| Literature DB >> 29974231 |
Dai Maruyama1, Kunihiro Tsukasaki2, Toshiki Uchida3, Yoshinobu Maeda4, Hirohiko Shibayama5, Hirokazu Nagai6, Mitsutoshi Kurosawa7, Yoko Suehiro8, Kiyohiko Hatake9, Kiyoshi Ando10, Isao Yoshida11, Michihiro Hidaka12, Tohru Murayama13, Yoko Okitsu14, Norifumi Tsukamoto15, Masafumi Taniwaki16, Junji Suzumiya17, Kazuo Tamura18, Takahiro Yamauchi19, Ryuzo Ueda20, Kensei Tobinai21.
Abstract
Peripheral T cell lymphomas are an aggressive group of non-Hodgkin lymphomas with poor outcomes for most subtypes and no accepted standard of care for relapsed patients. This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of forodesine, a novel purine nucleoside phosphorylase inhibitor, in patients with relapsed peripheral T cell lymphomas. Patients with histologically confirmed disease, progression after ≥ 1 prior treatment, and an objective response to last treatment received oral forodesine 300 mg twice-daily. The primary endpoint was objective response rate (ORR). Secondary endpoints included duration of response, progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and safety. Forty-eight patients (median age, 69.5 years; median of 2 prior treatments) received forodesine. In phase 1 (n = 3 evaluable), no dose-limiting toxicity was observed during the first 28 days of forodesine treatment. In phase 2 (n = 41 evaluable), the ORR for the primary and final analyses was 22% (90% CI 12-35%) and 25% (90% CI 14-38%), respectively, including four complete responses (10%). Median PFS and OS were 1.9 and 15.6 months, respectively. The most common grade 3/4 adverse events were lymphopenia (96%), leukopenia (42%), and neutropenia (35%). Dose reduction and discontinuation due to adverse events were uncommon. Secondary B cell lymphoma developed in five patients, of whom four were positive for Epstein-Barr virus. In conclusion, forodesine has single-agent activity within the range of approved therapies in relapsed peripheral T cell lymphomas, with a manageable safety profile, and may represent a viable treatment option for this difficult-to-treat population.Entities:
Keywords: Forodesine; Overall response rate; Peripheral T cell lymphoma; Progression-free survival; Purine nucleoside phosphorylase inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29974231 PMCID: PMC6334730 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-018-3418-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
Fig. 1Disposition of patients in phase 1 and phase 2
Demographics and baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | Phase 1 ( | Phase 2 ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years, median (range) | 72.5 (42–76) | 69.0 (32–79) | 69.5 (32–79) |
| Sex, | |||
| Male | 1 (25) | 30 (68) | 31 (65) |
| Female | 3 (75) | 14 (32) | 17 (35) |
| ECOG PS, | |||
| 0 | 2 (50) | 27 (61) | 29 (60) |
| 1 | 2 (50) | 17 (39) | 19 (40) |
| Disease classification, | |||
| Peripheral T cell lymphoma, NOS | 1 (25) | 21 (48) | 22 (46) |
| Angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma | 2 (50) | 17 (39) | 19 (40) |
| Anaplastic large cell lymphoma | |||
| ALK-positive | 1 (25) | 0 (0) | 1 (2) |
| ALK-negative | 0 (0) | 2 (5) | 2 (4) |
| Extranodal T cell/NK cell lymphoma, nasal type | 0 (0) | 1 (2) | 1 (2) |
| Transformed mycosis fungoides | 0 (0) | 1 (2) | 1 (2) |
| Othera | 0 (0) | 2 (5) | 2 (4) |
| Ann Arbor classification,b | |||
| Stage I | 0 (0) | 1 (2) | 1 (2) |
| Stage II | 3 (75) | 9 (20) | 12 (25) |
| Stage III | 0 (0) | 20 (45) | 20 (42) |
| Stage IV | 1 (25) | 13 (30) | 14 (29) |
| LDH (baseline) | |||
| Low/normal | 2(50.0) | 24 (55) | 26 (54) |
| High | 2(50.0) | 20 (45) | 22(46) |
| Prior treatment regimens | |||
| Median (range) | 2 (1–9) | 2 (1–6) | 2 (1–9) |
| Chemotherapy, | 4 (100) | 44 (100) | 48 (100) |
| ASCT, | 0 (0) | 3 (7) | 3 (6) |
| Radiation therapy, | 1 (25) | 5 (11) | 6 (13) |
| Monoclonal antibody, | 1 (25) | 3 (7) | 4 (8) |
| Corticosteroid, | 1 (25) | 2 (5) | 3 (6) |
| Response to most recent treatment regimen, | |||
| CR/CRu | 3 (75) | 20 (45) | 23 (48) |
| PR | 1 (25) | 24 (55) | 25 (52) |
ALK anaplastic lymphoma kinase, ASCT autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant, CR complete response, CRu unconfirmed complete response, ECOG PS Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, NK cell natural killer cell, NOS not otherwise specified, PR partial response, SD standard deviation
aIncludes two cases judged to be plasmablastic lymphoma and follicular dendritic cell sarcoma, respectively, on the independent central pathology review
bClassification for PTCLs other than transformed mycosis fungiodes. The case of transformed mycosis fungiodes was stage IV by the ISCL-EORTC classification
Fig. 2Scatterplots of lymphocyte subsets at baseline and on day 15
Adverse events regardless of causality occurring in ≥ 10% of patients
| Adverse event | All grades, | Grade 3/4, |
|---|---|---|
| Hematologic toxicities | ||
| Lymphopenia | 48 (100) | 46 (96) |
| Leukopenia | 35 (73) | 20 (42) |
| Neutropenia | 27 (56) | 17 (35) |
| Thrombocytopenia | 23 (48) | 12 (25) |
| Anemia | 23 (48) | 11 (23) |
| Febrile neutropenia | 6 (13) | 6 (13) |
| Non-hematologic toxicities | ||
| Constipation | 13 (27) | 1 (2) |
| Nasopharyngitis | 13 (27) | 0 (0) |
| Hypoalbuminemia | 12 (25) | 2 (4) |
| Edema | 12 (25) | 0 (0) |
| Pyrexia | 11 (23) | 1 (2) |
| Stomatitis | 11 (23) | 1 (2) |
| Headache | 11 (23) | 0 (0) |
| Insomnia | 10 (21) | 0 (0) |
| Alanine aminotransferase increased | 10 (21) | 1 (2) |
| Nausea | 9 (19) | 1 (2) |
| Decreased appetite | 9 (19) | 4 (8) |
| Malaise | 8 (17) | 0 (0) |
| Aspartate aminotransferase increased | 8 (17) | 0 (0) |
| Rash | 8 (17) | 0 (0) |
| Abnormal hepatic function | 7 (15) | 3 (6) |
| Herpes zoster | 7 (15) | 1 (2) |
| Pruritus | 7 (15) | 0 (0) |
| Protein in urine | 7 (15) | 0 (0) |
| Vomiting | 6 (13) | 0 (0) |
| Cytomegalovirus infection | 5 (10) | 0 (0) |
| Pneumonia | 5 (10) | 4 (8) |
| Hyponatremia | 5 (10) | 4 (8) |
| Decreased weight | 5 (10) | 1 (2) |
Outcomes for patients who developed secondary B cell lymphoma
| Disease classification | Sex | Agea | Duration of forodesine administration (days) | Duration to development of sBCLb (days) | Treatments for sBCL/response | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AITL | F | 71 | 447 | 450 | R-DeVIC/CR | Alive with AITL |
| AITL | F | 70 | 171 | 203 | R-CHOP/PD | Died from lymphoma (AITL, sBCL) |
| AITL | F | 76 | 67 | 436 | PSL/unknown | Died from lymphoma (AITL, sBCL) |
| PTCL, NOS | F | 72 | 353 | 281 | PSL/unknown | unknown |
| PTCL, NOS | F | 65 | 505 | 506 | R-COP/PD R-CHOP/PD DEX/PD | Died from lymphoma (PTCL, NOS, sBCL) |
AITL angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma; COP rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone; CR complete response; F female; PD progression disease; PSL prednisolone; PTCL peripheral T cell lymphoma; R-CHOP rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone; R-DeVIC rituximab plus dexamethasone, etoposide, ifosfamide, carboplatin; R-DEX dexamethasone; R-GDP rituximab plus gemcitabine, dexamethasone, cisplatin; sBCL secondary B cell lymphoma
aAge at the time of informed consent
bDuration from initial forodesine administration to development of sBCL
Objective response rate by IEAC assessment
| Response, | Phase 2 ( | Phase 1 + 2 ( |
|---|---|---|
| Primary analysis | ||
| DCR (CR + PR+ SD) | 16 (39) | 17 (38) |
| ORR (CR + PR) 90% CI | 9 (22)a | 10 (22) |
| CR | 4 (10) | 4 (9) |
| PR | 5 (12) | 6 (13) |
| SD | 7 (17) | 7 (16) |
| PD/RD | 24 (59) | 26 (58) |
| Not evaluable | 1 (2) | 2 (4) |
| Final analysis | ||
| DCR (CR + PR+ SD) | 16 (39) | 17 (38) |
| ORR (CR + PR) 90% CI | 10 (25)a | 11 (24) |
| CR | 4 (10) | 4 (9) |
| PR | 6 (15) | 7 (16) |
| SD | 6 (15) | 6 (13) |
| PD/RD | 24 (59) | 26 (58) |
| Not evaluable | 1 (2) | 2 (4) |
CR complete response, DCR disease control rate, IEAC Independent Efficacy Assessment Committee, ORR objective response rate, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, RD relapsed disease, SD stable disease
aUniformly minimum variance unbiased estimator (UMVUE)
Fig. 3Duration of response (n = 10 responding patients) (a), progression-free survival (b), and overall survival (OS) (c) among evaluable phase 2 patients (n = 41)
Fig. 4Progression-free survival (a) and overall survival (b) among responders and non-responders in the phase 2 populations. CI confidence interval, NE not estimable
Subgroup analysis of objective response rate, full analysis set
| Subgroup | ORR (95% CI), % | |
|---|---|---|
| All evaluable patients in phases 1 + 2 | 11/45 | 24 (13–40) |
| Sex | ||
| Men | 8/30 | 27 (12–46) |
| Women | 3/15 | 20 (4–48) |
| Age group | ||
| < 65 years | 6/16 | 38 (15–65) |
| ≥ 65 years | 5/29 | 17 (6–36) |
| No. of previous anti-tumor regimens | ||
| 1 | 5/19 | 26 (9–51) |
| 2 | 3/9 | 33 (8–70) |
| 3 | 3/10 | 30 (7–65) |
| ≥ 4 | 0/7 | 0 (0–41) |
| Histological classification | ||
| Peripheral T cell lymphoma, NOS | 5/22 | 23 (8–45) |
| Angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma | 6/18 | 33 (13–59) |
| Ann Arbor stageb | ||
| Stage I | 0/1 | 0 (0–98) |
| Stage II | 2/11 | 18 (2–52) |
| Stage III | 7/19 | 37 (16–62) |
| Stage IV | 2/13 | 15 (2–45) |
| ECOG performance status | ||
| 0 | 7/27 | 26 (11–46) |
| 1 | 4/18 | 22 (6–48) |
| Target lesion SPD | ||
| < 14 cm2 | 8/26 | 31 (14–52) |
| ≥ 14 cm2 | 3/19 | 16 (3–40) |
| LDH | ||
| Low/normal | 9/25 | 36 (18–58) |
| High | 2/20 | 10 (1–32) |
CI confidence interval, ECOG Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, NOS not otherwise specified, ORR objective response rate, SPD sum of the products of the largest diameters of target lesions
aNumber of patients with objective responses divided by the total number of patients in the category
bExcept for transformed mycosis fungoides
Fig. 5Reduction of target lesions measured by the sum of the products of the greatest diameters in the phase 2 populations: waterfall plot of maximum reduction (a) and target lesion reduction rate (b). CR complete response, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, SD stable disease
Fig. 6Plasma forodesine and 2′-deoxyguanosine (dGuo) concentrations. Concentration-time profile of plasma forodesine on days 1 and 15 (a), trough plasma forodesine concentrations from days 1 to 57 (b), concentration-time profile of plasma dGuo on days 1 and 15 (c), and trough plasma dGuo concentrations from days 1 to 57 (d)