1. Anti-CD25 radioimmunotherapy with BEAM autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation conditioning in Hodgkin lymphoma
- Author
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Jennifer Simpson, Ni-Chun Tsai, Diane Lynne Smith, John E. Shively, Firoozeh Sahebi, Dave Yamauchi, Joo Y. Song, Ricardo Spielberger, Vikram Adhikarla, Auayporn Nademanee, Sandra H. Thomas, Matthew Mei, David Colcher, Paul J. Yazaki, James R. Bading, S.V. Dandapani, Robert W. Chen, Alex F. Herrera, Pamela McTague, Erasmus Poku, Anna M. Wu, Thai Cao, Leslie Popplewell, Joycelynne Palmer, Eileen P. Smith, Nicole Karras, Stephen J. Forman, and Jeffrey Y.C. Wong
- Subjects
Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Transplantation Conditioning ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Salvage therapy ,Refractory ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Tumor Microenvironment ,medicine ,Humans ,Tissue Distribution ,Yttrium Radioisotopes ,Brentuximab vedotin ,Stomatitis ,business.industry ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Hematology ,Radioimmunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Hodgkin Disease ,Transplantation ,Clinical trial ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
High-risk relapsed or refractory (R/R) classical Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is associated with poor outcomes after conventional salvage therapy and autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (AHCT). Post-AHCT consolidation with brentuximab vedotin (BV) improves progression-free survival (PFS), but with increasing use of BV early in the treatment course, the utility of consolidation is unclear. CD25 is often expressed on Reed-Sternberg cells and in the tumor microenvironment in HL, and we hypothesized that the addition of 90Y-antiCD25 (aTac) to carmustine, etoposide, cytarabine, melphalan (BEAM) AHCT would be safe and result in a transplantation platform that is agnostic to prior HL-directed therapy. Twenty-five patients with high-risk R/R HL were enrolled in this phase 1 dose-escalation trial of aTac-BEAM. Following an imaging dose of 111In-antiCD25, 2 patients had altered biodistribution, and a third developed an unrelated catheter-associated bacteremia; therefore, 22 patients ultimately received therapeutic 90Y-aTac-BEAM AHCT. No dose-limiting toxicities were observed, and 0.6 mCi/kg was deemed the recommended phase 2 dose, the dose at which the heart wall would not receive >2500 cGy. Toxicities and time to engraftment were similar to those observed with standard AHCT, though 95% of patients developed stomatitis (all grade 1-2 per Bearman toxicity scale). Seven relapses (32%) were observed, most commonly in patients with ≥3 risk factors. The estimated 5-year PFS and overall survival probabilities among 22 evaluable patients were 68% and 95%, respectively, and non-relapse mortality was 0%. aTac-BEAM AHCT was tolerable in patients with high-risk R/R HL, and we are further evaluating the efficacy of this approach in a phase 2 trial. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01476839.
- Published
- 2021
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