| Literature DB >> 25942994 |
Andrew W Roberts1,2,3,4, Ranjana H Advani5, Brad S Kahl6, Daniel Persky7, John W Sweetenham8, Dennis A Carney3,4,9, Jianning Yang10, Todd B Busman10, Sari H Enschede10, Roderick A Humerickhouse10, John F Seymour3,4,9.
Abstract
The oral BCL2 inhibitor navitoclax has moderate single-agent efficacy in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and minor activity in lymphoma in Phase 1 trials. Navitoclax synergizes with rituximab in preclinical models of B-cell lymphoid cancers. We report the safety, pharmacokinetics and clinical activity of this combination. Patients received navitoclax (200-325 mg) daily and four standard weekly doses of rituximab. Twenty-nine patients were enrolled across three dose-escalation cohorts and a safety expansion cohort (250 mg/d navitoclax). The combination was well tolerated. Common toxicities were mild diarrhoea (79%) and nausea (72%). Grade 4 thrombocytopenia occurred in 17% of patients (dose limiting at 325 mg/d). CD19(+) counts were severely reduced, while CD3(+) cells (~ 20%) and serum immunoglobulin M levels (~ 33%) were also reduced during the first year. The maximum tolerated dose for navitoclax in combination was 250 mg/d. Pharmacokinetic analyses revealed no apparent interactions between the drugs. The response rate in patients with follicular lymphoma was 9/12, including five complete responses. All five patients with CLL/small lymphocytic leukaemia achieved partial responses. One of nine patients with aggressive lymphoma responded. The addition of rituximab to navitoclax 250 mg/d is safe; the combination demonstrates higher response rates for low-grade lymphoid cancers than observed for either agent alone in previous Phase 1 trials.Entities:
Keywords: B-cell malignancy; BCL2; navitoclax; rituximab
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25942994 PMCID: PMC4534314 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.13487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998