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Phase II Study of Venetoclax Added to Cladribine Plus Low-Dose Cytarabine Alternating With 5-Azacitidine in Older Patients With Newly Diagnosed Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Authors :
Tapan M. Kadia
Patrick K. Reville
Xuemei Wang
Caitlin R. Rausch
Gautam Borthakur
Naveen Pemmaraju
Naval G. Daver
Courtney D. DiNardo
Koji Sasaki
Ghayas C. Issa
Maro Ohanian
Guillermo Montalban-Bravo
Nicholas J. Short
Nitin Jain
Alessandra Ferrajoli
Kapil N. Bhalla
Elias Jabbour
Koichi Takahashi
Rashmi Malla
Kelly Quagliato
Rashmi Kanagal-Shamanna
Uday R. Popat
Michael Andreeff
Guillermo Garcia-Manero
Marina Y. Konopleva
Farhad Ravandi
Hagop M. Kantarjian
Source :
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. 40(33)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

PURPOSE The combination of venetoclax and 5-azacitidine (5-AZA) for older or unfit patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) improves remission rates and survival compared with 5-AZA alone. We hypothesized that the addition of venetoclax to cladribine (CLAD)/low-dose araC (low-dose cytarabine [LDAC]) alternating with 5-AZA backbone may further improve outcomes for older patients with newly diagnosed AML. METHODS This is a phase II study investigating the combination of venetoclax and CLAD/LDAC alternating with venetoclax and 5-AZA in older (≥ 60 years) or unfit patients with newly diagnosed AML. The primary objective was composite complete response (CR) rate (CR plus CR with incomplete blood count recovery); secondary end points were overall survival, disease-free survival (DFS), overall response rate, and toxicity. RESULTS A total of 60 patients were treated; median age was 68 years (range, 57-84 years). By European LeukemiaNet, 23%, 33%, and 43% were favorable, intermediate, and adverse risk, respectively. Fifty-six of 60 evaluable patients responded (composite CR: 93%) and 84% were negative for measurable residual disease. There was one death (2%) within 4 weeks. With a median follow-up of 22.1 months, the median overall survival and DFS have not yet been reached. The most frequent grade 3/4 nonhematologic adverse events were febrile neutropenia (n = 33) and pneumonia (n = 14). One patient developed grade 4 tumor lysis syndrome. CONCLUSION Venetoclax and CLAD/LDAC alternating with venetoclax and 5-AZA is an effective regimen among older or unfit patients with newly diagnosed AML. The rates of overall survival and DFS are encouraging. Further study of this non–anthracycline-containing backbone in younger patients, unfit for intensive chemotherapy, as well as comparisons to standard frontline therapies is warranted.

Details

ISSN :
15277755
Volume :
40
Issue :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c04f470593a5d93126e85fa9b3f05a41