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Pomalidomide, dexamethasone, and daratumumab immediately after lenalidomide-based treatment in patients with multiple myeloma: updated efficacy, safety, and health-related quality of life results from the phase 2 MM-014 trial.

Authors :
Bahlis, Nizar J.
Siegel, David S.
Schiller, Gary J.
Samaras, Christy
Sebag, Michael
Berdeja, Jesus
Ganguly, Siddhartha
Matous, Jeffrey
Song, Kevin
Seet, Christopher S.
Acosta-Rivera, Mirelis
Bar, Michael
Quick, Donald
Anz, Bertrand
Fonseca, Gustavo
Chung, Weiyuan
Lee, Kim
Mouro, Jorge
Agarwal, Amit
Reece, Donna
Source :
Leukemia & Lymphoma; Jun2022, Vol. 63 Issue 6, p1407-1417, 11p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM) need proven subsequent therapies after early-line lenalidomide treatment failure. The phase 2 MM-014 trial (NCT01946477) investigated pomalidomide, dexamethasone, and daratumumab after 1 to 2 prior treatment lines (62.5%, 1 prior line) in patients with RRMM and prior lenalidomide (75.0%, lenalidomide refractory). With a median follow-up of 28.4 months, overall response rate was 77.7% (52.7% achieved very good partial response or better) and median progression-free survival was 30.8 months. For patients with lenalidomide-refractory disease, these outcomes were 76.2%, 47.6%, and 23.7 months, respectively. No new safety signals were observed; 64.3% experienced grade 3/4 neutropenia. Health-related quality of life was preserved or trended toward improvement through 12 treatment cycles. Pomalidomide, dexamethasone, and daratumumab given immediately after early-line lenalidomide-based treatment continues to demonstrate safety and efficacy, supporting pomalidomide-dexamethasone as a foundation of combination therapy in RRMM and providing evidence that the immunomodulatory agent class delivers benefit after lenalidomide treatment failure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10428194
Volume :
63
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Leukemia & Lymphoma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157177010
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/10428194.2022.2030477