| Literature DB >> 31533852 |
Catherine Lai1, Kimberley Doucette2, Kelly Norsworthy3.
Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the most common form of acute leukemia in adults, with an incidence that increases with age, and a generally poor prognosis. The disease is clinically and genetically heterogeneous, and recent advances have improved our understanding of the cytogenetic abnormalities and molecular mutations, aiding in prognostication and risk stratification. Until recently, however, therapeutic options were mostly limited to cytotoxic chemotherapy. Since 2017, there has been an explosion of newly approved treatment options both nationally and internationally, with the majority of new drugs targeting specific gene mutations and/or pivotal cell survival pathways. In this review article, we will discuss these new agents approved for the treatment of AML within the last 2 years, and will outline the mechanistic features and clinical trials that led to their approvals.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; Newly approved drugs; Novel treatments
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31533852 PMCID: PMC6749668 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-019-0774-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Toxicities of new therapeutic drugs for AML
| Drug | Toxicity | Timing | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPX-351 [ | Common (≥ 25% incidence and ≥ 2% more common on CPX-351 arm): Hemorrhage (70% vs. 49%), rash (54% vs. 36%), constipation (40% vs. 38%), musculoskeletal pain (38% vs. 34%), abdominal pain (33% vs. 30%), cough (33% vs. 23%), headache (33% vs. 24%), arrhythmia (30% vs. 27%), and pneumonia (26% vs. 23%). Prolonged thrombocytopenia (28% CPX-351 vs. 12% 7 + 3), prolonged neutropenia (17% vs. 3%)a | During induction phase Platelet recoveryb 35 vs. 29 days Neutrophil recoveryb 36.5 vs. 29 days [ | Supportive care: Monitor blood counts frequently until recovery. Administer platelet transfusions as needed. Treat with anti-microbials per institutional standards |
Serious: 1) Hemorrhage (> grade 3 12% vs 8%) 2) Cardiotoxicity 3) Hypersensitivity reactions 4) Copper overload | During the entire treatment period. | 1) Supportive care: Monitor blood counts frequently until recovery. Administer transfusions as needed. 2) Check Echo at baseline and before consolidation. 3) Interrupt infusion immediately for hypersensitivity reactions. For mild symptoms, reinitiate the infusion at half the prior rate and consider premedication with antihistamines and/or steroids for subsequent doses. For moderate symptoms, do not reinitiate and premedicate prior to subsequent doses. For severe/life-threatening symptoms, permanently discontinue. 4) Caution in treating patients with Wilson’s disease or other copper-related metabolic disorders. | |
| Enasidenib [ | Common adverse reactions and laboratory abnormalities (≥ 30% all-grade; ≥ 5% grade ≥ 3): total bilirubin increased (81%; 15%), hypocalcemia (74%; 8%), nausea (50%; 5%), diarrhea (43%; 8%), hypokalemia (41%; 15%), vomiting (34%; 2%), decreased appetite (34%; 4%), tumor lysis syndrome (6%; 6%), differentiation syndrome (14%; 7%); non-infectious leukocytosis (12%; 6%). | During the entire treatment period. | If bilirubin > 3 times upper limit of normal (ULN) for ≥ 2 weeks with no other suspected etiology or elevation in transaminases, reduce dose to 50 mg daily. Resume at 100 mg daily if bilirubin resolves to less than 2 × ULN. |
Serious: 1) Differentiation syndrome, 2) Non-infectious leukocytosis | 1) Differentiation syndrome was seen from 10 days to 5 months after starting therapy 2) Non-infectious leukocytosis is typically seen in the first 2 cycles of treatment [ | 1) Steroids (Dexamethasone 10 mg BID) with taper and supportive care. Interrupt drug if intubation or ventilator support are required and/or kidney dysfunction persists > 48 h. Resume when adverse events are ≤ grade 2. 2) Initiate treatment with hydroxyurea and interrupt drug if leukocytosis does not improve. When WBC < 30 × 109/L, resume drug. | |
| Gemtuzumab ozogamicin [ | Common (≥20%) monotherapyc: fever (79%), infection (42%), increased AST (40%), bleeding (23%), nausea and vomiting (21%), constipation (21%), and mucositis (21%). In combination with 7 + 3: prolonged thrombocytopenia (19% vs 7%), prolonged neutropenia (3% vs 0%)a | During induction phase | Supportive care: Monitor blood counts frequently until recovery. Administer platelet transfusions as needed If platelet or neutrophil count does not recover to greater than or equal to 100 Gi/L and 0.5 Gi/L respectively within 14 days following the planned start date of the consolidation cycle, discontinue drug. |
Serious: 1) Hepatotoxicity including severe or fatal hepatic veno-occlusive disease (VOD) (5% ALFA trial GO arm—fatal in 50% of those afflicted) 2) Hemorrhage: grade 3–4 bleeding in 21% on ALFA trial GO arm, including fatal bleeding events (3%) (e.g., cerebral hematoma, intracranial hematoma, subdural hematoma) 3) Infusion related reactions (phase II studies reported one third of patients with a grade 3–4 infusion-related adverse event) [ | 1) Veno-occlusive disease occurred at a median time 9 days (range 2–298 days) 2) During the entire treatment period. 3) Infusion related reactions can occur during infusion and up to 24 h after, most commonly during the first infusion. | 1) For total bilirubin > 2 × ULN or AST and/or ALT > 2.5 × ULN, hold drug until recovery of total bilirubin to ≤ 2 × ULN and AST and ALT ≤ 2.5 × ULN. For VOD, institute supportive care and discontinue drug. 2) Dose delay or permanent discontinuation. 3) Premedicate with a corticosteroid (e.g., 1 mg/kg methylprednisolone), acetaminophen 650 mg, and diphenhydramine (50 mg). Patients should be monitored until 1 h after infusion. If reaction occurs, interrupt infusion and treat with same dose of steroid, acetaminophen and/or antihistamine. Permanently discontinue treatment if severe or life-threatening reaction. | |
| Gilteritinib [ | Common (≥ 25%): transaminase increased (51%), myalgia/arthralgia (50%), fatigue/malaise (44%), fever (41%), mucositis (41%), edema (40%), rash (36%), non-infectious diarrhea (35%), dyspnea (35%), nausea (30%),, cough (28%), constipation (28%), and eye disorders (25%). Common grade 3–4 laboratory abnormalities ≥ 5%: hypophosphatemia (14%), increased ALT (13%), hyponatremia (12%), AST increased (10%), hypocalcemia (6%), increased CK (6%), and triglycerides increased (6%) | During the entire treatment period. | Assess blood counts and chemistries including creatinine phosphokinase at baseline, at least weekly for the first month, every other week for the second month, and once monthly for the duration of therapy. Any nonhematologic toxicity grade 3 of over, hold drug until toxicity resolves or improves to Grade 1 and resume at a dose of 80 mg. |
Serious: 1) Differentiation syndrome (3%) 2) QT prolongation > 500 ms (1%), increase from baseline QTc > 60 ms (7%) 3) Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (1%) 4) Pancreatitis (4%) | 1) Differentiation syndrome was seen from 2 to 75 days after starting therapy. 2)–4) During the entire treatment period. | 1) Steroids (Dexamethasone 10 mg BID) with taper and supportive care. Interrupt drug if severe signs/symptoms persist > 48 h. Resume when adverse events are ≤ grade 2. 2) Assess EKGs prior to initiation of treatment with gilteritinib, on days 8 and 15 of cycle 1, and prior to the start of the next two subsequent cycles. If QTc interval > 500 ms, interrupt drug and resume at 80 mg when QTc interval returns to within 30 ms of baseline or ≤ 480 ms. 3) Discontinue drug. 4) Hold drug until pancreatitis is resolved. Then resume at a dose of 80 mg. | |
| Glasdegib [ | Common adverse reactions and laboratory abnormalities (≥ 20% and ≥ 2% more common on glasdegib + LDAC arm): creatinine increased (96% vs. 80%), hyponatremia (54% vs. 41%), hypomagnesemia (33% vs. 23%), febrile neutropenia (31% vs. 22%), thrombocytopenia (30% vs. 27%), fatigue (36% vs. 32%), edema (30% vs. 20%), musculoskeletal pain (30% vs. 17%), nausea (29% vs. 12%), AST increased (28% vs. 23%), decreased appetite (21% vs. 7%), dysgeusia (21% vs. 2%), mucositis (21% vs. 12%), constipation (20% vs. 12%), and rash (20% vs. 7%). | Within the first 90 days of therapy. Muscle spasms and decreased appetite worsened after the first 90 days of therapy in some patients. | Monitor blood counts, electrolytes, renal, and hepatic function prior to initiation and at least once monthly for the first month. Monitor electrolytes and renal function once monthly for the duration of therapy. Check creatine kinase at baseline and as clinically indicated. Dose modifications: For grade 3 non-hematologic toxicity, hold glasdegib and/or LDAC until toxicity resolves or improves to Grade 1 and resume same dose of glasdegib or reduce to 50 mg. Discontinue glasdegib and LDAC for grade 4 nonhematologic toxicity. |
Serious: 1) QT prolongation > 500 ms (5%), increase from baseline QTc > 60 ms (4%) 2) Strongly embryotoxic, fetotoxic, and teratogenic | During the entire treatment period | 1) Assess EKGs at baseline, after one week, and then once monthly for the next 2 months; repeat if abnormal. Avoid concomitant use with other QTc prolonging drugs. Avoid use of strong CYP3A4 inhibitors. If QTc interval > 500 ms, interrupt glasdegib and resume at 50 mg when QTc interval returns to within 30 ms of baseline or ≤ 480 ms. Permanently stop drug if there are signs or symptoms of life-threatening arrhythmia. 2) Must use contraception for females and males for at least 30 days after last dose. Pregnancy test must be done prior to initiating drug in women of reproductive potential. | |
| Ivosidenib [ | Common adverse reactions and laboratory abnormalities (≥ 25%)d: anemia (60%), hyponatremia (39%), fatigue (39%), hypomagnesemia (38%), leukocytosis (38%), arthralgia (36%), diarrhea (34%), dyspnea (33%), edema (32%), uric acid increased (32%), hypokalemia (31%), increased AST (27%), increased alkaline phosphatase (27%), nausea (31%), mucositis (28%), QT prolongation (26%), rash (26%), hypophosphatemia (25%) | During the entire treatment period. | Monitor blood counts and chemistries at baseline, at least weekly for the first month, once every other week for the second month, and once monthly for the duration of therapy. Monitor creatine phosphokinase weekly for the first month of therapy. Any non-hematologic toxicity grade ≥ 3, stop drug until resolves to grade 2 or lower. Resume drug at 250 mg once daily and can increase to 500 mg once daily if toxicities resolve to grade 1 or lower. If grade 3 or higher toxicity recurs, discontinue drug. |
Serious: 1) Differentiation syndrome (19% R/R patients; 13% grade ≥ 3, 25% newly-diagnosed patients; 11% grade ≥ 3) 2) QT prolongation > 500 msec (9%), increase from baseline QTc > 60 msec (14%) 3) Leukocytosis (8% grade ≥ 3 R/R patients, 7% grade ≥ 3 newly-diagnosed patients) 4) Guillain-Barré syndrome (< 1%) | 1) Differentiation syndrome occurred as early as 1 day and up to 3 months after drug initiation. 2)-4) During the entire treatment period. | 1) Steroids (Dexamethasone 10 mg BID) with taper and hemodynamic monitoring for at least 3 days. Interrupt drug if severe signs and/or symptoms persist > 48 h after steroid initiation. Resume when adverse events are ≤ grade 2. 2) Monitor ECGs at least once weekly for the first 3 weeks of therapy and then at least once monthly for the duration of therapy. If QTc interval > 500 ms, stop drug and resume at 250 mg when QTc interval returns to within 30 ms of baseline or ≤ 480 ms. Monitor EKG weekly for 2 weeks following resolution and consider re-escalating to 500 mg daily. Permanently stop drug if there are signs or symptoms of life-threatening arrhythmia. Avoid concomitant use with other QTc prolonging drugs. Avoid use of strong or moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors. Dose reduce ivosidenib to 250 mg daily if co-administration of a strong CYP3A4 inhibitor is unavoidable. 3) For WBC > 25 × 109/L or absolute increase of > 15 × 109/L from baseline, initiate treatment with hydroxyurea and/or leukapheresis and interrupt drug if leukocytosis does not improve. When leukocytosis resolves, resume ivosidenib. 4) Supportive care and discontinue drug permanently. | |
| Midostaurin [ | Common adverse events and laboratory abnormalities (≥ 25% and ≥ 2% more common on midostaurin arm): febrile neutropenia (83% vs. 81%), nausea (83% vs. 70%), ALT increased (71% vs. 69%), hypocalcemia (74% vs. 70%), mucositis (66% vs. 62%), vomiting (61% vs. 53%), headache (46% vs. 38%), petechiae (36% vs. 27%), musculoskeletal pain (33% vs. 31%), and epistaxis (28% vs. 24%). | Throughout the treatment period. | Supportive care: Monitor blood counts frequently and give antibiotics as clinically indicated until recovery. Any nonhematologic toxicity ≥ grade 3, interrupt Midostaurin until event has resolved to ≤ Grade 2, then resume at a dose of 50 mg twice daily. If tolerated, can increase to 100 mg twice daily. |
Serious: Pulmonary toxicity (interstitial lung disease or pneumonitis, with some reported fatal cases) | Throughout the treatment period. | Discontinue midostaurin in patients with signs or symptoms of interstitial lung disease or pneumonitis without an infectious etiology. Start steroids (Dexamethasone 10 mg BID) with taper, hemodynamic monitoring and supportive care until symptom resolution [ | |
| Venetoclax [ | Common (≥ 30%)e: nausea, diarrhea, thrombocytopenia, constipation, neutropenia, febrile neutropenia, fatigue, vomiting, peripheral edema, pyrexia, pneumonia, dyspnea, hemorrhage, anemia, rash, abdominal pain, sepsis, back pain, myalgia, dizziness, cough, oropharyngeal pain, and hypotension. Common nonhematologic laboratory abnormalities (≥ 30%)e: hyperglycemia, hypocalcemia, hypoalbuminemia, hypokalemia, hyponatremia, hypophosphatemia, hyperbilirubinemia, hypomagnesemia, creatinine increased, bicarbonate decreased | Throughout the treatment period. | Supportive care: Monitor blood counts frequently and give antibiotics as clinically indicated until count recovery. If grade 4 neutropenia or thrombocytopenia: - Prior to remission: supportive care; transfuse blood products and administer prophylactic or treatment with antibiotics as indicated. - First occurrence after achieving remission and lasting at least 7 days: delay subsequent treatment cycle. Administer G-CSF if clinically indicated for neutropenia. Once toxicity grade 1 or 2, resume treatment at same dose in combination with HMA or LDAC. - Subsequent occurrences in cycles after remission and lasting 7 days or longer: delay subsequent treatment cycle. Administer G-CSF if clinically indicated for neutropenia. Once toxicity grade 1 or 2, resume treatment at same dose and reduce duration by 7 days for each subsequent cycle. |
Serious: 1) Tumor Lysis Syndrome 2) Neutropenia (96–100% experienced grade ≥ 3) | 1) At initiation and during the ramp-up phase 2) Throughout the treatment period. | 1) Prior to the first dose, premedicate with anti-hyperuricemic agents and ensure adequate hydration; continue during the ramp-up phase. All patients should have white blood cell count < 25 × 109/L prior to initiation of drug. May have to cytoreduce prior to treatment. Monitor blood chemistries for TLS at pre-dose, 6 to 8 h after each new dose during ramp-up and 24 h after reaching final dose. Can consider increased laboratory monitoring and reduced starting dose for patients at higher risk of TLS. 2) See above. |
aDefinition of prolonged thrombocytopenia and neutropenia: platelets < 50 Gi/L or neutrophils < 0.5 Gi/L lasting past cycle day 42 in the absence of active leukemia
bMedian time to platelet count ≥ 50 Gi/L and neutrophil count ≥ 0.5 Gi/L in patients with CR/CRi response after initial induction chemotherapy
cAdverse events as reported in relapsed and refractory MyloFrance 1 clinical trial
dAdverse events in patients with R/R AML
eIncludes adverse reactions seen in combination with azacitidine or decitabine or LDAC. See prescribing information [44] for the number of adverse reactions for each combination individually
Summary of new therapeutic drugs for AML
| Newly diagnosed AML | ||||||||
| Drug | Study | Mechanism of action | Indication | Dosing | Country approval | Response Rate (RR) with 95% CI | Median Overall Survival (95% confidence interval) | Duration of Response (DOR) with 95% CI |
| CPX-351 [ | Phase III clinical trial comparing CPX-351 ( | CPX-351 is a liposomal formulation of fixed 1:5 M ratio encapsulated daunorubicin and cytarabine and it delivers stable synergistic drug ratios to AML cells [ | t-AML or AML-MRC | Induction:a (daunorubicin 44 mg/m2 and cytarabine 100 mg/m2) IV, days 1, 3, and 5 Consolidation: (daunorubicin 29 mg/m2 and cytarabine 65 mg/m2) IV, days 1 and 3 | -FDA United States 2017 -EMA 2018 | Publication: CR + CRi: 48% vs. 33% in 7 + 3 group CR: 37% versus 26% in 7 + 3 group FDA label: CR: 38% versus 26% | Median OS 9.6 (6.6–11.9) months versus 5.9 (5.0–7.8) in 7 + 3 arm | Not reported |
| Glasdegib + low dose cytarabineb [ | BRIGHT AML 1003 phase II randomized clinical trial comparing glasdegib+LDAC ( | Glasdegib is an oral inhibitor of the Hedgehog pathway. It binds to and inhibits Smoothened, a transmembrane protein involved in hedgehog signal transduction. When aberrantly activated, the Hedgehog signaling pathway leads to leukemias by promoting cancer stem cell maintenance. By inhibiting the Hedgehog signaling pathway, leukemic stem cells are reduced [ | Adults ≥ 75 years or comorbidities that preclude use of intensive induction chemotherapy | Glasdegib 100 mg daily continuously in combination with LDACc | -FDA United States 2018 | Publication:c CR 17% versus 2% LDAC arm CR + CRi + MLFS: 27% versus 5% LDAC arm FDA label:c CR 18% (10–29) versus 3% (0.1–14) LDAC arm | Publication:c Median OS 8.8 months versus 4.9 months LDAC arm FDA label: c Median OS 8.3 months (4.4–12.2) versus 4.3 months (1.9–5.7) LDAC arm | Publication:c CR DOR: glasdegib+LDAC 9.9 months (0.03–28.8) |
| Midostaurin + standard chemotherapy d,e [ | RATIFY phase III clinical trial comparing midostaurin + chemotherapy ( | Midostaurin is a multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor that inhibits the activity of wild type FLT3 and FLT3 mutant kinases (ITD and TKD), among others [ | FLT3 mutation positive as detected by FDA-approved test, in combination with standard cytarabine and daunorubicin induction and cytarabine consolidation | 50 mg oral, twice daily with food on days 8 to 21 in combination with Induction: 7 + 34 for up to 2 cycles. Consolidation: HiDAC for up to 4 cycles.e Maintenance: Continuous dosing up to 12 cycles. | -FDA United States 2017 -EMA 2017 | Publication: CR 59% (54–64) vs 54% (48–59) in the placebo group | Publication: 74.7 months (31.5-not reached) vs 25.6 months (18.6–42.9) in the placebo arm FDA label: Median survival could not be reliably estimated as survival curves plateaued before reaching the median. HR for OS 0.77 (95% CI 0.63–0.95; | Not reported |
Venetoclax + hypomethylating agentf [ | Study M14–358, non-randomized, phase Ib open-label clinical trial studying venetoclax in combination with azacitidine ( | Venetoclax is a selective, oral inhibitor of BCL-2 [ B cell lymphoma 2 (BCL-2) protein plays an important role in the survival and persistence of AML blasts. BCL2 is an important regulator of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway [ | Adults ≥ 75 years old or comorbidities that preclude use of intensive induction chemotherapy | Dose ramp-up: 100 mg day 1, 200 mg day 2, 400 mg day 3 and beyond, once daily continuously in combination with azacitidine or decitabinej | -FDA United States 2018 | Publication:g CR + CRi: 67% CR and CRi rates were 37% and 30% respectively FDA label:g V + aza: CR 37% (26–50), CRh 24% (14–36) V + dec: CR 54% (25–81), CRh 8% (0.2–36) | Publication:7 Median OS for all patients was 17.5 months (12.3-NR) | Publication:g CR DOR: 12.5 months (11-NR) CRi DOR: 6.8 months (4.1-NR). CR + CRi DOR: 11.3 months (8.9-NR) FDA label:g V + aza: CR DORh 5.5 months (range 0.4–30) V + dec: CR DORh 4.7 months (range 1–18) |
| Venetoclax + low dose cytarabinei [ | Study M14–387, phase Ib/II non-randomized, open-label clinical trial studying venetoclax in combination with LDAC ( | Adults ≥ 75 years old or comorbidities that preclude use of intensive induction chemotherapy | Dose ramp-up 100 mg day 1, 200 mg day 2, 400 mg day 3, and 600 mg day 4 and beyond once daily continuously in combination with LDACi | -FDA United States 2018 | Publication:j CR and CRi: 54% (42–65) CR: 26% CRi 28% FDA label:j CR: 21% (12–34) CRh: 21% (12–34) | Publication:j Median OS was 10.1 months (5.7–14.2) | Publication:j CR DOR: 8.1 months (5.3–14.9) FDA label:j CR DOR:h 6.0 months (range 0.03–25) | |
| Relapsed/Refractory AML | ||||||||
| Drug | Study | Mechanism of action | Indication | Dosing | Country approval | Response Rate (RR) with 95% CI | Median Overall Survival (95% confidence interval) | Median DOR (95% CI) |
| Enasidenib [ | Phase I/II clinical trial studying enasidenib monotherapy ( | Enasidenib is an oral, selective inhibitor of mutant IDH2 enzyme variants R140Q, R172S, and R172K [ Mutated IDH2 leads to neomorphic proteins that synthesize 2-hydroxyglutarate, which results in DNA and histone hypermethylation. This in turn blocks cellular differentiation [ | IDH2 mutation as detected by an FDA-approved test | 100 mg orally once daily until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity | -FDA United States 2017 | Publication: CR: 19.6% (14.5–25.6) CRi/CRp: 9.3% FDA label: CR: 19% (13–25) CRh: 4% (2–8) CR + CRh: 23% (18–30) | Publication: 8.8 months (7.7–9.6)k | Publication: DOR: 5.6 months (3.8–7.4) FDA label: CR DOR: 8.2 months (4.7–19.4) CRh DOR: 9.6 months (0.7-NA) CR + CRh DOR: 8.2 (4.3–19.4) |
| Gilteritinib [ | ADMIRAL phase III clinical trial comparing gilteritinib ( | Gilteritinib inhibits multiple receptor tyrosine kinases including FLT3 and demonstrated preclinical activity against FLT3-ITD and FLT3-D835 mutations [ | FLT3 mutation as detected by an FDA-approved test | 120 mg orally once daily | -FDA United States 2018 -PMDA Japan 2018 | Interim analysis:l CR or CRh: 21%, (15–29) CR: 12% (7–18) CRh: 9% (5–16) Final analysis: CR 14% (10–19) vs 11% (6–17) in the control group | 9.3 (7.7–10.7) months versus 5.6 months (4.7–7.3) for standard chemotherapy | Interim analysis:l CR + CRh DOR: 4.6 months (0.1–15.8) CR DOR: 8.6 months (1–13.8) CRh DOR: 2.9 months (0.1–15.8) Final analysis:l CR DOR: 14.8 months (0.6–23.1+) vs. 1.8 months (< 0.1+ − 1.8) in the control arm |
| Newly diagnosed and Relapsed/ Refractory (R/R) AML | ||||||||
| Drug | Study | Mechanism of action | Indication | Dosing | Country approval | Response Rate (RR) with 95% CI | Median Overall Survival (95% confidence interval) | Median DOR (95% CI) |
| Gemtuzumab ozogamicin [ | Newly diagnosed: Phase III EORTC-GIMEMA AML-19 clinical trial comparing GO ( | GO is a CD-33 directed ADC. The drug conjugate consists of a small molecule portion, N-acetyl gamma calicheamicin, which is a cytotoxic agent covalently bound to the antibody via a linker. GO acts through binding of the ADC to CD33-expressing cancer cells [ | Newly diagnosed: CD33-positive AML in adults | Newly diagnosed: Induction: 6 mg/m2 IV on day 1 and 3 mg/m2 IV on day 8 Continuation: 2 mg/m2 IV day 1 every 4 weeks for up to 8 cycles | FDA United States 2017 | Newly diagnosed: CR: 15% CRi: 12% CR + CRi: 27% | Newly diagnosed: 4.9 months (4.2–6.8) versus 3.6 months (2.6 to 4.2 months) in the best supportive care group | Newly diagnosed: Median DFS CR/CRi patients 5.3 months (95% CI 3.1–8.0) |
R/R: MyloFrance-1, phase II, single-arm, open-label clinical trial studying GO monotherapy ( | R/R: CD33 positive AML in adults and pediatric patients 2 years and older | R/R: 3 mg/m2 (up to one 4.5 mg vial) IV on days 1, 4, and 7 of a single course | R/R: CR 26% (16–40%) CR and CRp 33% | R/R: Median OS 8.4 months | R/R: Median RFS CR patients: 11.6 months | |||
Gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO) + standard chemotherapy [ | Newly diagnosed: ALFA-0701: a randomized, open-label, phase III study comparing GO+ 7 + 3 ( | Newly diagnosed: CD33-positive AML in adults | Newly diagnosed: Induction: 3 mg/m2 (up to one 4.5 mg vial) IV days 1, 4, and 7 in combination with 7 + 3n Consolidation: 3 mg/m2 (up to one 4.5 mg vial) IV day 1 in combination with daunorubicin and cytarabine for up to 2 cycleso | -FDA United States 2017 -European medicines agency 2018 | Newly diagnosed: CR: 73% versus 72% in 7 + 3 group. CRp: 8% versus 3% in 7 + 3 group CR and CRp: 81% versus 75% in the 7 + 3 group | Newly diagnosed: 25.4 months versus 20.8 months in the 7 + 3 groupp | Newly diagnosed: Not reported | |
| Ivosidenib [ | Phase I/II clinical trial studying ivosidenib monotherapy ( | Ivosidenib is a small molecule inhibitor that targets the mutant IDH1 enzyme. This targeted treatment is a potent inhibitor of 2-hydroxyglutarate, a neomorphic protein produced by a mutated IDH1 enzyme. 2-hydroxyglutarate competitively inhibits α-ketoglutarate–dependent enzymes and causes epigenetic alterations and impaired hematopoietic differentiation [ Ivosidenib leads to differentiation and maturation of malignant cells [ | Newly diagnosed: Adults ≥ 75 years or with comorbidities that preclude use of intensive induction chemotherapy | 500 mg orally daily until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity | Newly diagnosed: FDA United States 2019 | Newly diagnosed: Publication:q CR: 21% (9–38) CR + CRh: 35% (20–54) FDA label:q CR: 29% (13, 49) CR + CRh: 43% (25, 63). | Newly diagnosed: Not reported | Newly diagnosed: Publication:q CR DOR: NE (5.6-NE) CR + CRh DOR: NE (1.0-NE) FDA label:q CR DOR: NE (4.2-NE) CR + CRh DOR: NE (4.2-NE) |
R/R: IDH1 mutation as detected by an FDA-approved test | R/R: FDA United States 2018 | R/R: Publication:q CR: 22% (16–29) CR or CRh: 30% (24–38) FDA label:q CR: 25% (19–32) CRh: 8% (5–13) CR + CRh: 33% (26–40) | R/R: Publication: 8.8 months (6.7 to 10.2)r | R/R: Publication:q CR DOR: 9.3 months (5.6–12.5) CR + CRh DOR: 6.5 months (5.5–11.1) FDA label:q CR DOR: 10.1 months (6.5–22.2) CRh DOR: 3.6 months (1–5.5) CR + CRh DOR: 8.2 months (5.6–12) | ||||
7 + 3 7 days continuous infusion cytarabine in combination with 3 days intravenous daunorubicin, ADC antibody-drug conjugate, AML acute myeloid leukemia, AML-MRC AML with myelodysplasia-related changes, aza azacitidine, CI confidence interval, CR complete remission, CRh complete remission with partial hematologic recovery, CRi complete remission with incomplete count recovery, dec decitabine, EMA European Medicines Agency, FLT3 Fms-like tyrosine kinase 3, FDA Food and Drug Administration, HiDAC high dose cytarabine, ITD, internal tandem duplication IV intravenous; LDAC low-dose cytarabine, MLFS morphologic leukemia free state, NA not available, NE not estimable, NR not reached, OS overall survival, RFS relapse-free survival, t-AML therapy-related AML; TKD tyrosine kinase domain, V venetoclax
aNote that the second induction (for patients failing for achieve a response with the first induction cycle) uses the same dose of (daunorubicin 44 mg/m2 and cytarabine 100 mg/m2), but on days 1 and 3 only
bCytarabine 20 mg subcutaneously twice daily days 1–10 of each 28-day cycle
cResults in [75] presented data on 132 total patients randomized to glasdegib + LDAC (n = 88) or LDAC (n = 44), including patients with high-risk MDS, a condition for which glasdegib is not approved. The FDA label included the N = 115 patients with confirmed AML randomized to glasdegib + LDAC (n = 77) or LDAC (n = 38) [85]
dDaunorubicin dosed at 60 mg/m2 IV daily on days 1–3. Cytarabine dosed at 200 mg/m2 continuous infusion days 1–7
eHiDAC dose was 3 g/m2 IV every 12 h on days 1, 3, and 5
fAzacitidine 75 mg/m2 IV or subcutaneous days 1–7 of each 28-day cycle. Decitabine 20 mg/m2 IV days 1–5 of each 28-day cycle
gResults in [70] included 145 total patients treated with azacitidine or decitabine in combination with different dose levels of venetoclax. The FDA label included N = 80 patients who were age 75 or older or who had comorbidities that precluded the use of intensive induction chemotherapy and were treated with the recommended dose of venetoclax in combination with azacitidine (n = 67) or decitabine (n = 13) [44]
hDOR defined as the median observed time in remission, i.e. the time from the start of CR to the time of data cut-off date or relapse from CR. Median follow-up was 7.9 months (range 0.4–36) for azacitidine, 11 months (range 0.7–21) for decitabine, and 6.5 months (range 0.3–34) for LDAC [44]
iCytarabine 20 mg/m2 subcutaneously once daily days 1–10 of each 28-day cycle
jResults in included all 82 patients treated with the recommended dose of venetoclax in combination with LDAC. The FDA label included n = 61 patients who were age 75 or older or who had comorbidities that precluded the use of intensive induction chemotherapy [44]
kResults in had cut-off of September 1, 2017 and presented data on all 214 patients treated with enasidenib at the recommended dose. The FDA label included N = 199 patients with IDH2 mutation per the companion diagnostic test treated with the recommended dose, with a data cut date of October 14, 2016 [58]
lThe FDA label includes an interim analysis of CR + CRh in N = 138 patients randomized to the gilteritinib arm that were at least four treatment cycles past the first dose of gilteritinib at the time of the first pre-specified interim analysis [80]
mResults in [77, 84] included 278 randomized patients. FDA considered n = 271 patients in a modified intent-to-treat population based on lack of documentation of informed consent in the remaining patients [12]
nDaunorubicin dosed at 60 mg/m2 IV days 1–3. Cytarabine dosed at 200 mg/m2 continuous infusion days 1–7. Patients could receive a second induction with daunorubicin and cytarabine alone (i.e., no GO for second induction course)
oDaunorubicin dosed at 60 mg/m2 IV day 1 of consolidation course 1 and days 1–2 of consolidation course 2. Cytarabine dosed at 1 g/m2 every 12 h on days 1–4
pNote that the final analysis did not demonstrate a statistically significant benefit in median OS. FDA approval was on the basis of an EFS benefit of 13.6 months GO arm vs. 8.8 months 7 + 3 arm [12]
qResults in [63] had cut-off of May 12, 2017 and presented data on 179 patients with R/R AML and 34 patients with newly diagnosed AML treated with ivosidenib at the recommended dose. The FDA label included N = 174 patients with R/R AML and N = 28 patients with newly-diagnosed AML (the latter with age ≥ 75 years or comorbidities that precluded use of intensive induction chemotherapy) with confirmed IDH1 mutation per the companion diagnostic test and used a data cut-off date of November 10, 2017 in R/R patients [86] and a later data cut-off for newly-diagnosed patients (not yet public, but FDA review will be available soon at https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/daf/)
rOS reported for the primary efficacy population, which included the first 125 patients with R/R AML with second or later relapse, relapse after stem-cell transplantation, disease refractory to induction or reinduction chemotherapy, or relapse < 12 months after initial therapy who received the recommended dose and whose first dose of ivosidenib was at least 6 months before the analysis cut-off date