1. Oral decitabine/cedazuridine versus intravenous decitabine for acute myeloid leukaemia: A randomised, crossover, registration, pharmacokinetics study.
- Author
-
Geissler, Klaus, Koristek, Zdenek, del Castillo, Teresa Bernal, Novák, Jan, Rodríguez‐Macías, Gabriela, Metzelder, Stephan K., Illes, Arpad, Mayer, Jiří, Arnan, Montserrat, Keating, Mary‐Margaret, Krauter, Jürgen, Lunghi, Monia, Fracchiolla, Nicola Stefano, Platzbecker, Uwe, Santini, Valeria, Sano, Yuri, Oganesian, Aram, Keer, Harold, and Lübbert, Michael
- Abstract
Summary: This study compared decitabine exposure when administered IV (DEC‐IV) at a dose of 20 mg/m2 for 5‐days with orally administered decitabine with cedazuridine (DEC‐C), as well as the clinical efficacy and safety of DEC‐C in patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) who were ineligible for intensive induction chemotherapy. In all, 89 patients were randomised 1:1 to DEC‐IV or oral DEC‐C (days 1–5 in a 28‐day treatment cycle), followed by 5 days of the other formulation in the next treatment cycle. All patients received oral DEC‐C for subsequent treatment cycles until treatment discontinuation. Equivalent systemic decitabine exposures were demonstrated (5‐day area under the curve ratio between the two decitabine formulations of 99.64 [90% confidence interval 91.23%, 108.80%]). Demethylation rates also were similar (≤1.1% difference). Median overall survival (OS), clinical response and safety profile with oral DEC‐C were consistent with those previously observed with DEC‐IV. Next‐generation sequencing was performed to identify molecular abnormalities that impact OS and TP53 mutations were associated with a poor outcome. These findings support the use of oral DEC‐C in patients with AML. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF