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NEW ORLEANS — Blinatumomab extended survival when combined with chemotherapy for adults with minimal residual disease-negative, B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia, according to a study presented at ASH Annual Meeting and Exposition.
“We feel that this represents a new standard of care for these patients and should be incorporated into their standard therapy,”Mark R. Litzow, MD, professor of medicine in the division of hematology atMayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said during a press conference.
Mark R. Litzow
Background
Blinatumomab (Blincyto, Amgen), a bispecific T-cell engager molecule, combines the variable region of one antibody directed at CD19 on leukemia cells and another antibody directed at CD3 on T cells. The agent has been FDA approved for patients with relapsed or refractory B-lineage ALL and those who are in morphologic remission but have small amounts of disease in their bone marrow.
In the current study, Litzow and colleagues tested blinatumomab among 224 patients with MRD negativity.
Methodology
Patients received standard induction chemotherapy for about 2 months to induce remission, followed by a 1-month course of intensification chemotherapy. Researchers tested patients for MRD before randomly assigning them in a 1:1 ratio to two monthly cycles of blinatumomab via IV, four monthly cycles of consolidation chemotherapy and another two monthly cycles of blinatumomab or four monthly cycles of consolidation chemotherapy. All patients received maintenance chemotherapy for 2.5 years.
“Patients could go off and have a bone marrow transplant if their doctor felt that was in their best interest,” Litzow said.
Median follow-up was 43 months.
Key findings
Results showed longer OS among patients who received blinatumomab with chemotherapy vs. standard chemotherapy alone (median, not reached vs. 71.4 months; HR = 0.42; 95% CI, 0.24-0.75).
Seventeen patients in the blinatumomab group and 39 patients in the chemotherapy group had died by the third interim analysis. About half of the deaths in each group were due to relapse.
Clinical implications
Litzow said the results could lead to “diminishing use of transplant in this setting.”
“Given the survival curve you saw, it’s pretty hard to beat that with a transplant,” he said.