| Literature DB >> 24049458 |
Abstract
Over the last few decades, advances in immunochemotherapy have led to dramatic improvement in the prognosis of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Despite these advances, relapsed and refractory disease represents a major treatment challenge. For both aggressive and indolent subtypes of NHL, there is no standard of care for salvage regimens, with prognosis after relapse remaining relatively poor. Nevertheless, there are multiple emerging classes of targeted therapies for relapsed/refractory disease, including monoclonal antibodies, antibody- drug conjugates, radioimmunotherapy, small-molecule inhibitors of cell-growth pathways, and novel chemotherapy agents. This review will discuss treatment challenges of NHL, current available salvage regimens for relapsed/refractory NHL, and the safety and efficacy of novel emerging therapies.Entities:
Keywords: non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma; novel therapies; relapsed/refractory disease
Year: 2013 PMID: 24049458 PMCID: PMC3775637 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S34273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Figure 1Examples of salvage therapy regimens for refractory NHL.
Notes: 1Radiommunotherapy options include 131I-tositumomab and 90Y-ibritumomab tiuxetan; 2therapy for systemic ALCL, excluding primary cutaneous ALCL. Treatment options, stratification, and abbreviations are based on NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines In Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) for Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphomas V.1.2013. Not all treatment options included in the NCCN Guidelines are shown above. Reproduced/Adapted with permission from the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) for Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphomas V.1.2013. © 2013 National Comprehensive Cancer Network, Inc. All rights reserved. The NCCN Guidelines® and illustrations herein may not be reproduced in any form for any purpose without the express written permission of the NCCN. To view the most recent and complete version of the NCCN Guidelines, go online to NCCN.org. National Comprehensive Cancer Network®, NCCN®, NCCN Guidelines®, and all other NCCN Content are trademarks owned by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, Inc.131
Abbreviations: CEOP, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, vincristine, prednisone; CEPP, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, prednisone, procarbazine; CFAR, cyclophosphamide, fludarabine, alemtuzumab, rituximab; CHOP, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone; CLL/SLL, chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma; DA-EPOCH, dose-adjusted etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin; DHAP, dexamethasone, cisplastine, cytarabine; DLBCL, diffuse large b-cell lymphoma; ESHAP, etoposide, methylprednisolone, cytarabine, cisplatin; FCR, fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, rituximab; FCMR, fludarabine, cyclophosphamide, mitoxantrone, rituximab; FL, follicular lymphoma; FMR, fludarabine, mitoxantrone, rituximab; GDP, gemcitabine, dexamethasone, cisplatin; GemOx, gemcitabine, oxaliplatin; HyperCVAD, fractionated cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, dexamethasone; ICE, ifosphamide, carboplatin, etoposide; MCL, mantle cell lymphoma; OFAR, oxaliplatin, fludarabine, cytarabine, rituximab; PCR, pentostatin, cyclophosphamide, rituximab; PTCL, peripheral T-cell lymphoma; R, rituximab; RFND, rituximab, fludarabine, mitoxantrone, dexamethasone; SCT, stem cell transplant.
Figure 2Emerging therapeutic options in relapsed/refractory NHL. Numerous novel classes of drugs are emerging as therapeutic options in relapsed or refractory NHL. These classes include monoclonal antibodies (both next-generation anti-CD20 and non-anti-CD20 antibodies), antibody–drug conjugates, antibodies conjugated to radioactive isotopes, small-molecule inhibitors of key cell-signaling and apoptotic pathways, HDAC inhibitors, and toxicity-reducing chemotherapies.
Abbreviations: abs, antibodies; Bcl-2, B-cell lymphoma 2; BTK, Bruton tyrosine kinase; HDAC, histone deacetylase; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; NHL, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma; Syk, spleen tyrosine kinase; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase.
Emerging antibody therapies in non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
| Monoclonal Ab | Ab type | Phase | Patients | Disease | Regimen | Response | Ref | Current use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ocrelizumab | Humanized, IgG | I/II | 47 | R/RFL | Ocrelizumab | ORR 38%, PFS 11.4 mo | Phase III | |
| Ofatumumab | Humanized, IgG | II | 138 | FA-ref, BF-ref CLL | Ofatumumab | ORR: FA-ref 58%, BF-ref 47% | FDA-/EMA-approved for R/R CLL | |
| II | 61 | Untreated CLL | O-FC | ORR 75%, CR 41% | ||||
| II | 116 | Rituximab R/R FL | Ofatumumab | ORR 11% | ||||
| II | 59 | Untreated FL | O-CHOP | |||||
| Veltuzumab | Humanized, IgG120 | I/II | 82 | R/R NHL | Veltuzumab | ORR 41%, CR 21% | Early phase | |
| Blinatumomab | Anti-CD3/CDI9 Bispecific | I | 62 | R/R NHL | Blinatumomab | ORR 82%, all subtypes | Phase II | |
| Epratuzumab | Humanized, IgG1 | II | 63 | R/R NHL | E+R | ORR 47%, all subtypes, 64% = FL, DLBCL = 47% | Phase III | |
| II | 107 | Untreated DLBCL | ER-CHOP | ORR 96%, CR 74%, OS (3-yr) 80% | ||||
| Galiximab | Chimerized, IgG1 | I/II | 35 | R/R FL | Galiximab | ORR 11%, stable disease 34% | Phase III | |
| II | 61 | Untreated FL | Galiximab+R | ORR 72%, CR 48% | ||||
| Mogamulizumab | Humanized, IgG1 | II | 27 | CCR4+ATL | Mogamulizumab | ORR 50% | Phase II, approved in Japan for ATL | |
| Brentuximab | Anti-CD30, chimeric | II | 58 | R/R CD30+ALCL | Brentuximab vedotin | ORR 86%, CR 57% | 2 FDA-approved for R/R ALCL | |
| Vedotin | MMAE-conjugated | |||||||
| Inotuzumab | Anti-CD22, humanized | I | 79 | R/R FL, DLBCL | Inotuzumab-Ozo | ORR: FL 68%, DLBCL 15% | Phase III | |
| Ozogamicin | IgG4, calicheamicin-conjugated | I/II | 61 | R/R Fl, DLBCL | Inotuzumab-Ozo+R | ORR: FL 88%, DLBCL 71% | ||
| 131I-tositumomab | anti-CD20 mouse IgG2a, 131Iodine-conjugated | I/II | 250 | R/R low grade, | 131I-tositumomab transformed NHL | ORR 47%–68%, CR 20%–38% | FDA-approved for R/RFL | |
| III | 532 | Untreated FL | R-CHOP vs CHOP + 131I-tositumomab | 2-yr PFS: RCHOP 76%, CHOP + 131I-tositumomab 80% | ||||
| 90Y-ibritumomab Tiutexan | anti-CD20 mouse IgG1, 90Yttrium-conjugated | III | 143 | R/R FL (R-naïve) | 90Y-ibritumomab vs R | ORR: 90Y-ibritumomab 80%, R = 56% | FDA-approved for untreated FL | |
Notes:
FA-ref, fludarabine/alemtuzumab-refractory; BF-ref, fludarabine-refractory with bulky lymphadenopathy (>5 cm);
integrated efficacy analysis of five clinical trials resulting in FDA approval of 131I-tositumomab; clinical trial data are presented for select antibody-based therapies.
Abbreviations: CHOP, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone; E, epratuzumab; O-FC, ofatumumab + fludarabine/cyclophosphamide; O-CHOP, ofatumumab + cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone; R, rituximab; MMAE, monomethyl auristatin E; R/R, relapsed/refractory; ORR, overall response rate; CR, complete remission; FL, follicular lymphoma; CLL, chronic lymphocytic leukemia; NHL, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma; ALCL, anaplastic large cell lymphoma; DLBCL, diffuse large B-ceII lymphoma.
Figure 3Targeting the PI3K and BTK pathways in NHL. The B-cell receptor-signaling pathway (purple) is initiated through phosphorylation of coreceptors that recruit spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK), which then phosphorylates downstream kinases, including PLCγ, leading to activation of Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK). BTK then binds phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-triphosphate (PIP3), which in turn hydrolyzes phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) into two second messengers – inositol triphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol (DAG) – that ultimately activate downstream proteins involved in B-cell signaling. In the PI3K pathway (orange), activation of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) through adaptor proteins phosphorylate subunits of PI3K, leading to conversion of PIP2 to PIP3. Phosphorylation of the tumor suppressor PTEN terminates PI3K. Accumulation of PIP3 leads to phosphorylation of AKT, which further activates downstream pathways, including mTOR (through the tuberous sclerosis complex 1/2 (TSC1/2)) and other essential pathways. Therapeutic inhibition of select pathway components that have been investigated in clinical trials for NHL are shown.
Abbreviations: 4EBP-1, 4E-binding protein 1; GSK3, glycogen synthase kinase 3; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; mTORC, mTOR complex; MDM2, mouse double minute 2 homolog; P, phosphorylation site; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; PLC, phospholipase C gamma; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; RHEB, Ras homolog enriched in brain; S6K, S6 kinase.
Emerging non-antibody therapies in non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
| Agent | Drug class | Phase | Patients | Disease | Regimen | Response | Ref | Current use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perifosine | AKT inhibitor | II | 40 | R/R DLBCL, FL, CLL WM, HL | Perifosine (+sorafenib if failed PR on perifosine) | PR in combination group 22%, stable disease 42%, PD36% | Phase III (non-NHL) | |
| Pixantrone | Aza-anthracenedione | III | 140 | Relapsed NHL | Pixantrone vs single agent | CR 20% vs 5.7% | EMA conditional approval (relapsed/refractory NHL) FDA-rejected | |
| Navitoclax | Bcl-2 inhibitor | I | 55 | R/R NHL | Navitoclax | ORR 21%, PFS14.9mo | Early phase trials | |
| I | 12 | R/R NHL | Navitoclax+R | ORR 67%, CR 33% | ||||
| Oblimersen | Bcl-2 inhibitor | II | 43 | R/R NHL | Oblimersen+R | ORR 42%, CR 23% | Phase III | |
| III | 241 | R/R CLL | F/C ± OBL | CR: OBL-FC 17%, FC 7% 5 year OS: no difference between groups | ||||
| AVL-292 | BTK inhibitor | Ib | 18 | R/R NHL | AVL-2929 | Dose escalation ongoing | Phase I | |
| Ibrutinib | BTK inhibitor | I | 56 | R/R CLL, MCL, FL, DLBCL, MZL | Ibrutinib | ORR: CLL 79%, MCL 75%, FL 23%, DLBCL 17% | 77 | Fast-track status by FDA |
| Ib/II | Untreated CLL | Ibrutinib | ORR 74%, CR 10%, 15-mo PFS 96% | |||||
| Ib/II | R/R CLL | Ibrutinib+BR | ORR 93%, CR 13%, 11-mo PFS 90% | |||||
| Ib/II | 27 | R/R CLL | Ibrutinib+ofatumumab | ORR 100%, CR 4% | ||||
| Vorinostat | HDAC inhibitor | II | 35 | R/R FL, MZL, MCL | Vorinostat | ORR: FL 47%, MZL 22%, MCL 0% CR: FL 15%, MZL 11%, MCL 0% | FDA-approved for CTCL | |
| I | 29 | R/R NHL | Vorinostat+RlCE | ORR 70%, CR 28% | ||||
| Romidepsin | HDAC inhibitor | II | 47 | R/R PTCL | Romidepsin | ORR 38%, CR 18% | FDA-approved for CTCL and PTCL | |
| II | 130 | R/R PTCL | Romidepsin | ORR 25%, CR 15% | ||||
| Lenalidomide | Immunomodulant | II | 49 | R/R NHL | Lenalidomide | ORR 35%, CR 12% | Phase llI | |
| II | 217 | R/R NHL | Lenalidomide | ORR: DLBCL 28%, MCL 42%, FL 42% | ||||
| I/II | 52 | R/R MCL | Lenalidomide+R | ORR 57%, CR 36%, median OS 24 mo | ||||
| II | 23 | R/R DLBCL | Lenalidomide+R | ORR 35% | ||||
| Everolimus | mTOR inhibitor | II | 77 | R/R DLBCL, FL | Everolimus | ORR: DLBCL 30%, MCL 32%, FL 38% | FDA/EMEA approval for non-NHL cancers | |
| Temsirolimus | mTOR inhibitor | II | 89 | R/R DLBCL, FL, CLL, WM | Temsirolimus | ORR: DLBCL 28%, FL 54%, CLL 11% PFS (mo): DLBCL 2.6, FL 12.7 | EMEA-approved for MCL; FDA approval for non-NHL cancers | |
| III | 161 | R/R MCL | Temsirolimus hi/lo2 vs investigator’s choice | PFS (mo): hi 4.8, lo 3.4, investigator’s choice 1.9 | ||||
| II | 22 | R/R CLL | Everolimus | Partial response 18% | ||||
| GS-1101 (CAL-101) | PI3K inhibitor | I | 55 | R/R indolent and aggressive NHL | GS-1101 | ORR: indolent and aggressive NHL 62% | Planned phase III | |
| I | 51 | R/R CLL | GS-1101+B and/or R | ORR: CAL-101+R 78%, +B 82%, +B4R 87% | ||||
| I/II | 21 | R/R CLL | GS-1101+ofatumumab | ORR 80%, CR 10%, nodal response 85% | ||||
| Bortezomib | Proteasome inhibitor | II | 155 | Prior treated MCL | Bortezomib | ORR 31%, CR 8% | FDA approval for MCL | |
| III | 201 | R-naïve/sensitive FL | Bortezomib+R vs R | ORR: bortezomib+R 59%; 4R 37% PFS (mo): bortezomib+R 9.5; R 6.7 | ||||
| III | 676 | R-naïve/sensitive FL | Bortezomib+R vs R | PFS (mo): bortezomib+R 12.8; 4R 11 | ||||
| Fostamatinib | Syk inhibitor | I/II | 91 | R/R NHL | Fostamatinib | ORR 10%—55% based on subtype | Phase II |
Notes:
Indolent NHL included FL, SLL, and MZL; aggressive NHL included MCL and DLBCL;
high-dose temsirolimus, 175 mg IV weekly × 3 cycles followed by 75 mg weekly; low-dose, 175 mg IV weekly × 3 cycles followed by 25 mg weekly;
single agents chosen based on investigator’s choice included vinorelbine, oxaliplatin, ifosfamide, etoposide, mitoxantrone, or gemcitabine; select clinical trials are reported for the above nonantibody-based therapies.
Abbreviations: B, bendamustine; CR, complete response; CTCL, cutaneous T-cell lymphoma; CTX, cyclophosphamide; EMA, European Medicines Agency; F/C, fludarabine/cyclophosphamide; HL, Hodgkin’s lymphoma; MM, multiple myeloma; Mo, months; OBL, oblimersen; PD, progressive disease; PFS, progression-free survival; PTCL, peripheral T-cell lymphoma; PR, partial response; R/R, relapsed/refractory; R, rituximab; WM, Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia.