Multicenter phase 2 study of oral azacitidine (CC-486) plus CHOP as initial treatment for PTCL

•Addition of oral azacitidine to CHOP as initial therapy is safe, and induces high rates of CR in patients with PTCL-TFH.•Integrative analyses suggest that azacitidine priming promotes apoptosis and inflammation within the lymphoma tumor microenvironment. [Display omitted] Peripheral T-cell lymphoma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2023-05, Vol.141 (18), p.2194-2205
Hauptverfasser: Ruan, Jia, Moskowitz, Alison, Mehta-Shah, Neha, Sokol, Lubomir, Chen, Zhengming, Kotlov, Nikita, Nos, Grigorii, Sorokina, Maria, Maksimov, Vladislav, Sboner, Andrea, Sigouros, Michael, van Besien, Koen, Horwitz, Steven, Rutherford, Sarah C., Mulvey, Erin, Revuelta, Maria V., Xiang, Jenny, Alonso, Alicia, Melnick, Ari, Elemento, Olivier, Inghirami, Giorgio, Leonard, John P., Cerchietti, Leandro, Martin, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Addition of oral azacitidine to CHOP as initial therapy is safe, and induces high rates of CR in patients with PTCL-TFH.•Integrative analyses suggest that azacitidine priming promotes apoptosis and inflammation within the lymphoma tumor microenvironment. [Display omitted] Peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCL) with T-follicular helper phenotype (PTCL-TFH) has recurrent mutations affecting epigenetic regulators, which may contribute to aberrant DNA methylation and chemoresistance. This phase 2 study evaluated oral azacitidine (CC-486) plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) as initial treatment for PTCL. CC-486 at 300 mg daily was administered for 7 days before C1 of CHOP, and for 14 days before CHOP C2-6. The primary end point was end-of-treatment complete response (CR). Secondary end points included safety and survival. Correlative studies assessed mutations, gene expression, and methylation in tumor samples. Grade 3 to 4 hematologic toxicities were mostly neutropenia (71%), with febrile neutropenia uncommon (14%). Nonhematologic toxicities included fatigue (14%) and gastrointestinal symptoms (5%). In 20 evaluable patients, CR was 75%, including 88.2% for PTCL-TFH (n = 17). The 2-year progression-free survival (PFS) was 65.8% for all and 69.2% for PTCL-TFH, whereas 2-year overall survival (OS) was 68.4% for all and 76.1% for PTCL-TFH. The frequencies of the TET2, RHOA, DNMT3A, and IDH2 mutations were 76.5%, 41.1%, 23.5%, and 23.5%, respectively, with TET2 mutations significantly associated with CR (P = .007), favorable PFS (P = .004) and OS (P = .015), and DNMT3A mutations associated with adverse PFS (P = .016). CC-486 priming contributed to the reprograming of the tumor microenvironment by upregulation of genes related to apoptosis (P < .01) and inflammation (P < .01). DNA methylation did not show significant shift. This safe and active regimen is being further evaluated in the ALLIANCE randomized study A051902 in CD30-negative PTCL. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT03542266. Peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCLs) are a heterogeneous group that generally has disappointing response rates and short-lived response to cytotoxic chemotherapy. Ruan and colleagues report that epigenetic priming with the oral hypomethylating agent azacitidine in combination with first-line standard cytotoxic chemotherapy achieves a 75% complete remission rate and 66% 2-year progression-free survival in a phase 2 study, with effi
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood.2022018254