| Literature DB >> 34073689 |
Sarah A Holstein1, Vera J Suman2, Jens Hillengass3, Philip L McCarthy4.
Abstract
Autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) has been a backbone of therapy for newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma eligible for high-dose therapy for decades. Survival outcomes have continued to improve over time, in part because of the incorporation of highly effective induction regimens prior to ASCT as well as post-ASCT maintenance therapy. Randomized phase III clinical trials have helped establish lenalidomide maintenance as a standard of care. However, as nearly all patients will eventually experience disease relapse, there continues to be significant interest in developing novel maintenance strategies to improve upon lenalidomide maintenance. In this review, we summarize the available evidence for the use of immunomodulatory drugs, proteasome inhibitors, and monoclonal antibodies as post-ASCT maintenance therapies as well as discuss future directions and unanswered questions in the field.Entities:
Keywords: lenalidomide; maintenance; minimal residual disease; multiple myeloma; overall survival; transplant
Year: 2021 PMID: 34073689 PMCID: PMC8197068 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10112261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Summary of randomized phase III trials evaluating lenalidomide maintenance after ASCT.
| Study | N | Induction Therapy | Dosing Schedule | Intended Duration of Maintenance | Reported Duration of Lenalidomide Maintenance | TTP or PFS | OS | SPMs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CALGB 100104 [ | 460 | ≤2 regimens; 94% received a regimen containing Thal, Len, and/or Bor | 10 mg continuous, increase up to 15 mg | Until progression | 31 months (median) | Median TTP *: 57 vs. 29 months (HR, 0.57; | Median OS *: | Len: 8% hematologic, 6% solid tumor, 5% noninvasive |
| IFM 2005-02 [ | 614 | 46% received vincristine, doxorubicin, Dex and 46% received Bor and Dex | All patients received 2 cycles of consolidation (25 mg/d, 21 out of 28 days) | Stopped due to concerns regarding second primary malignancies at a median time of 2 years (range 1–3 years) | 25 months (mean) | Median PFS: | Median follow-up 45 months: | Len: 4% hematologic, 3% solid tumor, 2% nonmelanoma skin cancer |
| 21% received tandem transplant | Maintenance: | 4-year PFS: | 4-year OS: 73% vs. 75% ( | |||||
| RV-MM-209 [ | 402 | 4 cycles Len/Dex followed by either transplant or MPR | 10 mg (21 out of 28 days) | Until progression | 35 months (mean) (TE population) | Median PFS **: | 3-year OS **: | 4.3% (Len) vs. 4.3% (Obs) |
| Myeloma XI [ | 1247 *** | CTD vs. RCD followed by CVD if suboptimal response | 10 mg (21 out of 28 days) | Until progression | NR for TE population | Median PFS: | 3-year OS: 88 vs. 80% (HR, 0.69; | 3-year cumulative incidence: 5.3% (Len) vs. 3.1% (Obs) **** |
* Placebo group includes 86 patients who chose to cross over to receive lenalidomide at time of study unblinding; ** Combining ASCT and chemotherapy groups; *** Transplant-eligible only (total number in the study was 1970); **** For the entire study population; data not reported for the transplant-eligible population; Abbreviations: Bor (bortezomib), CTD (cyclophosphamide, thalidomide, dexamethasone), CVD (cyclophosphamide, bortezomib, dexamethasone), Dex (dexamethasone), HR (hazard ratio), Len (lenalidomide), MEL200 (melphalan 200 mg/m2), MPR (melphalan, prednisone, lenalidomide), NR (not reported), Obs (observation), OS (overall survival), Pbo (placebo), PFS (progression-free survival), RCD (lenalidomide, cyclophosphamide, dexamethasone), TE (transplant eligible), Thal (thalidomide), and TTP (time to progression).