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Adjusted comparison between elotuzumab and carfilzomib in combination with lenalidomide and dexamethasone as salvage therapy for multiple myeloma patients

Authors :
Valerio De Stefano
Lucio Catalano
Lucia Pantani
Pellegrino Musto
Elena Rossi
Enrica Antonia Martino
Antonetta Pia Falcone
Ernesto Vigna
Iolanda Vincelli
Salvatore Palmieri
Paola Tacchetti
Fortunato Morabito
Sara Bringhen
Giovanni Tripepi
Maria Teresa Petrucci
Serena Rocchi
Bruno Garibaldi
Vincenzo Pavone
Francesco Di Raimondo
Giuliana Farina
Nicola Cascavilla
Monica Galli
Antonino Neri
Stelvio Ballanti
Silvia Mangiacavalli
Maurizio Musso
Ilaria Rizzello
Ferdinando Frigeri
Massimo Offidani
Clotilde Cangialosi
Massimo Gentile
Antonella Bruzzese
Elena Zamagni
Anna Mele
Cirino Botta
Mario Boccadoro
Daniele Derudas
Marialucia Barone
Nicola Di Renzo
Concetta Conticello
Giovanni Reddiconto
Roberto Ria
Michele Cavo
Giuseppe Mele
Morabito, Fortunato
Zamagni, Elena
Conticello, Concetta
Pavone, Vincenzo
Palmieri, Salvatore
Bringhen, Sara
Galli, Monica
Mangiacavalli, Silvia
Derudas, Daniele
Rossi, Elena
Ria, Roberto
Catalano, Lucio
Tacchetti, Paola
Mele, Giuseppe
Vincelli, Iolanda Donatella
Martino, Enrica Antonia
Vigna, Ernesto
Botta, Cirino
Bruzzese, Antonella
Mele, Anna
Pantani, Lucia
Rocchi, Serena
Garibaldi, Bruno
Cascavilla, Nicola
Ballanti, Stelvio
Tripepi, Giovanni
Frigeri, Ferdinando
Falcone, Antonetta Pia
Cangialosi, Clotilde
Reddiconto, Giovanni
Farina, Giuliana
Barone, Marialucia
Rizzello, Ilaria
Musto, Pellegrino
De Stefano, Valerio
Musso, Maurizio
Petrucci, Maria Teresa
Offidani, Massimo
Neri, Antonino
Di Renzo, Nicola
Di Raimondo, Francesco
Boccadoro, Mario
Cavo, Michele
Gentile, Massimo
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The lack of a randomized trial comparing carfilzomib (K) versus elotuzumab (Elo) associated with lenalidomide and dexamethasone (Rd) prompted us to assess the relative usefulness of one triplet over the other. Five independent retrospective cohorts of 883 relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM) patients, including 300 EloRd and 583 KRd cases, outside clinical trials, entered this non-randomized comparison. KRd cohort accounted for a higher incidence of younger patients, cases with ≥3 lines of therapy, already exposed to lenalidomide, International Staging System (ISS) stage III, and abnormal lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) level compared with EloRd cohort. Moreover, cytogenetic risk categories, detected in roughly one-third of cases, were equally distributed between the two therapy arms. The probability of CR+VGPR response was significantly higher in KRd (n = 314, 53.9%) than in EloRd patients (n = 111, 37.0%). Likewise, the cumulative incidence function of CR+VGPR, taking into account the competitive risk of death, was significantly higher in KRd arm patients than those in the EloRd arm (p = .003). Moreover, KRd treatment significantly reduced the progression or death risk by 46% in an adjusted multivariate analysis (HR: 0.54, 95% CI 0.42-0.69, p .0001). Finally, in an adjusted illness-progression/death model, the effect of KRd versus EloRd was of higher magnitude among those who achieved CR+VGPR (-39% hazard ratio reduction, p = .02) than among those who achieved VGPR (-29% hazard ratio reduction, p = .007). With limitations characteristic to any retrospective analysis, this current clinical practice study's overall results demonstrated potential benefits of KRd therapy compared with EloRd. This observation may help the daily clinical practice.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....63023416c48907a833c628edda117e47