| Literature DB >> 32571377 |
Leire Burgos1, Noemi Puig2, Maria-Teresa Cedena3, María-Victoria Mateos2, Juan José Lahuerta3, Bruno Paiva1, Jesús F San-Miguel4.
Abstract
The landscape of multiple myeloma (MM) has changed considerably in the past two decades regarding new treatments, insight into disease biology and innovation in the techniques available to assess measurable residual disease (MRD) as the most accurate method to evaluate treatment efficacy. The sensitivity and standardization achieved by these techniques together with unprecedented rates of complete remission (CR) induced by new regimens, raised enormous interest in MRD as a surrogate biomarker of patients' outcome and endpoint in clinical trials. By contrast, there is reluctance and general lack of consensus on how to use MRD outside clinical trials. Here, we discuss critical aspects related with the implementation of MRD in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical practice; MRD; Myeloma; Plasma cells; Surrogate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32571377 PMCID: PMC7310444 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-020-00911-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Clinical trials where MRD guides treatment decisions. Results are based on a search in the ‘https://clinicaltrials.gov/’ website that included the terms “multiple myeloma” and “MRD”, and individual identification of clinical trials where treatment algorithms were triggered by patients’ MRD status. Selected studies (identified with an asterisk) were added based on knowledge of their existence, despite being absent in search results. It should be noted that many more studies assess MRD and in most clinical trials, MRD response rates are a primary or secondary endpoint (see Fig. 1). However, because no apparent treatment decision is being made based on patients’ MRD status, those studies were not included in the table below. There are many clinical trials that, to the best of our knowledge, will have MRD-guided treatment decisions but were not added because their design is still being finalized or have not been initiated at the time of this publication
| NCT | Study official title | Country | Technique |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02406144 | Maintenance treatment with lenalidomide and dexamethasone versus lenalidomide, dexamethasone and ixazomib after autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in patients With newly diagnosed symptomatic multiple myeloma-duration of maintenance guided by MRD status (GEM2014MAIN) | Spain | NGF |
| RADAR* | Risk adapted therapy directed according to response comparing treatment escalation and de-escalation strategies in newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma suitable for stem cell transplantation | UK | N/A |
| NCT03490344 | Short course daratumumab in minimal residual disease (MRD) positive myeloma patients after induction therapy with/without consolidative high-dose chemotherapy/autologous stem cell support | USA | FC |
| NCT03224507 | Monoclonal antibody-based sequential therapy for deep remission in multiple myeloma (MASTER) | USA | NGS |
| NCT03742297* | Induction therapy with bortezomib-melphalan and prednisone (VMP) followed by lenalidomide and dexamethasone (Rd) versus carfilzomib, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone (KRd) plus/minus daratumumab, 18 cycles, followed by consolidation and maintenance therapy with lenalidomide and daratumumab: phase III, multicenter, randomized trial for elderly fit newly diagnosed multiple myeloma patients aged between 65 and 80 years | Spain | NGF |
| NCT03697655 | Pre-emptive daratumumab therapy of minimal residual disease reappearance or biochemical relapse in multiple myeloma (PREDATOR) | Poland | N/A |
| NCT03710603 | A phase 3 study comparing daratumumab, VELCADE (Bortezomib), lenalidomide, and dexamethasone (D-VRd) vs VELCADE, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone (VRd) in subjects with previously untreated multiple myeloma who are eligible for high-dose therapy (PERSEUS) | EMN | N/A |
| NCT03992170 | A pilot study on the efficacy of daratumumab in multiple myeloma (MM) patients in >VGPR/MRD-positive by next-generation flow (DART4MM) | Italy | FC |
| NCT02969837 | Open-label, single-arm, phase 2 study of initial treatment with elotuzumab, carfilzomib (Kyprolis), lenalidomide (Revlimid), and low-dose dexamethasone (E-KRd) in newly diagnosed, multiple myeloma requiring systemic chemotherapy | USA | NGS and MFC |
| NCT04071457 | S1803, phase III study of daratumumab/rHuPH20 (NSC-810307) + lenalidomide or lenalidomide as post-autologous stem cell transplant maintenance therapy in patients with multiple myeloma (MM) using minimal residual disease to direct therapy duration (DRAMMATIC study) | USA | NGS |
| NCT04096066 | Carfilzomib-lenalidomide-dexamethasone (KRd) versus lenalidomide-dexamethasone (Rd) in newly diagnosed myeloma patients not eligible for autologous stem cell transplantation: a randomized phase III trial | Italy | N/A |
| NCT03376477 | A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase II trial of an allogeneic myeloma GM-CSF vaccine with lenalidomide in multiple myeloma patients in complete or near complete | USA | NGS |
| NCT04108624 | A multimodality approach to minimal residual disease detection to guide post-transplant maintenance therapy in multiple myeloma (MRD2STOP) | USA | NGS |
| NCT04221178 | A single-arm, prospective atudy of maintenance therapy cessation for patients with multiple myeloma in sustained MRD-negative remissions | USA | NGF |
| NCT04140162 | Phase 2 study with minimal residual disease (MRD) driven adaptive strategy in treatment for newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (MM) with upfront daratumumab-based therapy | USA | N/A |
NGS next-generation sequencing, FC flow cytometry, NGF next-generation flow cytometry, N/A not available, EMN European Myeloma Network
Fig. 1Clinical trials reporting MRD assessment. Results are based on a search in the https://clinicaltrials.gov/ website that included the terms “multiple myeloma” and “MRD.” Of 170 clinical trials, 154 indicate in the “descriptive information” that MRD is assessed. Furthermore, MRD negative rates are a “primary outcome measure” in 41 (27%) studies, and a “secondary outcome measure” in 104 (67%) trials
Prospective randomized clinical trials with MRD assessment using next-generation techniques. These studies were selected based on reported effect of treatment randomization in patients’ outcome and MRD negativity rates. Overall, whenever significant differences in MRD rates are observed, these predicted significant differences in outcome
| Study | Treatment | Outcome | MRD assessment | MRD-negative rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IFM2009 (NCT01191060) [ | HDT vs RVD | HDT: median PFS 50m RVD: median PFS 36m | NGS (10−6)a | HDT 30% RVD 20% |
| CASSIOPEIA (NCT02541383) [ | D-VTd vs VTd | D-VTD: 18m PFS 93% VTD: 18m PFS 85% | NGF (10−5) | D-VTD 64% VTD 44% |
| ALCYONE (NCT02195479) [ | D-VMP vs VMP | D-VMP: median PFS NR VMP: median PFS 18.1m | NGS (10−5) | D-VMP 22.3% VMP 6.2% |
| CLARION (NCT01818752) [ | KMP vs VMP | KMP: median PFS 22.3m VMP: median PFS 22.1m | NGF (10−6) | KMP 15.7% VMP 15.5% |
| MAIA (NCT02252172) [ | DRd vs Rd | DRd: median PFS NR Rd: median PFS 31.9m | NGS (10−5) | DRd 24.2% Rd 7.3% |
| POLLUX (NCT02076009) [ | DRd vs Rd | DRd: median PFS NR Rd: median PFS 17.5m | NGS (10−5) | DRd 22.4% Rd 4.6% |
| CASTOR (NCT02136134) [ | DVd vs Vd | DVd: median PFS 16.7m Vd: median PFS 7.1m | NGS (10−5) | DVd 11.6% Vd 2.4% |
MRD measurable residual disease, HDT high-dose therapy, D Daratumumab, V Bortezomib, T Thalidomide, d Dexamethasone, M Melphalan, P Prednisone, K Carfilzomib, R Lenalidomide, PFS progression-free survival, m months, NR not reached, NGF next-generation flow, NGS next-generation sequencing
aThis study also reported MRD rates based on a 7-color flow cytometry assay that, similarly to the results obtained by NGS, showed significant differences between the HDT vs RVD arm.