine and those with creatinine up to 1.5 times the upper limit of normal. However, higher levels of creatinine were significantly associated with worse survival, Dr. Statler said.

Further analyses showed that these survival findings by creatinine level held up specifically in the African American subgroup as well, Dr. Statler said in the press conference.

Dr. Statler provided no disclosures related to the presentation. Study coauthors described disclosures related to Amgen, SimulStat, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takeda, Pfizer, Novartis, Celgene Corporation, Abbvie, and Incyte, among others.

SOURCE: Statler A et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 381.

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Myeloma patients over age 70 can benefit from auto-HC transplant

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Changed
Thu, 12/12/2019 - 10:19

– Age 70 may be the new 60, at least when it comes to outcomes following autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (auto-HCT) in multiple myeloma.

Benjamin Pena/Medscape
Dr. Anita D'Souza

A large-scale study looking at transplant outcomes across age groups in multiple myeloma patients found similar rates of nonrelapse mortality, relapse/progression, progression-free survival, and overall survival between patients who were aged 70 years and older and those who were aged 60-69 years.

“Age has no implication in terms of the antimyeloma effect of transplant,” Anita D’Souza, MD, of the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

The study analyzed outcomes from 15,999 multiple myeloma patients aged 20 years or older in the United States who received a single auto-HCT with melphalan conditioning within 12 months of diagnosis between 2013 and 2017. Within that dataset, the researchers compared outcomes from 7,032 patients aged 60-69 years and 2,092 patients aged 70 years and older.

This is the largest study of auto-HCT in older adults with multiple myeloma, the researchers said, and provides important data about the benefit of transplant at any age.

Univariate analysis showed that 100-day nonrelapse mortality was higher in patients aged 70 years and older – at 1% – compared with younger patients (P less than .01). Also, 2-year overall survival was lower in older adults – at 86% – compared with 60- to 69-year-olds (P less than .01).

However, on multivariate analysis with 60- to 69-year-olds as the reference group, patients older than age 70 years had similar nonrelapse mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 1.3, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1, 1.7, P = .06). The same trends were seen for relapse/progression (HR 1.0, 95% CI, 0.9-1, P = .6), progression-free survival (HR 1.1, 95% CI 1-1.2, P = .2), and overall survival (HR 1.2, 95% CI 1-1.4, P = .03). Given the large sample size, a P value of .01 was considered statistically significant.

Over the course of the study period, the percentage of patients aged 70 and older who received a transplant grew each year, rising to 28% by 2017. But Dr. D’Souza said that number is still too low given the safety and efficacy of auto-HCT in these patients.

“Every patient with myeloma should be referred to a transplant center,” she said.

Dr. D’Souza reported financial disclosures related to EDO-Mundapharma, Merck, Prothena, Sanofi, TeneoBio, Prothena, Pfizer, Imbrium, and Akcea. Other study authors reported financial relationships with multiple companies including Celgene, Takeda, BMS, and Janssen.

SOURCE: Munshi PN et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 782.

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– Age 70 may be the new 60, at least when it comes to outcomes following autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (auto-HCT) in multiple myeloma.

Benjamin Pena/Medscape
Dr. Anita D'Souza

A large-scale study looking at transplant outcomes across age groups in multiple myeloma patients found similar rates of nonrelapse mortality, relapse/progression, progression-free survival, and overall survival between patients who were aged 70 years and older and those who were aged 60-69 years.

“Age has no implication in terms of the antimyeloma effect of transplant,” Anita D’Souza, MD, of the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

The study analyzed outcomes from 15,999 multiple myeloma patients aged 20 years or older in the United States who received a single auto-HCT with melphalan conditioning within 12 months of diagnosis between 2013 and 2017. Within that dataset, the researchers compared outcomes from 7,032 patients aged 60-69 years and 2,092 patients aged 70 years and older.

This is the largest study of auto-HCT in older adults with multiple myeloma, the researchers said, and provides important data about the benefit of transplant at any age.

Univariate analysis showed that 100-day nonrelapse mortality was higher in patients aged 70 years and older – at 1% – compared with younger patients (P less than .01). Also, 2-year overall survival was lower in older adults – at 86% – compared with 60- to 69-year-olds (P less than .01).

However, on multivariate analysis with 60- to 69-year-olds as the reference group, patients older than age 70 years had similar nonrelapse mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 1.3, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1, 1.7, P = .06). The same trends were seen for relapse/progression (HR 1.0, 95% CI, 0.9-1, P = .6), progression-free survival (HR 1.1, 95% CI 1-1.2, P = .2), and overall survival (HR 1.2, 95% CI 1-1.4, P = .03). Given the large sample size, a P value of .01 was considered statistically significant.

Over the course of the study period, the percentage of patients aged 70 and older who received a transplant grew each year, rising to 28% by 2017. But Dr. D’Souza said that number is still too low given the safety and efficacy of auto-HCT in these patients.

“Every patient with myeloma should be referred to a transplant center,” she said.

Dr. D’Souza reported financial disclosures related to EDO-Mundapharma, Merck, Prothena, Sanofi, TeneoBio, Prothena, Pfizer, Imbrium, and Akcea. Other study authors reported financial relationships with multiple companies including Celgene, Takeda, BMS, and Janssen.

SOURCE: Munshi PN et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 782.

– Age 70 may be the new 60, at least when it comes to outcomes following autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (auto-HCT) in multiple myeloma.

Benjamin Pena/Medscape
Dr. Anita D'Souza

A large-scale study looking at transplant outcomes across age groups in multiple myeloma patients found similar rates of nonrelapse mortality, relapse/progression, progression-free survival, and overall survival between patients who were aged 70 years and older and those who were aged 60-69 years.

“Age has no implication in terms of the antimyeloma effect of transplant,” Anita D’Souza, MD, of the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, said at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology.

The study analyzed outcomes from 15,999 multiple myeloma patients aged 20 years or older in the United States who received a single auto-HCT with melphalan conditioning within 12 months of diagnosis between 2013 and 2017. Within that dataset, the researchers compared outcomes from 7,032 patients aged 60-69 years and 2,092 patients aged 70 years and older.

This is the largest study of auto-HCT in older adults with multiple myeloma, the researchers said, and provides important data about the benefit of transplant at any age.

Univariate analysis showed that 100-day nonrelapse mortality was higher in patients aged 70 years and older – at 1% – compared with younger patients (P less than .01). Also, 2-year overall survival was lower in older adults – at 86% – compared with 60- to 69-year-olds (P less than .01).

However, on multivariate analysis with 60- to 69-year-olds as the reference group, patients older than age 70 years had similar nonrelapse mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 1.3, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1, 1.7, P = .06). The same trends were seen for relapse/progression (HR 1.0, 95% CI, 0.9-1, P = .6), progression-free survival (HR 1.1, 95% CI 1-1.2, P = .2), and overall survival (HR 1.2, 95% CI 1-1.4, P = .03). Given the large sample size, a P value of .01 was considered statistically significant.

Over the course of the study period, the percentage of patients aged 70 and older who received a transplant grew each year, rising to 28% by 2017. But Dr. D’Souza said that number is still too low given the safety and efficacy of auto-HCT in these patients.

“Every patient with myeloma should be referred to a transplant center,” she said.

Dr. D’Souza reported financial disclosures related to EDO-Mundapharma, Merck, Prothena, Sanofi, TeneoBio, Prothena, Pfizer, Imbrium, and Akcea. Other study authors reported financial relationships with multiple companies including Celgene, Takeda, BMS, and Janssen.

SOURCE: Munshi PN et al. ASH 2019, Abstract 782.

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FDA approves acalabrutinib for CLL, SLL treatment

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Fri, 12/16/2022 - 11:32

 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved acalabrutinib (Calquence) as initial or subsequent treatment for adults with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or small lymphocytic leukemia (SLL).

Olivier Le Moal/Getty Images

The approval came as part of Project Orbis, a collaboration among the FDA, the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration, and Health Canada. The program allows for the concurrent submission of review of oncology drug applications among the various agencies.

Acalabrutinib, a bruton tyrosin kinase inhibitor, is already approved in the United States for the treatment of adults with mantle cell lymphoma who have received at least one prior therapy. The FDA granted breakthrough therapy designation to acalabrutinib as a monotherapy for adults with CLL in August 2019, allowing for an expedited review.

The approval in CLL/SLL was based on results from two randomized clinical trials comparing acalabrutinib with other standard treatments. In the first trial, patients with previously untreated CLL who received acalabrutinib had a longer progression-free survival time, compared with patients who received standard treatment. A similar result was seen in the second trial among patients with previously treated CLL.


The most common adverse events associated with acalabrutinib include anemia, neutropenia, upper respiratory tract infection, thrombocytopenia, headache, diarrhea, and musculoskeletal pain. Patients receiving the drug should be monitored for symptoms of arrhythmia, serious infection, bleeding, and low blood count. Full prescribing information can be found on the FDA website.

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The Food and Drug Administration has approved acalabrutinib (Calquence) as initial or subsequent treatment for adults with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or small lymphocytic leukemia (SLL).

Olivier Le Moal/Getty Images

The approval came as part of Project Orbis, a collaboration among the FDA, the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration, and Health Canada. The program allows for the concurrent submission of review of oncology drug applications among the various agencies.

Acalabrutinib, a bruton tyrosin kinase inhibitor, is already approved in the United States for the treatment of adults with mantle cell lymphoma who have received at least one prior therapy. The FDA granted breakthrough therapy designation to acalabrutinib as a monotherapy for adults with CLL in August 2019, allowing for an expedited review.

The approval in CLL/SLL was based on results from two randomized clinical trials comparing acalabrutinib with other standard treatments. In the first trial, patients with previously untreated CLL who received acalabrutinib had a longer progression-free survival time, compared with patients who received standard treatment. A similar result was seen in the second trial among patients with previously treated CLL.


The most common adverse events associated with acalabrutinib include anemia, neutropenia, upper respiratory tract infection, thrombocytopenia, headache, diarrhea, and musculoskeletal pain. Patients receiving the drug should be monitored for symptoms of arrhythmia, serious infection, bleeding, and low blood count. Full prescribing information can be found on the FDA website.

 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved acalabrutinib (Calquence) as initial or subsequent treatment for adults with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) or small lymphocytic leukemia (SLL).

Olivier Le Moal/Getty Images

The approval came as part of Project Orbis, a collaboration among the FDA, the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration, and Health Canada. The program allows for the concurrent submission of review of oncology drug applications among the various agencies.

Acalabrutinib, a bruton tyrosin kinase inhibitor, is already approved in the United States for the treatment of adults with mantle cell lymphoma who have received at least one prior therapy. The FDA granted breakthrough therapy designation to acalabrutinib as a monotherapy for adults with CLL in August 2019, allowing for an expedited review.

The approval in CLL/SLL was based on results from two randomized clinical trials comparing acalabrutinib with other standard treatments. In the first trial, patients with previously untreated CLL who received acalabrutinib had a longer progression-free survival time, compared with patients who received standard treatment. A similar result was seen in the second trial among patients with previously treated CLL.


The most common adverse events associated with acalabrutinib include anemia, neutropenia, upper respiratory tract infection, thrombocytopenia, headache, diarrhea, and musculoskeletal pain. Patients receiving the drug should be monitored for symptoms of arrhythmia, serious infection, bleeding, and low blood count. Full prescribing information can be found on the FDA website.

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Will TP53-mutated AML respond to immunotherapy?

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Tue, 11/19/2019 - 16:49

 

– New research has shown increased immune infiltration in patients with TP53-mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Jennifer Smith/MDedge News
Dr. Sergio Rutella

Patients with TP53-mutated AML had higher levels of T-cell infiltration, immune checkpoint molecules, and interferon (IFN)–gamma signaling than patients with wild-type TP53.

These findings may indicate that patients with TP53-mutated AML will respond to T-cell targeting immunotherapies, but more investigation is needed, according to Sergio Rutella, MD, PhD, of Nottingham (England) Trent University.

Dr. Rutella described the findings at the annual meeting of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer.

He and his colleagues recently identified subgroups of AML, called “immune infiltrated” and “immune depleted,” that can predict chemotherapy resistance and response to flotetuzumab (ASH 2019, Abstract 460). However, the team has not determined the genetic drivers of immune infiltration in AML.*

With the current study, Dr. Rutella and his colleagues wanted to determine if TP53 mutations are associated with the AML immune milieu and see if TP53-mutated patients might benefit from immunotherapy.

Discovery cohort

The researchers first analyzed 147 patients with non-promyelocytic AML from the Cancer Genome Atlas. In total, 9% of these patients (n = 13) had TP53-mutated AML. The researchers assessed how 45 immune gene and biological activity signatures correlated with prognostic molecular lesions (TP53 mutations, FLT3-ITD, etc.) and clinical outcomes in this cohort.

The data showed that immune subtypes were associated with overall survival (OS). The median OS was 11.8 months in patients with immune-infiltrated AML, 16.4 months in patients with intermediate AML, and 25.8 months in patients with immune-depleted AML.

The inflammatory chemokine score (P = .011), IDO1 score (P = .027), IFN-gamma score (P = .036), and B7H3 score (P = .045) were all significantly associated with OS. In fact, these factors were all better predictors of OS than cytogenetic risk score (P = .049).

The IFN-gamma score, inflammatory chemokine score, and lymphoid score were all significantly higher in TP53-mutated patients than in patients with RUNX1 mutations, NPM1 mutations, FLT3-ITD (with or without NPM1 mutations), and TET2/DNMT3A/ASXL1 mutations (P values ranging from less than .0001 to .05).

Likewise, the tumor inflammation signature score was significantly higher among TP53-mutated patients than among patients with NPM1 mutations, FLT3-ITD (with or without NPM1 mutations), and TET2/DNMT3A/ASXL1 mutations (P values ranging from less than .0001 to .01).

Validation cohort and bone marrow samples

The researchers also looked at data from a validation cohort, which consisted of 140 patients with non-promyelocytic AML in the Beat AML Master Trial. Twelve percent of these patients (n = 17) had TP53 mutations.

Data in this cohort showed that CD3G messenger RNA (mRNA) was significantly higher in TP53-mutated AML than in TP53-wild-type AML (P = .04). The same was true for CD8A mRNA (P = .0002) and GZMB mRNA (P = .0005).

Likewise, IFN-gamma mRNA (P = .0052), IFIT2 mRNA (P = .0064), and IFIT3 mRNA (P = .003) were all significantly higher in patients with TP53-mutated AML.

Lastly, the researchers analyzed gene expression profiles of bone marrow samples from patients with AML, 36 with mutated TP53 and 24 with wild-type TP53.

The team found that IFN-gamma–induced genes (IFNG and IRF1), markers of T-cell infiltration (CD8A and CD3G) and senescence (EOMES, KLRD1, and HRAS), immune checkpoint molecules (IDO1, LAG3, PDL1, and VISTA), effector function molecules (GZMB, GZMK, and GZMM), and proinflammatory cytokines (IL17A and TNF) were all significantly overexpressed in TP53-mutated AML.

Among the top overexpressed genes in TP53-mutated AML were genes associated with IFN signaling and inflammation pathways – IL-33, IL-6, IFN-gamma, OASL, RIPK2, TNFAIP3, CSF1, and PTGER4. The IL-17 and TNF signaling pathways were the most enriched pathways in TP53-mutated AML.

“Our analysis of primary bone marrow samples showed that TP53-mutated samples are enriched in IL-17, TNF, and IFN signaling molecules, and show higher levels of T-cell infiltrations and immune checkpoints relative to their wild-type counterparts,” Dr. Rutella said.

“The in silico analysis indicated that TP53-mutated cases will show higher levels of T-cell infiltration, immune checkpoints, and IFN-gamma signaling, compared with AML subgroups without risk-defining molecular lesions,” he added. “This is speculative. Whether TP53-mutated AML can be amenable to respond to T-cell targeting immunotherapies is still to be determined.”

Dr. Rutella reported research support from NanoString Technologies, MacroGenics, and Kura Oncology.

SOURCE: Rutella S et al. SITC 2019. Abstract O3.

*This article was updated on 11/19/2019.

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– New research has shown increased immune infiltration in patients with TP53-mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Jennifer Smith/MDedge News
Dr. Sergio Rutella

Patients with TP53-mutated AML had higher levels of T-cell infiltration, immune checkpoint molecules, and interferon (IFN)–gamma signaling than patients with wild-type TP53.

These findings may indicate that patients with TP53-mutated AML will respond to T-cell targeting immunotherapies, but more investigation is needed, according to Sergio Rutella, MD, PhD, of Nottingham (England) Trent University.

Dr. Rutella described the findings at the annual meeting of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer.

He and his colleagues recently identified subgroups of AML, called “immune infiltrated” and “immune depleted,” that can predict chemotherapy resistance and response to flotetuzumab (ASH 2019, Abstract 460). However, the team has not determined the genetic drivers of immune infiltration in AML.*

With the current study, Dr. Rutella and his colleagues wanted to determine if TP53 mutations are associated with the AML immune milieu and see if TP53-mutated patients might benefit from immunotherapy.

Discovery cohort

The researchers first analyzed 147 patients with non-promyelocytic AML from the Cancer Genome Atlas. In total, 9% of these patients (n = 13) had TP53-mutated AML. The researchers assessed how 45 immune gene and biological activity signatures correlated with prognostic molecular lesions (TP53 mutations, FLT3-ITD, etc.) and clinical outcomes in this cohort.

The data showed that immune subtypes were associated with overall survival (OS). The median OS was 11.8 months in patients with immune-infiltrated AML, 16.4 months in patients with intermediate AML, and 25.8 months in patients with immune-depleted AML.

The inflammatory chemokine score (P = .011), IDO1 score (P = .027), IFN-gamma score (P = .036), and B7H3 score (P = .045) were all significantly associated with OS. In fact, these factors were all better predictors of OS than cytogenetic risk score (P = .049).

The IFN-gamma score, inflammatory chemokine score, and lymphoid score were all significantly higher in TP53-mutated patients than in patients with RUNX1 mutations, NPM1 mutations, FLT3-ITD (with or without NPM1 mutations), and TET2/DNMT3A/ASXL1 mutations (P values ranging from less than .0001 to .05).

Likewise, the tumor inflammation signature score was significantly higher among TP53-mutated patients than among patients with NPM1 mutations, FLT3-ITD (with or without NPM1 mutations), and TET2/DNMT3A/ASXL1 mutations (P values ranging from less than .0001 to .01).

Validation cohort and bone marrow samples

The researchers also looked at data from a validation cohort, which consisted of 140 patients with non-promyelocytic AML in the Beat AML Master Trial. Twelve percent of these patients (n = 17) had TP53 mutations.

Data in this cohort showed that CD3G messenger RNA (mRNA) was significantly higher in TP53-mutated AML than in TP53-wild-type AML (P = .04). The same was true for CD8A mRNA (P = .0002) and GZMB mRNA (P = .0005).

Likewise, IFN-gamma mRNA (P = .0052), IFIT2 mRNA (P = .0064), and IFIT3 mRNA (P = .003) were all significantly higher in patients with TP53-mutated AML.

Lastly, the researchers analyzed gene expression profiles of bone marrow samples from patients with AML, 36 with mutated TP53 and 24 with wild-type TP53.

The team found that IFN-gamma–induced genes (IFNG and IRF1), markers of T-cell infiltration (CD8A and CD3G) and senescence (EOMES, KLRD1, and HRAS), immune checkpoint molecules (IDO1, LAG3, PDL1, and VISTA), effector function molecules (GZMB, GZMK, and GZMM), and proinflammatory cytokines (IL17A and TNF) were all significantly overexpressed in TP53-mutated AML.

Among the top overexpressed genes in TP53-mutated AML were genes associated with IFN signaling and inflammation pathways – IL-33, IL-6, IFN-gamma, OASL, RIPK2, TNFAIP3, CSF1, and PTGER4. The IL-17 and TNF signaling pathways were the most enriched pathways in TP53-mutated AML.

“Our analysis of primary bone marrow samples showed that TP53-mutated samples are enriched in IL-17, TNF, and IFN signaling molecules, and show higher levels of T-cell infiltrations and immune checkpoints relative to their wild-type counterparts,” Dr. Rutella said.

“The in silico analysis indicated that TP53-mutated cases will show higher levels of T-cell infiltration, immune checkpoints, and IFN-gamma signaling, compared with AML subgroups without risk-defining molecular lesions,” he added. “This is speculative. Whether TP53-mutated AML can be amenable to respond to T-cell targeting immunotherapies is still to be determined.”

Dr. Rutella reported research support from NanoString Technologies, MacroGenics, and Kura Oncology.

SOURCE: Rutella S et al. SITC 2019. Abstract O3.

*This article was updated on 11/19/2019.

 

– New research has shown increased immune infiltration in patients with TP53-mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

Jennifer Smith/MDedge News
Dr. Sergio Rutella

Patients with TP53-mutated AML had higher levels of T-cell infiltration, immune checkpoint molecules, and interferon (IFN)–gamma signaling than patients with wild-type TP53.

These findings may indicate that patients with TP53-mutated AML will respond to T-cell targeting immunotherapies, but more investigation is needed, according to Sergio Rutella, MD, PhD, of Nottingham (England) Trent University.

Dr. Rutella described the findings at the annual meeting of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer.

He and his colleagues recently identified subgroups of AML, called “immune infiltrated” and “immune depleted,” that can predict chemotherapy resistance and response to flotetuzumab (ASH 2019, Abstract 460). However, the team has not determined the genetic drivers of immune infiltration in AML.*

With the current study, Dr. Rutella and his colleagues wanted to determine if TP53 mutations are associated with the AML immune milieu and see if TP53-mutated patients might benefit from immunotherapy.

Discovery cohort

The researchers first analyzed 147 patients with non-promyelocytic AML from the Cancer Genome Atlas. In total, 9% of these patients (n = 13) had TP53-mutated AML. The researchers assessed how 45 immune gene and biological activity signatures correlated with prognostic molecular lesions (TP53 mutations, FLT3-ITD, etc.) and clinical outcomes in this cohort.

The data showed that immune subtypes were associated with overall survival (OS). The median OS was 11.8 months in patients with immune-infiltrated AML, 16.4 months in patients with intermediate AML, and 25.8 months in patients with immune-depleted AML.

The inflammatory chemokine score (P = .011), IDO1 score (P = .027), IFN-gamma score (P = .036), and B7H3 score (P = .045) were all significantly associated with OS. In fact, these factors were all better predictors of OS than cytogenetic risk score (P = .049).

The IFN-gamma score, inflammatory chemokine score, and lymphoid score were all significantly higher in TP53-mutated patients than in patients with RUNX1 mutations, NPM1 mutations, FLT3-ITD (with or without NPM1 mutations), and TET2/DNMT3A/ASXL1 mutations (P values ranging from less than .0001 to .05).

Likewise, the tumor inflammation signature score was significantly higher among TP53-mutated patients than among patients with NPM1 mutations, FLT3-ITD (with or without NPM1 mutations), and TET2/DNMT3A/ASXL1 mutations (P values ranging from less than .0001 to .01).

Validation cohort and bone marrow samples

The researchers also looked at data from a validation cohort, which consisted of 140 patients with non-promyelocytic AML in the Beat AML Master Trial. Twelve percent of these patients (n = 17) had TP53 mutations.

Data in this cohort showed that CD3G messenger RNA (mRNA) was significantly higher in TP53-mutated AML than in TP53-wild-type AML (P = .04). The same was true for CD8A mRNA (P = .0002) and GZMB mRNA (P = .0005).

Likewise, IFN-gamma mRNA (P = .0052), IFIT2 mRNA (P = .0064), and IFIT3 mRNA (P = .003) were all significantly higher in patients with TP53-mutated AML.

Lastly, the researchers analyzed gene expression profiles of bone marrow samples from patients with AML, 36 with mutated TP53 and 24 with wild-type TP53.

The team found that IFN-gamma–induced genes (IFNG and IRF1), markers of T-cell infiltration (CD8A and CD3G) and senescence (EOMES, KLRD1, and HRAS), immune checkpoint molecules (IDO1, LAG3, PDL1, and VISTA), effector function molecules (GZMB, GZMK, and GZMM), and proinflammatory cytokines (IL17A and TNF) were all significantly overexpressed in TP53-mutated AML.

Among the top overexpressed genes in TP53-mutated AML were genes associated with IFN signaling and inflammation pathways – IL-33, IL-6, IFN-gamma, OASL, RIPK2, TNFAIP3, CSF1, and PTGER4. The IL-17 and TNF signaling pathways were the most enriched pathways in TP53-mutated AML.

“Our analysis of primary bone marrow samples showed that TP53-mutated samples are enriched in IL-17, TNF, and IFN signaling molecules, and show higher levels of T-cell infiltrations and immune checkpoints relative to their wild-type counterparts,” Dr. Rutella said.

“The in silico analysis indicated that TP53-mutated cases will show higher levels of T-cell infiltration, immune checkpoints, and IFN-gamma signaling, compared with AML subgroups without risk-defining molecular lesions,” he added. “This is speculative. Whether TP53-mutated AML can be amenable to respond to T-cell targeting immunotherapies is still to be determined.”

Dr. Rutella reported research support from NanoString Technologies, MacroGenics, and Kura Oncology.

SOURCE: Rutella S et al. SITC 2019. Abstract O3.

*This article was updated on 11/19/2019.

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CAR T-cell ‘cocktail’ may overcome antigen escape relapse

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Fri, 12/16/2022 - 10:57

A chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell “cocktail” targeting both CD19 and CD22 could improve outcomes for patients with refractory or relapsed B-cell malignancies, according to investigators.

This dual approach, which appeared safe and effective, may be able to overcome antigen escape relapse, reported Na Wang, MD, of Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China, and colleagues.

The investigators tested this method in an open-label, single-arm pilot study involving 89 patients with refractory/relapsed B cell malignancies. Of these, 51 patients had B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), while the remaining 38 had non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). All patients had dual expression of CD19 and CD22 on malignant B cells, good performance status, and “essentially” normal organ function, the investigators reported in Blood.

Following lymphodepletion, patients were infused with CAR19 and CAR22 T cells, then evaluated for responses with imaging or bone marrow aspiration on a monthly basis for 6 months, then every 3 months thereafter.

After 30 days, most patients with ALL (96%) achieved a minimal residual disease-negative complete response or complete response with incomplete count recovery. After a median follow-up of 16.7 months, almost half of these responders relapsed (49%), median progression-free survival was 13.6 months, and overall survival was 31 months.

With a minimum follow-up of 3 months, half of the patients with NHL (50%) achieved complete responses, with the caveat that two patients who died of septic shock and severe cytokine release syndrome were excluded from this efficacy analysis. After a median follow-up of 14.4 months, in the NHL group, median progression-free survival was 9.9 months and overall survival was 18 months.

Across disease types, almost all patients (95.5%) experienced cytokine release syndrome, with more than three-quarters (77.6%) categorized as grade 1 or 2. CAR T cell-related encephalopathy syndrome (CRES) occurred in 13.5% of patients; most were low grade, apart from one case that was grade 4. In total, 12 patients died due to adverse events.

“The severe [adverse events] were mostly cytopenias and the most frequent fatal [adverse event] was lung infection, which was attributable in part to the high disease burden and heavy pretreatment of the enrolled patients,” the investigators wrote. “Nearly all the high-grade CRS and CRES were reversible and occurred in similar incidences as previously reported. Thus, the sequential infusion of CAR19/22 T-cell “cocktail” was an efficient and well-tolerated approach to circumvent antigen loss of CD19 or CD22.”

The investigators reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Wang N et al. 2019 Oct 29. doi: 10.1182/blood.2019000017.

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A chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell “cocktail” targeting both CD19 and CD22 could improve outcomes for patients with refractory or relapsed B-cell malignancies, according to investigators.

This dual approach, which appeared safe and effective, may be able to overcome antigen escape relapse, reported Na Wang, MD, of Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China, and colleagues.

The investigators tested this method in an open-label, single-arm pilot study involving 89 patients with refractory/relapsed B cell malignancies. Of these, 51 patients had B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), while the remaining 38 had non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). All patients had dual expression of CD19 and CD22 on malignant B cells, good performance status, and “essentially” normal organ function, the investigators reported in Blood.

Following lymphodepletion, patients were infused with CAR19 and CAR22 T cells, then evaluated for responses with imaging or bone marrow aspiration on a monthly basis for 6 months, then every 3 months thereafter.

After 30 days, most patients with ALL (96%) achieved a minimal residual disease-negative complete response or complete response with incomplete count recovery. After a median follow-up of 16.7 months, almost half of these responders relapsed (49%), median progression-free survival was 13.6 months, and overall survival was 31 months.

With a minimum follow-up of 3 months, half of the patients with NHL (50%) achieved complete responses, with the caveat that two patients who died of septic shock and severe cytokine release syndrome were excluded from this efficacy analysis. After a median follow-up of 14.4 months, in the NHL group, median progression-free survival was 9.9 months and overall survival was 18 months.

Across disease types, almost all patients (95.5%) experienced cytokine release syndrome, with more than three-quarters (77.6%) categorized as grade 1 or 2. CAR T cell-related encephalopathy syndrome (CRES) occurred in 13.5% of patients; most were low grade, apart from one case that was grade 4. In total, 12 patients died due to adverse events.

“The severe [adverse events] were mostly cytopenias and the most frequent fatal [adverse event] was lung infection, which was attributable in part to the high disease burden and heavy pretreatment of the enrolled patients,” the investigators wrote. “Nearly all the high-grade CRS and CRES were reversible and occurred in similar incidences as previously reported. Thus, the sequential infusion of CAR19/22 T-cell “cocktail” was an efficient and well-tolerated approach to circumvent antigen loss of CD19 or CD22.”

The investigators reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Wang N et al. 2019 Oct 29. doi: 10.1182/blood.2019000017.

A chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell “cocktail” targeting both CD19 and CD22 could improve outcomes for patients with refractory or relapsed B-cell malignancies, according to investigators.

This dual approach, which appeared safe and effective, may be able to overcome antigen escape relapse, reported Na Wang, MD, of Huazhong University of Science and Technology in China, and colleagues.

The investigators tested this method in an open-label, single-arm pilot study involving 89 patients with refractory/relapsed B cell malignancies. Of these, 51 patients had B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), while the remaining 38 had non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). All patients had dual expression of CD19 and CD22 on malignant B cells, good performance status, and “essentially” normal organ function, the investigators reported in Blood.

Following lymphodepletion, patients were infused with CAR19 and CAR22 T cells, then evaluated for responses with imaging or bone marrow aspiration on a monthly basis for 6 months, then every 3 months thereafter.

After 30 days, most patients with ALL (96%) achieved a minimal residual disease-negative complete response or complete response with incomplete count recovery. After a median follow-up of 16.7 months, almost half of these responders relapsed (49%), median progression-free survival was 13.6 months, and overall survival was 31 months.

With a minimum follow-up of 3 months, half of the patients with NHL (50%) achieved complete responses, with the caveat that two patients who died of septic shock and severe cytokine release syndrome were excluded from this efficacy analysis. After a median follow-up of 14.4 months, in the NHL group, median progression-free survival was 9.9 months and overall survival was 18 months.

Across disease types, almost all patients (95.5%) experienced cytokine release syndrome, with more than three-quarters (77.6%) categorized as grade 1 or 2. CAR T cell-related encephalopathy syndrome (CRES) occurred in 13.5% of patients; most were low grade, apart from one case that was grade 4. In total, 12 patients died due to adverse events.

“The severe [adverse events] were mostly cytopenias and the most frequent fatal [adverse event] was lung infection, which was attributable in part to the high disease burden and heavy pretreatment of the enrolled patients,” the investigators wrote. “Nearly all the high-grade CRS and CRES were reversible and occurred in similar incidences as previously reported. Thus, the sequential infusion of CAR19/22 T-cell “cocktail” was an efficient and well-tolerated approach to circumvent antigen loss of CD19 or CD22.”

The investigators reported having no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Wang N et al. 2019 Oct 29. doi: 10.1182/blood.2019000017.

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FDA approves Brukinsa for relapsed, refractory MCL

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Fri, 12/16/2022 - 12:36

 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved zanubrutinib (Brukinsa) for the treatment of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) in adult patients who have received at least one prior therapy.

Olivier Le Moal/Getty Images

The approval is based on results from two separate studies; in a global phase 1/2 trial, patients with relapsed or refractory MCL who received zanubrutinib had an overall response rate of 84%, with 22% experiencing a complete response and 62% experiencing partial response. Median duration of response was 18.5 months. The ORR in the second study – a multicenter phase 2 trial – was also 84%, but with 59% experiencing a complete response and 24% experiencing partial response; duration of response was 19.5 months.

The most common adverse events reported during the trials were decreased neutrophil count, decreased platelet count, upper respiratory tract infection, decreased white blood cell count, decreased hemoglobin, rash, bruising, diarrhea, cough, musculoskeletal pain, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, hematuria, fatigue, constipation, and hemorrhage. The most common serious adverse events were pneumonia and hemorrhage.



Of the 118 patients with MCL treated with zanubrutinib over the two trials, 8 had to be discontinued because of adverse events.

The recommended dose of zanubrutinib is 320 mg, taken orally 160 mg twice daily or 320 mg once daily, with or without food.

“BTK [Bruton kinase] inhibition is an established mode of treatment for patients with MCL, but many patients treated with previously approved BTK inhibitors do not fully respond to BTK therapy or are forced to discontinue treatment early due to side effects. Today we have a new option for our adult patients who have received one prior systemic or targeted therapy and are living with MCL,” Luhua (Michael) Wang, MD, clinical trial investigator and professor in the department of lymphoma and myeloma at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, said in a statement.

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The Food and Drug Administration has approved zanubrutinib (Brukinsa) for the treatment of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) in adult patients who have received at least one prior therapy.

Olivier Le Moal/Getty Images

The approval is based on results from two separate studies; in a global phase 1/2 trial, patients with relapsed or refractory MCL who received zanubrutinib had an overall response rate of 84%, with 22% experiencing a complete response and 62% experiencing partial response. Median duration of response was 18.5 months. The ORR in the second study – a multicenter phase 2 trial – was also 84%, but with 59% experiencing a complete response and 24% experiencing partial response; duration of response was 19.5 months.

The most common adverse events reported during the trials were decreased neutrophil count, decreased platelet count, upper respiratory tract infection, decreased white blood cell count, decreased hemoglobin, rash, bruising, diarrhea, cough, musculoskeletal pain, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, hematuria, fatigue, constipation, and hemorrhage. The most common serious adverse events were pneumonia and hemorrhage.



Of the 118 patients with MCL treated with zanubrutinib over the two trials, 8 had to be discontinued because of adverse events.

The recommended dose of zanubrutinib is 320 mg, taken orally 160 mg twice daily or 320 mg once daily, with or without food.

“BTK [Bruton kinase] inhibition is an established mode of treatment for patients with MCL, but many patients treated with previously approved BTK inhibitors do not fully respond to BTK therapy or are forced to discontinue treatment early due to side effects. Today we have a new option for our adult patients who have received one prior systemic or targeted therapy and are living with MCL,” Luhua (Michael) Wang, MD, clinical trial investigator and professor in the department of lymphoma and myeloma at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, said in a statement.

 

The Food and Drug Administration has approved zanubrutinib (Brukinsa) for the treatment of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) in adult patients who have received at least one prior therapy.

Olivier Le Moal/Getty Images

The approval is based on results from two separate studies; in a global phase 1/2 trial, patients with relapsed or refractory MCL who received zanubrutinib had an overall response rate of 84%, with 22% experiencing a complete response and 62% experiencing partial response. Median duration of response was 18.5 months. The ORR in the second study – a multicenter phase 2 trial – was also 84%, but with 59% experiencing a complete response and 24% experiencing partial response; duration of response was 19.5 months.

The most common adverse events reported during the trials were decreased neutrophil count, decreased platelet count, upper respiratory tract infection, decreased white blood cell count, decreased hemoglobin, rash, bruising, diarrhea, cough, musculoskeletal pain, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, hematuria, fatigue, constipation, and hemorrhage. The most common serious adverse events were pneumonia and hemorrhage.



Of the 118 patients with MCL treated with zanubrutinib over the two trials, 8 had to be discontinued because of adverse events.

The recommended dose of zanubrutinib is 320 mg, taken orally 160 mg twice daily or 320 mg once daily, with or without food.

“BTK [Bruton kinase] inhibition is an established mode of treatment for patients with MCL, but many patients treated with previously approved BTK inhibitors do not fully respond to BTK therapy or are forced to discontinue treatment early due to side effects. Today we have a new option for our adult patients who have received one prior systemic or targeted therapy and are living with MCL,” Luhua (Michael) Wang, MD, clinical trial investigator and professor in the department of lymphoma and myeloma at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, said in a statement.

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