December 06, 2015
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Midostaurin confers OS, EFS benefits in FLT3-mutated AML

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ORLANDO, Fla. — The addition of midostaurin to standard chemotherapy, followed by 1 year of maintenance therapy, significantly improved EFS and OS for patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia and FLT3 mutations, according to phase 3 study results presented at the ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition.

“This particular subtype of AML has an unmet medical need,” Richard M. Stone, MD, clinical director of the adult leukemia program at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, told HemOnc Today. “Most patients with FLT3-mutated AML have a poor prognosis. This mutation itself causes a gain of function, so the enzyme is more active than usual when it is mutated. Therefore, it is relatively more straightforward to inhibit.”

Midostaurin (PKC412, Novartis) — a multi-targeted small molecule FLT3 inhibitor — has shown single-agent activity in AML with internal tandem duplication (ITD) and tyrosine kinase domain (TKD) FLT3 mutations, according to study background.

Thus, Stone and colleagues sought to study whether the addition of midostaurin to induction and consolidation therapy, followed by maintenance therapy, would improve OS compared with standard chemotherapy in younger adult patients with FLT3–mutated AML.

The researchers enrolled patients aged 18 to 60 years with previously untreated AML. They screened 3,279 patients for FLT3 mutation, stratifying patients by mutation subtype (TKD vs. ITD; high allelic mutation fraction [> 0.7] vs. low mutation fraction [0.05-0.7]).

The trial included data from 717 patients (FLT3 ITD-low, n = 341; FLT3 ITD-high, n = 214; FLT3 TKD, n = 162). The median age of the population was 48 years.

Patients received induction chemotherapy — which consisted of IV daunorubicin (60 mg/m2 on days 1-3) and cytarabine (200 mg/m2 on days 1-7) — plus midostaurin (50 mg; n = 360) or placebo (n = 357) on days 8 through 22.

The cohorts had comparable characteristics with the exception of sex (midostaurin, 48.2% men; placebo, 40.6% men; P = .04).

Patients could undergo a second blinded course if residual AML was seen on a 21-day marrow examination. Those who achieved a complete remission went on to receive four cycles of cytarabine (3 g/m2 on days 1, 3 and 5), plus midostaurin or placebo, followed by a year of maintenance therapy with midostaurin or placebo. The researchers permitted stem cell transplantation (SCT).

The researchers amended the study to add EFS as a key secondary endpoint, due to a slow rate of events.

All patients have gone off treatment, according to the researchers. The median follow-up for all surviving patients was 57 months.

The researchers did not observe a significant difference in the overall rate of grade 3 or higher hematologic or non-hematologic adverse events between study arms.

Patients experienced a total of 37 grade 5 adverse events (midostaurin, 5.3%; placebo, 5%). There were no observed differences in treatment-related grade 5 adverse events (midostaurin, 3.1%; placebo, 2.5%).

Fifty-nine percent of patients assigned midostaurin and 54% of patients assigned placebo achieved complete remission.

Patients assigned midostaurin achieved significantly longer median OS (74.7 months vs. 26 months; P = .007) and EFS (8 months vs. 3 months; P = .0044). More patients assigned midostaurin achieved 5-year OS (50.9% vs. 43.9%; HR = 0.77; 95% CI, 0.63-0.95) and 5-year EFS (27.5% vs. 19.3%; HR = 0.8; 95% CI, 0.67-0.95).

Fifty-seven percent of patients (n = 402) underwent allogeneic SCT at any time, with a similar time to transplantation in each arm (midostaurin = 5 months; placebo = 4.6 months). Secondary analyses censoring at the time of SCT provided similar results in favor of midostaurin for OS (HR = 0.77; 95% CI, 0.56-1.05) and EFS (HR = 0.84; 95% CI, 0.7-1.002).

Further, the OS and EFS benefit of midostaurin extended across all FLT3 subgroups.

“Pending FDA approval, I think this may become the standard of care for this AML subtype,” Stone said. “I think we can be optimistic that it will be approved and used. From a research standpoint, there are many other areas where you might explode midostaurin: post-transplantation, in older patients with AML or in patients without a FLT3 mutation.” – by Cameron Kelsall

Reference:

Stone RM, et al. Abstract 6. Presented at: ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition; Dec. 5-8, 2015; Orlando, Fla.

For more information:

Richard M. Stone, MD, can be reached at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney St., Boston, MA 02115; email: richard_stone@dfci.harvard.edu.

Disclosure: Stone reports consultant roles with Abbvie, Agios, Amgen, AROG, Celator, Celgene, Genentech/Roche, Juno, Karyopharm, Merck, Novartis and Sunesis. Please see the abstract for a list of all other researchers’ relevant financial disclosures.