Venetoclax and idasanutlin in relapsed/refractory AML: a nonrandomized, open-label phase 1b trial

•Manageable safety and encouraging preliminary efficacy support extra evaluation of BCL-2/MDM2 inhibition in AML.•IDH1/2 and RUNX1 mutations were associated with ven-idasa sensitivity; TP53 mutations were unfavorable. [Display omitted] This phase 1b trial (NCT02670044) evaluated venetoclax-idasanutl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2023-03, Vol.141 (11), p.1265-1276
Hauptverfasser: Daver, Naval G., Dail, Monique, Garcia, Jacqueline S., Jonas, Brian A., Yee, Karen W. L., Kelly, Kevin R., Vey, Norbert, Assouline, Sarit, Roboz, Gail J., Paolini, Stefania, Pollyea, Daniel A., Tafuri, Agostino, Brandwein, Joseph M., Pigneux, Arnaud, Powell, Bayard L., Fenaux, Pierre, Olin, Rebecca L., Visani, Giuseppe, Martinelli, Giovanni, Onishi, Maika, Wang, Jue, Huang, Weize, Green, Cherie, Ott, Marion G., Hong, Wan-Jen, Konopleva, Marina Y., Andreeff, Michael
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Zusammenfassung:•Manageable safety and encouraging preliminary efficacy support extra evaluation of BCL-2/MDM2 inhibition in AML.•IDH1/2 and RUNX1 mutations were associated with ven-idasa sensitivity; TP53 mutations were unfavorable. [Display omitted] This phase 1b trial (NCT02670044) evaluated venetoclax-idasanutlin in patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) ineligible for cytotoxic chemotherapy. Two-dimensional dose escalation (DE, n = 50) was performed for venetoclax daily with idasanutlin on days 1 to 5 in 28-day cycles, followed by dosing schedule optimization (n = 6) to evaluate reduced venetoclax schedules (21-/14-day dosing). Common adverse events (occurring in ≥40% of patients) included diarrhea (87.3% of patients), nausea (74.5%), vomiting (52.7%), hypokalemia (50.9%), and febrile neutropenia (45.5%). During DE, across all doses, composite complete remission (CRc; CR + CR with incomplete blood count recovery + CR with incomplete platelet count recovery) rate was 26.0% and morphologic leukemia-free state (MLFS) rate was 12%. For anticipated recommended phase 2 doses (venetoclax 600 mg + idasanutlin 150 mg; venetoclax 600 mg + idasanutlin 200 mg), the combined CRc rate was 34.3% and the MLFS rate was 14.3%. Pretreatment IDH1/2 and RUNX1 mutations were associated with higher CRc rates (50.0% and 45.0%, respectively). CRc rate in patients with TP53 mutations was 20.0%, with responses noted among those with co-occurring IDH and RUNX1 mutations. In 12 out of 36 evaluable patients, 25 emergent TP53 mutations were observed; 22 were present at baseline with low TP53 variant allele frequency (median 0.0095% [range, 0.0006-0.4]). Venetoclax-idasanutlin showed manageable safety and encouraging efficacy in unfit patients with R/R AML. IDH1/2 and RUNX1 mutations were associated with venetoclax-idasanutlin sensitivity, even in some patients with co-occurring TP53 mutations; most emergent TP53 clones were preexisting. Our findings will aid ongoing/future trials of BCL-2/MDM2 inhibitor combinations. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02670044. Daver and colleagues report on a phase 1b trial combining venetoclax and the MDM inhibitor idasanutlin in patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who are ineligible for cytotoxic chemotherapy. Composite complete remissions are seen in 25-40% of patients; however, response duration is short. Patients with AML bearing IDH1/2 and RUNX1 mutations respond better, and th
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood.2022016362