| Literature DB >> 34069354 |
Moritz Bewarder1, Stephan Stilgenbauer1, Lorenz Thurner1, Dominic Kaddu-Mulindwa1.
Abstract
After impressive developments in recent years with the rise of new targeted agents, chemoimmunotherapy (CIT) only plays a minor role in the treatment of patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Inhibitors of the Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK), such as ibrutinib or more recently acalabrutinib, are highly effective, even in poor-risk or chemo-refractory patients. Venetoclax, an inhibitor of the anti-apoptotic BCL2 protein and, to a lesser extent, phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K) delta inhibitors, add to the armamentarium of targeted agents for the treatment of CLL. Furthermore, anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies are used very successfully either alone or in combination with BTK, BCL2 or PI3K inhibitors. Despite these advances, there is still an ongoing pursuit for new therapeutic approaches in the treatment of CLL. An even bigger challenge poses the determination of the optimal combination and sequence of those drugs. Here, we give an overview of current treatment options in CLL, weighing the advantages and disadvantages of each approach in the light of different clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: BCL2 inhibitors; BTK inhibitor; chronic lymphocytic leukemia; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34069354 PMCID: PMC8158749 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13102468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Overview of phase 3 trials in tn CLL.
| Trial | Treatment Arms | ORR | OS | PFS | uMRD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALLIANCE (A041202) Study [ | Ibr vs. Ibr-R vs. BR | 81% (BR) vs. 93% (Ibr) vs. 94% (Ibr-R) | 2-year OS | 2-year PFS 74% (BR) vs. 87% (Ibr) vs. 88% (Ibr-R) | 8% (BR) vs. 1% (Ibr) vs. 4% (Ibr-R) |
| E1912 study [ | FCR vs. Ibr-R | 96% (Ibr-R) vs. 81% (FCR) | 3-year OS | 3-year PFS | 8% (Ibr-R) vs. 59% (FCR) |
| RESONATE-2 [ | Ibr vs. Clb | 86% (Ibr) vs. 35% (Clb) | 5-year OS | 5-year PFS 70% (Ibr) vs. 12% (Clb) | N.A. |
| iLLUMINATE study [ | G-Ibr vs. G-Clb | 88% (G-Ibr) vs. 73% (G-Clb) | Estimated 30-month OS | Estimated 30-month PFS | 35% (G-Ibr) vs. 25% (G-Clb) |
| ELEVATE TN [ | Acb vs. G-Acb vs. G-Clb | 94% (G-Acb) vs. 79% (G-Clb) vs. 85% (Acb) | Estimated 24-month OS | Estimated 24-month PFS | N.A. |
| CLL14 trial [ | Ven-G vs. G-Clb | 85% (Ven-G) vs. 71% (G-Clb) | 24-month OS | 3-year PFS | 76% (Ven-G) vs. 35% (G-Clb) |
Abbreviations: Ibr, ibrutinib; R, rituximab; F, fludarabine; C, cyclophosphamide; Clb, chlorambucil; G, obinutuzumab; Acb, acalabrutinib; Ven, venetoclax; N.A., not available.
Figure 1Frontline treatment algorithm in CLL.
Figure 2Treatment algorithm in relapsed/refractory CLL.
Overview of phase 3 trials in r/r-CLL.
| Trial | Treatment Arms | ORR | OS | PFS | uMRD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASCEND [ | Acb vs. Investigators choice (Idl-R or BR) | 81% (Acb) vs. 75% | 12-months OS 94% (Acb) vs. 91% | Estimated 12-month PFS | N.A. |
| MURANO [ | Ven-R vs. BR | 92% (Ven-R) vs. 72% (BR) | 4-year OS 85% (Ven-R) vs. 67% (BR) | 4-year PFS 57% (Ven-R) vs. 5% (BR) | N.A. |
| RESONATE-1 [ | Ibr vs. Ofa | 86% (Ibr) vs. 24% (Ofa) | 3-year OS 74% (Ibr) vs. 65% (Ofa) | 3-year PFS 59% (Ibr) vs. 3% (Ofa) | N.A. |
Abbreviations: Acb, acalabrutinib; B, bendamustine; Ibr, ibrutinib; Idl, idelalisib; Ofa, ofatumumab; R, rituximab; Ven, venetoclax; N.A., not available.