| Literature DB >> 26069290 |
Alessandro M Vannucchi1, Hagop M Kantarjian2, Jean-Jacques Kiladjian3, Jason Gotlib4, Francisco Cervantes5, Ruben A Mesa6, Nicholas J Sarlis7, Wei Peng7, Victor Sandor7, Prashanth Gopalakrishna8, Abdel Hmissi8, Viktoriya Stalbovskaya8, Vikas Gupta9, Claire Harrison10, Srdan Verstovsek2.
Abstract
Ruxolitinib, a potent Janus kinase 1/2 inhibitor, resulted in rapid and durable improvements in splenomegaly and disease-related symptoms in the 2 phase III COMFORT studies. In addition, ruxolitinib was associated with prolonged survival compared with placebo (COMFORT-I) and best available therapy (COMFORT-II). We present a pooled analysis of overall survival in the COMFORT studies using an intent-to-treat analysis and an analysis correcting for crossover in the control arms. Overall, 301 patients received ruxolitinib (COMFORT-I, n=155; COMFORT-II, n=146) and 227 patients received placebo (n=154) or best available therapy (n=73). After a median three years of follow up, intent-to-treat analysis showed that patients who received ruxolitinib had prolonged survival compared with patients who received placebo or best available therapy [hazard ratio=0.65; 95% confidence interval (95%CI): 0.46-0.90; P=0.01]; the crossover-corrected hazard ratio was 0.29 (95%CI: 0.13-0.63). Both patients with intermediate-2- or high-risk disease showed prolonged survival, and patients with high-risk disease in the ruxolitinib group had survival similar to that of patients with intermediate-2-risk disease in the control group. The Kaplan-Meier estimate of overall survival at week 144 was 78% in the ruxolitinib arm, 61% in the intent-to-treat control arm, and 31% in the crossover-adjusted control arm. While larger spleen size at baseline was prognostic for shortened survival, reductions in spleen size with ruxolitinib treatment correlated with longer survival. These findings are consistent with previous reports and support that ruxolitinib offers a survival benefit for patients with myelofibrosis compared with conventional therapies. (clinicaltrials.gov identifiers: COMFORT-I, NCT00952289; COMFORT-II, NCT00934544). Copyright© Ferrata Storti Foundation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26069290 PMCID: PMC4800694 DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2014.119545
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Haematologica ISSN: 0390-6078 Impact factor: 9.941