| Literature DB >> 35768410 |
Shaji Kumar1, Lawrence Baizer2, Natalie S Callander3, Sergio A Giralt4, Jens Hillengass5, Boris Freidlin6, Antje Hoering7, Paul G Richardson8, Elena I Schwartz9, Anthony Reiman10, Suzanne Lentzsch11, Philip L McCarthy12, Sundar Jagannath13, Andrew J Yee14, Richard F Little15, Noopur S Raje14.
Abstract
A wide variety of new therapeutic options for Multiple Myeloma (MM) have recently become available, extending progression-free and overall survival for patients in meaningful ways. However, these treatments are not curative, and patients eventually relapse, necessitating decisions on the appropriate choice of treatment(s) for the next phase of the disease. Additionally, an important subset of MM patients will prove to be refractory to the majority of the available treatments, requiring selection of effective therapies from the remaining options. Immunomodulatory agents (IMiDs), proteasome inhibitors, monoclonal antibodies, and alkylating agents are the major classes of MM therapies, with several options in each class. Patients who are refractory to one agent in a class may be responsive to a related compound or to a drug from a different class. However, rules for selection of alternative treatments in these situations are somewhat empirical and later phase clinical trials to inform those choices are ongoing. To address these issues the NCI Multiple Myeloma Steering Committee formed a relapsed/refractory working group to review optimal treatment choices, timing, and sequencing and provide recommendations. Additional issues considered include the role of salvage autologous stem cell transplantation, risk stratification, targeted approaches for genetic subsets of MM, appropriate clinical trial endpoints, and promising investigational agents. This report summarizes the deliberations of the working group and suggests potential avenues of research to improve the precision, timing, and durability of treatments for Myeloma.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35768410 PMCID: PMC9243011 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-022-00695-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 9.812
Results of randomized clinical trials in Lenalidomide-refractory patients.
| Treatments for first relapse in patients with lenalidomide-refractory disease | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trial | Phase | Agents | Outcome | References |
| OPTIMISMM | III | POM-Vd vs. Vd | Median PFS 11.2 vs. 7.1 months | [ |
| A061202 | II | POM-Kd | Median PFS 7.2 months Median OS 20.6 months | [ |
| I/II | POM-Kd | Median PFS 10.3 months 1 year OS 67% | [ | |
| CANDOR | III | Dara-Kd vs. Kd | Median PFS not reached vs. 15.8 months | [ |
| IKEMA | III | Isa-Kd vs. Kd | Median PFS not reached vs. 19.1 months | [ |
POM pomalidomide, V velcade, bortezomib, d dexamethasone, Dara daratumumab, K carfilzomib, Isa Isatuximab.
Outcomes of trials of salvage ASCT.
| Salvage autologous stem cell transplantation in relapsed/refractory MM patients | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trial | Phase | Agents | Outcome | References |
| BSBMT/UKMF Myeloma X | III | High dose Melphalan + ASCT vs. oral cyclophosphamide | Time to progression 19 vs. 11 months; OS 67 vs. 52 months | [ |
| ReLApsE | III | Second ASCT vs. continued Rd | No difference in response rates; trends toward improved PFS and OS with ASCT | [ |
| 2nd Chance | II | 4 X Dara-KRD→ASCT →4 X Dara-KRD →Maintenance | CR 45%, >VGPR 77% >PR 82% | [ |
| Retrospective analysis | II | KRd→ASCT | ≥VGPR 77%, median PFS 23.3 months | [ |
ASCT autologous stem cell transplant, Rd Lenalidomide-dexamethasome, Dara-KRD Daratumumab-Carfilzomib Lenalidomide dexamethasone, KRD Carfilzomib Lenalidomide dexamethasone.
Possible treatments for patients who have received two or more prior lines of therapy.
| Treatment of patients who have received two or more prior lines of therapy | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trial | No Prior Lines | Agents | Outcome | References |
| BOSTON | 1–3 | Weekly Selinexor-Vd vs. 2 X per week Vd | Median PFS 13.9 months vs. 9.5 months. Less PN with Selinexor-Vd | [ |
| APOLLO | 2 | Dara-POM-d vs. POM-d | Median PFS 12.4 vs. 6.9 months | [ |
| ICARIA | 3 | Isa-POMd vs. POMd | Median PFS 11.5 vs. 6.5 months | [ |
| DREAMM-2 | 3 | Belantamab mafadotin 2.5 or 3.4 mg/kg | ORR 31% and 34% Median PFS 2.9 and 4.9 months | [ |
| ELOQUENT 3 | 3 | Elotuzumab-POMd vs. POMd | ORR 53% vs. 26% Median PFS 10.3 vs. 4.7 months | [ |
| 4 | PomCyDex vs. PomDex | Median PFS 9.5 vs. 4.4 months | [ | |
| STORM | 7 | Selinexor + dexamethasone | ≥PR 26%, median PFS 3.7 months Median OS 8.6 months | [ |
Vd bortezomib + dexamethasone, POMd pomalidomide + dexamethasone.
Trials of investigational agents in relapsed/refractory myeloma.
| Investigational agents: Immunological approaches | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trial | Phase | Agents | Outcome | References |
| KarMMa | II | idecabtagene vicleucel ide-cel, bb2121 | ORR 73%, CR 33%, 26% MRD-, median PFS 8.8 months | [ |
| CARTITUDE-1 | I/II | Ciltacabtagene autoleucel (cilta-cel) | ORR 96.9%, 34% MRD-negative CR, 2-year PFS 60.5% | [ |
| MajesTEC-1 | I/II | teclistimab | ORR 62%, 9-month PFS 58.5% | [ |
| II | Venetoclax-Kd | ORR 80% in all patients, 92% in t(11:14). ≥CRR 41% median PFS 22.8 months | [ | |
| BELLINI | III | Venetoclax-Vd vs. Vd | Median PFS 22.4 vs. 11.5 months, increased overall mortality with Venetoclax. Venetoclax-Vd increased PFS in patients with t(11;14) (HR = 0.10) or high bcl-2 expression (HR = 0.26), also increased MRD- rate (19% vs. 0) with no increased mortality | [ |
Kd carfilzomib-dexamethasone, Vd bortezomib-dexamethasone.