| Literature DB >> 29468438 |
David M Ross1, Tamas Masszi2, María Teresa Gómez Casares3, Andrzej Hellmann4, Jesper Stentoft5, Eibhlin Conneally6, Valentin Garcia-Gutierrez7, Norbert Gattermann8, Philipp D le Coutre9, Bruno Martino10, Susanne Saussele11, Francis J Giles12, Jerald P Radich13, Giuseppe Saglio14, Weiping Deng15, Nancy Krunic16, Véronique Bédoucha17, Prashanth Gopalakrishna17, Andreas Hochhaus18.
Abstract
PURPOSE: ENESTfreedom is evaluating treatment-free remission (TFR) following frontline nilotinib in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in chronic phase. Following our primary analysis at 48 weeks, we here provide an updated 96-week analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic myeloid leukemia; Clinical trial; Frontline; Nilotinib; Predictors of TFR; Treatment-free remission
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29468438 PMCID: PMC5916993 DOI: 10.1007/s00432-018-2604-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Res Clin Oncol ISSN: 0171-5216 Impact factor: 4.553
Fig. 1ENESTfreedom study design. CML-CP chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase, DMR deep molecular response, MMR major molecular response [BCR-ABL1 on the International Scale (BCR-ABL1IS) ≤ 0.1%], MR BCR-ABL1IS ≤ 0.01%, MR BCR-ABL1IS ≤ 0.0032%, RQ-PCR real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction, TFR treatment-free remission. aSustained DMR was defined as the following (in the last 4 quarterly RQ-PCR assessments): MR4.5 in the last assessment, ≤ 2 assessments between MR4 and MR4.5, and no assessment worse than MR4
Fig. 2Patient flow and disposition by the 96-week data cut-off date. MMR major molecular response (BCR-ABL1 ≤ 0.1% on the International Scale), TFR treatment-free remission
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier-estimated TFS among all patients who entered the TFR phase. aMMR major molecular response (BCR-ABL1 ≤ 0.1% on the International Scale), TFR treatment-free remission, TFS treatment-free survival. aTFS was defined as the time from the start of TFR until the earliest of any of the following: loss of MMR, reinitiation of nilotinib for any reason, progression to accelerated phase/blast crisis, or death due to any cause. By the data cut-off date, one patient had lost MMR at week 120, at which time only eight patients were considered at risk, resulting in the artificial drop seen at the end of the curve
Fig. 4Cumulative incidence of MMR and MR4.5 regained after nilotinib reinitiation. aMMR major molecular response [BCR-ABL1 ≤ 0.1% on the International Scale (BCR-ABL1IS)], MR BCR-ABL1IS ≤ 0.0032%. aOf the 88 patients who reinitiated treatment, 1 discontinued from the study due to patient decision without regaining MMR 7.1 weeks after reinitiating treatment and the remaining 87 regained MMR on nilotinib
TFR rates in patient subgroups
| TFR rate, | TFR population ( | |
|---|---|---|
| 48 weeks | 96 weeks | |
| Sokal risk score at diagnosis | ||
| Low | 39/62 (62.9 [49.7–74.8]) | 38/62 (61.3 [48.1–73.4]) |
| Intermediate | 25/50 (50.0 [35.5–64.5]) | 25/50 (50.0 [35.5–64.5]) |
| High | 9/28 (32.1 [15.9–52.4]) | 8/28 (28.6 [13.2–48.7]) |
| Unknown | 25/50 (50.0 [35.5–64.5]) | 22/50 (44.0 [30.0-58.7]) |
| MR4.5 in all assessments | 90/170 (52.9 [45.2–60.6]) | 86/170 (50.6 [42.8–58.3]) |
| ≥ 1 assessment of MR4 but not MR4.5 | 8/20 (40.0 [19.1–63.9]) | 7/20 (35.0 [15.4–59.2]) |
MR BCR-ABL1 on the International Scale (BCR-ABL1IS) ≤ 0.01%, MR BCR-ABL1IS ≤ 0.0032%, TFR treatment-free remission
Fig. 5TFR rates according to response level at TFR week 12. MMR major molecular response [BCR-ABL1 on the International Scale (BCR-ABL1IS) ≤ 0.1%], MR BCR-ABL1IS ≤ 0.01%, MR BCR-ABL1IS ≤ 0.0032%, TFR treatment-free remission. aPatients who lost MMR, reinitiated nilotinib, or discontinued from the TFR phase by week 12 and patients without available BCR-ABL1 values at week 12 were excluded from this analysis
Deaths reported during each study phasea
| Deaths, | Consolidation phase ( | TFR phase ( | Reinitiation phase ( | Posttreatment follow-upb |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 2 (0.9) | 1 (0.5) | 3 (3.4) | 2 |
| Cardiac arrest | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Suicide | 1 (0.5) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Acute myocardial infarction | 0 | 0 | 1 (1.1) | 0 |
| Respiratory failure | 0 | 0 | 1 (1.1)c | 0 |
| Other cancers | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2b,c |
| Unknown cause | 0 | 1 (0.5) | 1 (1.1) | 0 |
TFR treatment-free remission
aMedian duration by the 96-week data cut-off date was 52.1 weeks in the consolidation phase, 75.9 weeks in the TFR phase, and 85.0 weeks in the reinitiation phase
bDeaths were reported > 30 days after patients discontinued from the study
cNew deaths reported since the 48-week data cut-off date
Clinically notable AE groups (all grades) among patients who continued into the second 48 weeks of the TFR phase (n = 100)a
| Patients, | Consolidation phase ( | TFR phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| First 48 weeks ( | Second 48 weeks ( | ||
| Cardiovascular events | 3 (3.0) | 2 (2.0) | 1 (1.0) |
| Ischemic cerebrovascular events | 1 (1.0) | 1 (1.0) | 0 |
| Ischemic heart disease | 1 (1.0) | 0 | 1 (1.0) |
| Peripheral arterial occlusive disease | 1 (1.0) | 1 (1.0) | 0 |
| Musculoskeletal pain | 17 (17.0) | 34 (34.0) | 9 (9.0) |
| Fluid retention | 3 (3.0) | 4 (4.0) | 4 (4.0) |
| Edema and other fluid retentions | 2 (2.0) | 3 (3.0) | 4 (4.0) |
| Severe | 1 (1.0) | 1 (1.0) | 0 |
| Hepatotoxicity | 2 (2.0) | 2 (2.0) | 0 |
| Cardiac failure | 0 | 1 (1.0) | 0 |
| Rash | 5 (5.0) | 1 (1.0) | 1 (1.0) |
| Myelosuppression (thrombocytopenia) | 1 (1.0) | 0 | 0 |
| Pancreatitis | 1 (1.0) | 0 | 0 |
| Significant bleeding | 0 | 0 | 1 (1.0) |
| Gastrointestinal hemorrhage | 0 | 0 | 1 (1.0) |
AE adverse event, TFR treatment-free remission
aEach listed AE group includes a predefined set of individual AEs. Reported frequencies include all patients with ≥ 1 new or worsening AE in the group reported during the indicated study period