| Literature DB >> 34981560 |
Yazan Numan1, Zaid Abdel Rahman2,3,4, Justin Grenet5, Stephanie Boisclair6, Jan Philipp Bewersdorf7, Cailin Collins8, Dylan Barth9, Martina Fraga10, Dale L Bixby11, Amer M Zeidan12, Musa Yilmaz13, Pankil Desai5, Gabriel Mannis8, Yehuda E Deutsch6, Yasmin Abaza1, Shira Dinner1, Olga Frankfurt1, Mark Litzow2,3,4, Aref Al-Kali2,3,4, James M Foran2,3,4, Lisa Z Sproat2,3,4, Borko Jovanovic14, Naval Daver13, Alexander E Perl15, Jessica K Altman1.
Abstract
Gilteritinib is approved for the treatment of relapsed/refractory (R/R) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with an FLT3-mutation (FLT3mut+ ). However, the gilteritinib phase 3 ADMIRAL study (Perl et al NEJM 2019) was conducted prior to widespread adoption of either midostaurin as a component of standard intensive induction and consolidation or posttransplant FLT3 inhibitor maintenance. We performed a retrospective analysis using data from 11 US centers and where we identified 113 patients who received gilteritinib alone or as combination therapy for the treatment of R/R FLT3mut+ AML. The composite complete remission (CR) rate (CRc, defined as CR + CRi + CR with incomplete platelet recovery [CRp]) was 48.7% (n = 55). The CRc rate after treatment with gilteritinib in patients who were treated with only prior 7+3 and midostaurin with or without consolidation was 58% with a median survival of 7.8 months. Survival was longest in patients who obtained a CR, particularly a cMRD (clinical minimal or measurable residual disease) negative response; this remained significant after censoring at the time of stem cell transplant. The mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway activating mutations that are known for gilteritinib resistance (NRAS, KRAS, and PTPN11) had lower CRc (35% vs. 60.5%) and lower median overall survival than patients' whose leukemia did not express these mutations (4.9 months vs. 7.8 months) (HR 2.4; 95% CI 1. 5.4) p value <.01.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34981560 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.26447
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047