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Dose modification dynamics of ponatinib in patients with chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia (CP-CML) from the PACE and OPTIC trials.

Authors :
Jabbour, Elias
Jabbour, Elias
Apperley, Jane
Cortes, Jorge
Rea, Delphine
Deininger, Michael
Abruzzese, Elisabetta
Chuah, Charles
DeAngelo, Daniel
Hochhaus, Andreas
Lipton, Jeffrey
Mauro, Michael
Nicolini, Franck
Pinilla-Ibarz, Javier
Rosti, Gianantonio
Rousselot, Philippe
Talpaz, Moshe
Vorog, Alexander
Ren, Xiaowei
Kantarjian, Hagop
Shah, Neil Pravin
Jabbour, Elias
Jabbour, Elias
Apperley, Jane
Cortes, Jorge
Rea, Delphine
Deininger, Michael
Abruzzese, Elisabetta
Chuah, Charles
DeAngelo, Daniel
Hochhaus, Andreas
Lipton, Jeffrey
Mauro, Michael
Nicolini, Franck
Pinilla-Ibarz, Javier
Rosti, Gianantonio
Rousselot, Philippe
Talpaz, Moshe
Vorog, Alexander
Ren, Xiaowei
Kantarjian, Hagop
Shah, Neil Pravin
Source :
Leukemia; vol 38, iss 3
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Ponatinib, the only approved all known-BCR::ABL1 inhibitor, is a third-generation tyrosine-kinase inhibitor (TKI) designed to inhibit BCR::ABL1 with or without any single resistance mutation, including T315I, and induced robust and durable responses at 45 mg/day in patients with CP-CML resistant to second-generation TKIs in the PACE trial. However, cardiovascular toxicities, including arterial occlusive events (AOEs), have emerged as treatment-related AEs within this class of TKIs. The OPTIC trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of ponatinib using a novel, response-based, dose-reduction strategy in patients with CP-CML whose disease is resistant to ≥2 TKIs or who harbor T315I. To assess the dose-response relationship and the effect on the safety of ponatinib, we examined the outcomes of patients with CP-CML enrolled in PACE and OPTIC who received 45 mg/day of ponatinib. A propensity score analysis was used to evaluate AOEs across both trials. Survival rates and median time to achieve ≤1% BCR::ABL1IS in OPTIC were similar or better than in PACE. The outcomes of patients with T315I mutations were robust in both trials. Patients in OPTIC had a lower exposure-adjusted incidence of AOEs compared with those in PACE. This analysis demonstrates that response-based dosing for ponatinib improves treatment tolerance and mitigates cardiovascular risk.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Leukemia; vol 38, iss 3
Notes :
application/pdf, Leukemia vol 38, iss 3
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1449593685
Document Type :
Electronic Resource