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Phase II Trial of Costimulation Blockade With Abatacept for Prevention of Acute GVHD

Authors :
Yvonne Suessmuth
Shalini Shenoy
Catherine Bresee
Alison Yu
Amelia Langston
Scott N. Furlan
Andrew C. Harris
Steven E. Bosinger
Muna Qayed
Sungjin Kim
Brandi Bratrude
Maxim Norkin
Audrey G. Tumlin
Jeffrey H. Davis
James Rhodes
John T. Horan
Courtney McCracken
Urvi Kapoor
Alexandria Narayan
Leslie S. Kean
Kayla Betz
Benjamin Watkins
John E. Levine
Bruce R. Blazar
Aleksandra Petrovic
Sung Won Choi
Kayla Cribbin
Michael Grimley
James L.M. Ferrara
Scott Gillespie
Kyle Hebert
Ted Gooley
Marcelo C. Pasquini
Shauna Sinclair
Michael A. Pulsipher
Mourad Tighiouart
Roger Giller
David A. Jacobsohn
Nahal R. Lalefar
Kirk R. Schultz
Christine Duncan
Edmund K. Waller
Gregory A. Yanik
Victor Tkachev
Andre Rogatko
Nosha Farhadfar
Source :
J Clin Oncol
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

PURPOSE Severe (grade 3-4) acute graft-versus-host disease (AGVHD) is a major cause of death after unrelated-donor (URD) hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT), resulting in particularly high mortality after HLA-mismatched transplantation. There are no approved agents for AGVHD prevention, underscoring the critical unmet need for novel therapeutics. ABA2 was a phase II trial to rigorously assess safety, efficacy, and immunologic effects of adding T-cell costimulation blockade with abatacept to calcineurin inhibitor (CNI)/methotrexate (MTX)-based GVHD prophylaxis, to test whether abatacept could decrease AGVHD. METHODS ABA2 enrolled adults and children with hematologic malignancies under two strata: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled stratum (8/8-HLA-matched URD), comparing CNI/MTX plus abatacept with CNI/MTX plus placebo, and a single-arm stratum (7/8-HLA-mismatched URD) comparing CNI/MTX plus abatacept versus CNI/MTX CIBMTR controls. The primary end point was day +100 grade 3-4 AGVHD, with day +180 severe-AGVHD-free-survival (SGFS) a key secondary end point. Sample sizes were calculated using a higher type-1 error (0.2) as recommended for phase II trials, and were based on predicting that abatacept would reduce grade 3-4 AGVHD from 20% to 10% (8/8s) and 30% to 10% (7/8s). ABA2 enrolled 142 recipients (8/8s, median follow-up = 716 days) and 43 recipients (7/8s, median follow-up = 708 days). RESULTS In 8/8s, grade 3-4 AGVHD was 6.8% (abatacept) versus 14.8% (placebo) ( P = .13, hazard ratio = 0.45). SGFS was 93.2% (CNI/MTX plus abatacept) versus 82% (CNI/MTX plus placebo, P = .05). In the smaller 7/8 cohort, grade 3-4 AGVHD was 2.3% (CNI/MTX plus abatacept, intention-to-treat population), which compared favorably with a nonrandomized matched cohort of CNI/MTX (30.2%, P < .001), and the SGFS was better (97.7% v 58.7%, P < .001). Immunologic analysis revealed control of T-cell activation in abatacept-treated patients. CONCLUSION Adding abatacept to URD HCT was safe, reduced AGVHD, and improved SGFS. These results suggest that abatacept may substantially improve AGVHD-related transplant outcomes, with a particularly beneficial impact on HLA-mismatched HCT.

Details

ISSN :
15277755
Volume :
39
Issue :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b6ef7b7224dca5b8fd51b3c034d8c0f2