567 results on '"Andrew D. Zelenetz"'
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2. Rituximab and lenalidomide for the treatment of relapsed or refractory indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma: real-life experience
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Giulio Cassanello, Esther Drill, Alfredo Rivas-Delgado, Michelle Okwali, Irem Isgor, Philip C. Caron, Zachary Epstein-Peterson, Paola Ghione, Paul Hamlin, Jennifer Lue, Steven M. Horwitz, Andrew M. Intlekofer, William Johnson, Anita Kumar, Alison Moskowitz, Ariela Noy, Colette Owens, Lia M. Palomba, Pallawi Torka, Pallavi Galera, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Gilles Salles, and Lorenzo Falchi
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
The combination of rituximab and lenalidomide (R-len) stands as an established treatment for relapsed/refractory (R/R) indolent non-Hodgkin lymphoma (iNHL). However, the reproducibility of clinical trial results in routine clinical practice is unknown. To address this gap in knowledge, we reviewed our experience with patients diagnosed with R/R follicular lymphoma (FL) or marginal zone lymphoma (MZL) treated with this combination. Eighty-four patients underwent treatment with R-len, 69 (82%) affected by FL and 15 (18%) by MZL. The median age at the time of treatment initiation was 65 years (range, 39-94), 38 patients (45%) had a pre-treatment FLIPI score of 3-5, 19 (23%) had a bulky disease, 29 (37%) had a lymphoma refractory to the last treatment line, while in 20 (24%) cases the disease was refractory to rituximab. The best overall response rate (ORR) was 82%, and 52% achieved a complete response (CR). The best CR rates for FL and MZL patients were 55% and 40%, respectively. With a median follow-up of 22 months, the median progression-free survival (mPFS) was 22 months (95% CI 19-36) and the 2-year overall survival (OS) was 83% (95% CI 74-93). The median duration of CR (DoCR) was 46 months (95% CI 22-NR). Factors associated with shorter PFS in multivariate analysis were bulky disease and rituximab refractoriness. The most common adverse events (AE) included hematologic toxicity, fatigue and gastrointestinal disorders, such as diarrhea and constipation. Neutropenia and thrombocytopenia were the most common severe toxicities (grade ≥3 in 25% and 4%, respectively). No new safety signals were reported. Real-life results of R-len in patients with R/R iNHL appear consistent with those reported in prospective studies, and further support its use as comparator arm in controlled clinical trials.
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- 2024
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3. The PI3Kδ inhibitor zandelisib on intermittent dosing in relapsed/refractory follicular lymphoma: Results from a global phase 2 study
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Andrew D. Zelenetz, Wojciech Jurczak, Vincent Ribrag, Kim Linton, Graham P. Collins, Javier L. Jiménez, Mark Bishton, Bhagirathbhai Dholaria, Andrea Mengarelli, Tycel J. Phillips, Nagendraprasad Sungala, Gerardo Musuraca, Oonagh Sheehy, Eric Van Den Neste, Mitsuhiko Odera, Lu Miao, Daniel P. Gold, Richard G. Ghalie, and Pier L. Zinzani
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Abstract In this global phase 2 study in patients with relapsed/refractory follicular lymphoma (FL), zandelisib was administered on intermittent dosing to mitigate immune‐related adverse events and infections that have been reported with oral PI3Kδ inhibitors administered daily continuously. Eligible patients with measurable disease and progression after at least two prior therapies were administered zandelisib until disease progression or intolerability. The primary efficacy endpoint was objective response rate (ORR) and the key secondary efficacy endpoint was duration of response (DOR). We report on 121 patients with FL administered zandelisib on intermittent dosing after 8 weeks of daily dosing for tumor debulking. The median number of prior therapies was 3 (range, 2–8) and 45% of patients had refractory disease. The ORR was 73% (95% confidence interval [CI], 63.9–80.4), the complete response (CR) rate was 38% (95% CI, 29.3–47.3), and the median DOR was 16.4 months (95% CI, 9.5–not reached). With a median follow‐up of 14.3 months (range, 1–30.5), the median progression‐free survival was 11.6 months (95% CI, 8.3–not reached). Twenty‐one patients (17%) discontinued therapy due to an adverse event. Grade 3–4 class‐related toxicities included 6% diarrhea, 5% lung infections, 3% colitis (confirmed by biopsy or imaging), 3% rash, 2% AST elevation, and 1% non‐infectious pneumonitis. Zandelisib achieved a high rate of durable responses in heavily pretreated patients with relapsed/refractory FL. The intermittent dosing resulted in a relatively low incidence of severe class‐related toxicities, which supports the evaluation of zandelisib as a single agent and in combination with indolent B‐cell malignancies.
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- 2024
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4. Erratum to: Immunochemotherapy plus lenalidomide for high-risk mantle cell lymphoma with measurable residual disease evaluation
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Zachary D. Epstein-Peterson, Esther Drill, Umut Aypar, Connie Lee Batlevi, Philip Caron, Ahmet Dogan, Pamela Drullinsky, John Gerecitano, Paul A. Hamlin, Caleb Ho, Allison Jacob, Ashlee Joseph, Leana Laraque, Matthew J. Matasar, Alison J. Moskowitz, Craig H. Moskowitz, Chelsea Mullins, Colette Owens, Gilles Salles, Heiko Schöder, David J. Straus, Anas Younes, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Anita Kumar
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2024
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5. Immunochemotherapy plus lenalidomide for high-risk mantle cell lymphoma with measurable residual disease evaluation
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Zachary D. Epstein-Peterson, Esther Drill, Umut Aypar, Connie Lee Batlevi, Philip Caron, Ahmet Dogan, Pamela Drullinsky, John Gerecitano, Paul A. Hamlin, Caleb Ho, Allison Jacob, Ashlee Joseph, Leana Laraque, Matthew J. Matasar, Alison J. Moskowitz, Craig H. Moskowitz, Chelsea Mullins, Colette Owens, Gilles Salles, Heiko Schöder, David J. Straus, Anas Younes, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Anita Kumar
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Chemoimmunotherapy followed by consolidative high-dose therapy with autologous stem cell rescue was a standard upfront treatment for fit patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) in first remission; however, treatment paradigms are evolving in the era of novel therapies. Lenalidomide is an immunomodulatory agent with known efficacy in treating MCL. We conducted a single-center, investigator-initiated, phase II study of immunochemotherapy incorporating lenalidomide, without autologous stem cell transplant consolidation, enriching for patients with high-risk MCL (clinicaltrials gov. Identifier: NCT02633137). Patients received four cycles of lenalidomide-R-CHOP, two cycles of R-HiDAC, and six cycles of R-lenalidomide. The primary endpoint was rate of 3-year progression-free survival. We measured measurable residual disease (MRD) using a next-generation sequencing-based assay after each phase of treatment and at 6 months following end-oftreatment. We enrolled 49 patients of which 47 were response evaluable. By intent-to-treat, rates of overall and complete response were equivalent at 88% (43/49), one patient with stable disease, and two patients had disease progression during study; 3-year progression-free survival was 63% (primary endpoint not met) and differed by TP53 status (78% wild-type vs. 38% ALT; P=0.043). MRD status was prognostic and predicted long-term outcomes following R-HiDAC and at 6 months following end-of-treatment. In a high-dose therapy-sparing, intensive approach, we achieved favorable outcomes in TP53- wild-type MCL, including high-risk cases. We confirmed that sequential MRD assessment is a powerful prognostic tool in patients with MCL.
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- 2023
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6. P1087: PIRTOBRUTINIB IN COVALENT BTK-INHIBITOR PRE-TREATED MANTLE CELL LYMPHOMA: UPDATED RESULTS AND SUBGROUP ANALYSIS FROM THE PHASE 1/2 BRUIN STUDY WITH >3 YEARS FOLLOW-UP FROM START OF ENROLLMENT
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Wojciech Jurczak, Pier Luigi Zinzani, Toby A. Eyre, Chan Y. Cheah, Chaitra S. Ujjani, Koji Izutsu, Shuo MA, Ian Flinn, Alvaro J. Alencar, David Lewis, Krish Patel, Kami Maddocks, Yucai Wang, Talha Munir, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Minna Balbas, Donald E. Tsai, Chunxiao Wang, Michael L. Wang, and Nirav N. Shah
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2023
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7. Clinical outcomes with use of radiation therapy and risk of transformation in early-stage follicular lymphoma
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Fushen Sha, Michelle Okwali, Anna Alperovich, Philip C. Caron, Lorenzo Falchi, Audrey Hamilton, Paul A. Hamlin, Steven M. Horwitz, Erel Joffe, Niloufer Khan, Anita Kumar, Matthew J. Matasar, Alison J. Moskowitz, Ariela Noy, Colette Owens, Lia M. Palomba, Ildefonso Rodriguez-Rivera, David Straus, Gottfried von Keudell, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Joachim Yahalom, Ahmet Dogan, Heiko Schöder, Venkatraman E. Seshan, Gilles Salles, Anas Younes, and Connie L. Batlevi
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Between 1998 and 2009, a total of 295 patients (median age 58, 53% females) with newly diagnosed early-stage follicular lymphoma (FL) were managed at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Approximately half of patients (137, 46%) underwent initial observation and half (158, 54%) immediate treatment: radiation alone (n = 108), systemic treatment alone (n = 29), or combined modality treatment (n = 21). Median follow-up was 8.4 years (range 0.3–17.2), and 10-year overall survival (OS) was 87.2%. OS was similar between initially-observed and immediately-treated patients (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.25, 95% CI: 0.67–2.36, p = 0.49). For patients receiving radiation alone, 5-year OS was 98.0%. Patients selected for systemic therapy alone had high-risk baseline features and had shorter OS than patients treated with radiation alone (HR 3.38, 95% CI 1.29–8.86, p = 0.01). Combined modality treatment did not yield superior survival compared with radiation alone (P > 0.05) but was associated with better progression-free survival (HR 0.36, 95% CI 0.14–0.90, p = 0.03). The rate of transformation increased steadily over time and was 4.2% at 5 years and 10.8% at 10 years. This modern-era analysis rationalized the role of initial observation in patients with early-stage FL although patients receiving radiation therapy also demonstrate excellent outcome.
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- 2022
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8. Interim Positron Emission Tomography During Frontline Chemoimmunotherapy for Follicular Lymphoma
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Reid W. Merryman, Laure Michaud, Robert Redd, Patrizia Mondello, Hyesun Park, Gabriela Spilberg, Matthew Robertson, Eleanor Taranto, Gulrayz Ahmed, Matthew Chase, Erin Jeter, Inhye E. Ahn, Jennifer R. Brown, Jennifer Crombie, Matthew S. Davids, David C. Fisher, Eric Jacobsen, Caron A. Jacobson, Austin I. Kim, Ann S. LaCasce, Samuel Y. Ng, Oreofe O. Odejide, Erin M. Parry, Gilles Salles, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Philippe Armand, Heiko Schöder, and Heather Jacene
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
While most patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) have excellent outcomes with frontline chemoimmunotherapy (CIT), a subset of patients will experience early progression, which is associated with poor subsequent outcomes. Novel biomarkers are needed to identify high-risk patients earlier. We hypothesized that interim positron emission tomography (PET) would predict progression-free survival (PFS) in this population. We retrospectively identified 128 patients with grade 1–3A FL who had an interim PET after 2–4 cycles of frontline CIT at 2 academic centers. PET scans were analyzed using Deauville score (DS) and change in maximum standardized uptake value (ΔSUVmax). Interim PET DS was a significant predictor of PFS (P < 0.003). Patients with a DS of 3 had outcomes similar to those of patients with a DS of 4, so were categorized as PET-positive for additional analyses. Interim PET remained a strong predictor of PFS (DS 3-5, hazard ratio [HR] 2.4, P = 0.006) in a multivariable analysis and was also an early predictor of both a positive end-of-treatment PET (P < 0.001) and progression of disease within 24 months (POD24) (P = 0.006). An optimal ΔSUVmax cutoff of 75% was selected using the bootstrap method. ΔSUVmax
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- 2023
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9. Prophylaxis with intrathecal or high-dose methotrexate in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and high risk of CNS relapse
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Sabela Bobillo, Erel Joffe, David Sermer, Patrizia Mondello, Paola Ghione, Philip C. Caron, Audrey Hamilton, Paul A. Hamlin, Steven M. Horwitz, Anita Kumar, Matthew J. Matasar, Connie L. Batlevi, Alison Moskowitz, Ariela Noy, Collette N. Owens, M. Lia Palomba, David Straus, Gottfried von Keudell, Ahmet Dogan, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Venkatraman E. Seshan, and Anas Younes
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Although methotrexate (MTX) is the most widely used therapy for central nervous system (CNS) prophylaxis in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the optimal regimen remains unclear. We examined the efficacy of different prophylactic regimens in 585 patients with newly diagnosed DLBCL and high-risk for CNS relapse, treated with rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP) or R-CHOP-like regimens from 2001 to 2017, of whom 295 (50%) received prophylaxis. Intrathecal (IT) MTX was given to 253 (86%) and high-dose MTX (HD-MTX) to 42 (14%). After a median follow-up of 6.8 years, 36 of 585 patients relapsed in the CNS, of whom 14 had received prophylaxis. The CNS relapse risk at 1 year was lower for patients who received prophylaxis than patients who did not: 2% vs. 7.1%. However, the difference became less significant over time (5-year risk 5.6% vs. 7.5%), indicating prophylaxis tended to delay CNS relapse rather than prevent it. Furthermore, the CNS relapse risk was similar in patients who received IT and HD-MTX (5-year risk 5.6% vs. 5.2%). Collectively, our data indicate the benefit of MTX for CNS prophylaxis is transient, highlighting the need for more effective prophylactic regimens. In addition, our results failed to demonstrate a clinical advantage for the HD-MTX regimen.
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- 2021
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10. Prephase rituximab/prednisone therapy and aging-related, proinflammatory cytokine milieu in older, vulnerable patients with newly diagnosed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
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Richard J. Lin, Colette N. Owens, Esther Drill, Augustine Iannotta, Mayan Oliveros, Dylan L. Schick, Ariela Noy, John F. Gerecitano, Pamela R. Drullinsky, Philip C. Caron, Anita Kumar, Matthew J. Matasar, Craig Moskowitz, Beatriz Korc-Grodzicki, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Gilles A. Salles, and Paul A. Hamlin
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) predominantly affects older adults with suboptimal therapeutic outcomes due to increased treatment-related mortality and toxicities in vulnerable patients, clinically defined by geriatric impairments such as functional limitation, multimorbidity, or cognitive deficits. In this prospective pilot study, we evaluated a rituximab/prednisone prephase treatment strategy in 33 older, vulnerable patients with newly diagnosed DLBCL, defined by either age ≥70 years or age 60-70 years with Karnofsky performance scale (KPS)
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- 2021
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11. Idelalisib addition has neutral to beneficial effects on quality of life in bendamustine/rituximab-treated patients: results of a phase 3, randomized, controlled trial
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Marco Montillo, Árpád Illés, Tadeusz Robak, Alexander S. Pristupa, Malgorzata Wach, Miklós Egyed, Julio Delgado, Wojciech Jurczak, Franck Morschhauser, Anna Schuh, Herbert Eradat, Sanatan Shreay, Jacqueline C. Barrientos, and Andrew D. Zelenetz
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Idelalisib ,Relapsed/refractory CLL ,Patient-related outcomes ,Health-related quality of life ,Randomized phase 3 study ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
Abstract Background In a phase 3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, treatment with idelalisib, a phosphoinositol-3 kinase δ inhibitor, + bendamustine/rituximab improved progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in adult patients with relapsed/refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (R/R CLL). Here we report the results of health-related quality of life (HRQL) analyses from this study. Methods From June 15, 2012 to August 21, 2014, 416 patients with R/R CLL were enrolled; 207 patients were randomized to the idelalisib arm and 209 to the placebo arm. In the 416 patients randomized to receive bendamustine/rituximab and either oral idelalisib 150 mg twice-daily or placebo, HRQL was assessed at baseline and throughout the blinded part of the study using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–Leukemia (FACT-Leu) and EuroQoL Five-Dimension (EQ-5D) visual analogue scale (VAS) questionnaires. The assessments were performed at scheduled patient visits; every 4 weeks for the first 6 months from the initiation of treatment, then every 8 weeks for the next 6 months, and every 12 weeks thereafter until end of study. Least-squares mean changes from baseline were estimated using a mixed-effects model by including treatment, time, and treatment-by-time interaction, and stratification factors as fixed effects. Time to first symptom improvement was assessed by Kaplan-Meier analysis. Results In mixed-effects model analysis, idelalisib + bendamustine/rituximab treatment led to clinically meaningful improvements from baseline in leukemia-associated symptoms. Moreover, per Kaplan-Meier analysis, the proportion of patients with symptom improvement was higher and time to improvement was shorter among patients in the idelalisib-containing arm compared with those who did not receive idelalisib. The physical and social/family FACT-Leu subscale scores, along with the self-rated health assessed by EQ-VAS, showed improvement with idelalisib over placebo, but the difference did not reach statistical significance. The functional and emotional FACT-Leu subscale scores remained similar to placebo. Conclusions Addition of idelalisib to bendamustine/rituximab, apart from improving PFS and OS, had a neutral to beneficial impact on HRQL in patients with R/R CLL, particularly by reducing leukemia-specific disease symptoms. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01569295. Registered April 3, 2012.
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- 2019
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12. Impact of idelalisib on health-related quality of life in patients with relapsed chronic lymphocytic leukemia in a phase III randomized trial
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Paolo Ghia, Steven E. Coutre, Bruce D. Cheson, Jacqueline C. Barrientos, Peter Hillmen, Andrew R. Pettitt, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Sanatan Shreay, Michael Hallek, and Richard R. Furman
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2020
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13. Clinical presentation determines selection of patients for initial observation in mantle cell lymphoma
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Anita Kumar, Zhitao Ying, Anna Alperovich, Ahmet Dogan, Paul Hamlin, Craig Moskowitz, Janine Pichardo, Carol Portlock, Fushen Sha, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Zhigang Zhang, Esther Drill, Kaitlin Woo, and Anas Younes
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2019
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14. Definition of bulky disease in early stage Hodgkin lymphoma in computed tomography era: prognostic significance of measurements in the coronal and transverse planes
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Anita Kumar, Irene A. Burger, Zhigang Zhang, Esther N. Drill, Jocelyn C. Migliacci, Andrea Ng, Ann LaCasce, Darci Wall, Thomas E. Witzig, Kay Ristow, Joachim Yahalom, Craig H. Moskowitz, and Andrew D. Zelenetz
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Disease bulk is an important prognostic factor in early stage Hodgkin lymphoma, but its definition is unclear in the computed tomography era. This retrospective analysis investigated the prognostic significance of bulky disease measured in transverse and coronal planes on computed tomography imaging. Early stage Hodgkin lymphoma patients (n=185) treated with chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy from 2000–2010 were included. The longest diameter of the largest lymph node mass was measured in transverse and coronal axes on pre-treatment imaging. The optimal cut off for disease bulk was maximal diameter greater than 7 cm measured in either the transverse or coronal plane. Thirty patients with maximal transverse diameter of 7 cm or under were found to have bulk in coronal axis. The 4-year overall survival was 96.5% (CI: 93.3%, 100%) and 4-year relapse-free survival was 86.8% (CI: 81.9%, 92.1%) for all patients. Relapse-free survival at four years for bulky patients was 80.5% (CI: 73%, 88.9%) compared to 94.4% (CI: 89.1%, 100%) for non-bulky; Cox HR 4.21 (CI: 1.43, 12.38) (P=0.004). In bulky patients, relapse-free survival was not impacted in patients treated with chemoradiotherapy; however, it was significantly lower in patients treated with chemotherapy alone. In an independent validation cohort of 38 patients treated with chemotherapy alone, patients with bulky disease had an inferior relapse-free survival [at 4 years, 71.1% (CI: 52.1%, 97%) vs. 94.1% (CI: 83.6%, 100%), Cox HR 5.27 (CI: 0.62, 45.16); P=0.09]. Presence of bulky disease on multidimensional computed tomography imaging is a significant prognostic factor in early stage Hodgkin lymphoma. Coronal reformations may be included for routine Hodgkin lymphoma staging evaluation. In future, our definition of disease bulk may be useful in identifying patients who are most appropriate for chemotherapy alone.
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- 2016
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15. A Cancer and Leukemia Group B multi-center study of DA-EPOCH-rituximab in untreated diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with analysis of outcome by molecular subtype
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Wyndham H. Wilson, Sin-Ho Jung, Pierluigi Porcu, David Hurd, Jeffrey Johnson, S. Eric Martin, Myron Czuczman, Raymond Lai, Jonathan Said, Amy Chadburn, Dan Jones, Kieron Dunleavy, George Canellos, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Bruce D. Cheson, and Eric D. Hsi
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Background A phase II trial of dose-adjusted etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and rituximab (DA-EPOCH-R) from the National Cancer Institute showed promising activity in untreated diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The Cancer and Leukemia Group B conducted a study to determine if these results could be reproduced in a multi-institutional setting.Design and Methods The study included 69 patients with untreated diffuse large B-cell lymphoma at least 18 years of age and at least stage II. Radiaton therapy was not permitted on study. Median age was 58 years (range 23–83) and 40% had high-intermediate or high International Prognostic Index risk. Immunohistochemical biomarkers for cell of origin and proliferation were performed.Results With a median follow up of 62 months, time to progression and overall survival were 81% and 84%, respectively, and time to progression was 87%, 92% and 54% for low/low-intermediate, high-intermediate and high International Prognostic Index risk groups, respectively, at 5-years and beyond. The time to progression and event-free survival of germinal center B-cell lymphoma were 100% and 94%, respectively, and non-germinal center B-cell GCB diffuse large B-cell lymphoma were 67% and 58%, respectively, at 62 months (germinal center vs. non-germinal center B cell P=0.008). DA-EPOCH-R was tolerated without significant grade 4 non-hematologic toxicities.Conclusions These results provide the first confirmation by a multi-institutional group that DA-EPOCH-R provides high durable remissions in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and is effective in both germinal center and non-germinal center B-cell subtypes. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.Gov (NCT00032019).
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- 2012
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16. Molecularly targeted epigenetic therapy with mocetinostat in relapsed and refractory non-Hodgkin lymphoma with CREBBP or EP300 mutations: an open label phase II study
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David Qualls, Ariela Noy, David Straus, Matthew Matasar, Craig Moskowitz, Venkatraman Seshan, Ahmet Dogan, Gilles Salles, Anas Younes, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Connie Lee Batlevi
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Hematology - Published
- 2023
17. Prognostic Value of18F-FDG PET/CT in Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma Treated with a Risk-Adapted Immunochemotherapy Regimen
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Laure Michaud, Kurt Bantilan, Audrey Mauguen, Craig H. Moskowitz, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Heiko Schöder
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging - Published
- 2022
18. Efficacy of Pirtobrutinib in Covalent BTK-Inhibitor Pre-Treated Relapsed / Refractory Mantle Cell Lymphoma: Additional Patients and Extended Follow-up from the Phase 1/2 BRUIN Study
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Michael L. Wang, Nirav N. Shah, Wojciech Jurczak, Pier Luigi Zinzani, Toby A. Eyre, Chan Y. Cheah, Chaitra S. Ujjani, Youngil Koh, Koji Izutsu, James N. Gerson, Ian W. Flinn, Benoit Tessoulin, Alvaro J. Alencar, Shuo Ma, Ewa Lech-Marańda, Joanna M. Rhodes, Krish Patel, Jennifer A. Woyach, Nicole Lamanna, Yucai Wang, Constantine S. Tam, John F. Seymour, Talha Munir, Hirokazu Nagai, Francisco Hernandez-Ilizaliturri, Anita Kumar, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Preetesh Jain, Binoj Nair, Donald E. Tsai, Minna Balbas, Richard A. Walgren, Paolo B. Abada, Chunxiao Wang, Junjie Zhao, and Anthony R. Mato
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
19. Next-generation ALK inhibitors are highly active in ALK-positive large B-cell lymphoma
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Jacob D. Soumerai, Allison Rosenthal, Shannon Harkins, Jessica Duffy, Carmen Mecca, Yingbing Wang, Ravinder K. Grewal, Areej R. El-Jawahri, Huiyun Liu, Cedric Menard, Ahmet Dogan, Lei Yang, Lisa M. Rimsza, Kurt Bantilan, Haley Martin, Matthew Lei, Sydney Mohr, Anna Kurilovich, Olga Kudryashova, Ekaterina Postovalova, Valentina Nardi, Jeremy S. Abramson, Roberto Chiarle, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Abner Louissaint
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Lymphoma, B-Cell ,Lung Neoplasms ,Immunology ,Humans ,Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
20. Adding Umbralisib and Ublituximab (U2) to Ibrutinib in Patients with CLL: A Phase II Study of an MRD-Driven Approach
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Lindsey E. Roeker, Tatyana A. Feldman, Jacob D. Soumerai, Victoria Falco, Gail Panton, Colleen Dorsey, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Lorenzo Falchi, Jae H. Park, David J. Straus, Camila Pena Velasquez, Sonia Lebowitz, Yehudit Fox, Kristen Battiato, Carissa Laudati, Meghan C. Thompson, Elizabeth McCarthy, Sabrina Kdiry, Rosalba Martignetti, Teja Turpuseema, Michelle Purdom, Dana Paskalis, Hari P. Miskin, Peter Sportelli, Lori A. Leslie, and Anthony R. Mato
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Purpose: Ibrutinib has transformed the management of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), though its use is limited by toxicity and resistance. In this study, we utilized an “add on” approach for patients who had been treated with ibrutinib in the front-line or relapsed/refractory settings with detectable MRD. Umbralisib and ublituximab (U2) were added on to ibrutinib, patients were treated until achieving undetectable-MRD (U-MRD), and then they entered a period of treatment-free observation (TFO). Patients and Methods: Patients were eligible if they received ibrutinib in any line of therapy for at least 6 months and had detectable MRD (flow cytometry, Results: Twenty-eight patients were enrolled of whom 27 were evaluable for efficacy. Patients received ibrutinib for a median of 21 months (range 7–67) prior to study enrollment. Fourteen patients (52%) have achieved U-MRD per protocol whereas 78% had at least one U-MRD evaluation. Seventeen patients (63%) have entered TFO after a median of 6.4 months on triplet therapy. Progression-free survival at 12 months was estimated at 95%. Grade ≥3 adverse events were hypertension 7%, diarrhea 4%, and increased ALT/AST 4%. Conclusions: This triplet approach utilizes the addition of U2 to ibrutinib as an MRD-driven time-limited therapy. This therapy was well tolerated and effective. TFO following this therapy appears durable in ongoing follow-up.
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- 2022
21. Pirtobrutinib in Covalent BTK-Inhibitor Pre-treated Mantle Cell Lymphoma
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Michael L. Wang, Wojciech Jurczak, Pier Luigi Zinzani, Toby A. Eyre, Chan Y. Cheah, Chaitra S. Ujjani, Youngil Koh, Koji Izutsu, James N. Gerson, Ian Flinn, Benoit Tessoulin, Alvaro J. Alencar, Shuo Ma, David Lewis, Ewa Lech-Maranda, Joanna Rhodes, Krish Patel, Kami Maddocks, Nicole Lamanna, Yucai Wang, Constantine S. Tam, Talha Munir, Hirokazu Nagai, Francisco Hernandez-Ilizaliturri, Anita Kumar, Timothy S. Fenske, John F. Seymour, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Binoj Nair, Donald E. Tsai, Minna Balbas, Richard A. Walgren, Paolo Abada, Chunxiao Wang, Junjie Zhao, Anthony R. Mato, and Nirav N. Shah
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
PURPOSE Pirtobrutinib is a highly selective, non-covalent (reversible) Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor (BTKi). We report the safety and efficacy of pirtobrutinib in patients with covalent (c) BTKi pre-treated mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), a population with poor prognosis. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with cBTKi pre-treated relapsed/refractory MCL received pirtobrutinib monotherapy in a multicenter phase 1/2 trial (BRUIN, NCT03740529). Efficacy was assessed in the first 90 consecutively enrolled patients who met criteria for inclusion in the primary efficacy cohort. The primary endpoint was overall response rate (ORR). Secondary endpoints included duration of response (DOR) and safety. RESULTS Median patient age was 70 years (range, 46-87), median prior lines of therapy 3 (range, 1-8), 82.2% had discontinued a prior cBTKi due to disease progression, and 77.8% had intermediate or high risk sMIPI score. The ORR was 57.8% (95% CI, 46.9-68.1), including 20.0% complete responses (n=18). At a median follow-up of 12 months, the median DOR was 21.6 months (95% CI, 7.5-not reached). The 6- and 12-month estimated DOR rates were 73.6% and 57.1%, respectively. In the MCL safety cohort (n=164), the most common treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAE) were fatigue (29.9%), diarrhea (21.3%), and dyspnea (16.5%). Grade ≥3 TEAE of hemorrhage (3.7%) and atrial fibrillation/flutter (1.2%) were less common. Only 3% of patients discontinued pirtobrutinib due to a treatment-related AE. CONCLUSION Pirtobrutinib is a first-in-class novel non-covalent (reversible) BTKi, and the first BTKi of any kind to demonstrate durable efficacy following prior cBTKi therapy in heavily pre-treated relapsed/refractory MCL. Pirtobrutinib was well tolerated with low rates of treatment discontinuation due to toxicity.
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- 2023
22. TP53 mutations identify high-risk events for peripheral T-cell lymphoma treated with CHOP-based chemotherapy
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William T Johnson, Nivetha Ganesan, Zachary D Epstein-Peterson, Alison J. Moskowitz, Robert N Stuver, Catherine R Maccaro, Natasha Galasso, Tiffany Chang, Niloufer Khan, Umut Aypar, Natasha E Lewis, Andrew D Zelenetz, M. Lia Palomba, Matthew J Matasar, Ariela Noy, Audrey M Hamilton, Paul A. Hamlin, Philip C Caron, David J Straus, Andrew M Intlekofer, Connie Lee Batlevi, Anita Kumar, Colette N Owens, Craig S Sauter, Lorenzo Falchi, Jennifer K Lue, Santosha A Vardhana, Gilles A. Salles, Ahmet Dogan, Nikolaus D Schultz, Maria E Arcila, and Steven M Horwitz
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Hematology - Abstract
Nodal peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PTCL), the most common PTCLs, are generally treated with CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, prednisone)-based curative-intent chemotherapy. Recent molecular data have assisted in prognosticating these PTCLs, but most reports lack detailed baseline clinical characteristics and treatment courses. We retrospectively evaluated cases of PTCL treated with CHOP-based chemotherapy that had tumors sequenced by the Memorial Sloan Kettering Integrated Mutational Profiling of Actionable Cancer Targets (MSK-IMPACT) next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel to identify variables correlating with inferior survival. We identified 132 patients who met these criteria. Clinical factors correlating with increased risk of progression (by multivariate analysis) were advanced-stage disease (HR, 5.1; 95% CI, 1.1-22.5, P=.03) and bone marrow involvement (HR, 3.0; 95% CI, 1.1-8.4; P=.04). The only somatic genetic aberrancies correlating with inferior progression-free survival (PFS) were TP53 mutations (HR, 3.1; 95% CI, 1.4-6.8; P=.005) and TP53/17p deletions (HR, 4.1; 95% CI, 1.1-15.0, P=.03). PFS remained inferior when stratifying by TP53 mutation status, with a median PFS of 4.5 months (95% CI, 3.8-13.9) for PTCL with a TP53 mutation (n=21) vs 10.5 months (95% CI, 7.8-18.1; P
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- 2023
23. Supplementary Data from Adding Umbralisib and Ublituximab (U2) to Ibrutinib in Patients with CLL: A Phase II Study of an MRD-Driven Approach
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Anthony R. Mato, Lori A. Leslie, Peter Sportelli, Hari P. Miskin, Dana Paskalis, Michelle Purdom, Teja Turpuseema, Rosalba Martignetti, Sabrina Kdiry, Elizabeth McCarthy, Meghan C. Thompson, Carissa Laudati, Kristen Battiato, Yehudit Fox, Sonia Lebowitz, Camila Pena Velasquez, David J. Straus, Jae H. Park, Lorenzo Falchi, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Colleen Dorsey, Gail Panton, Victoria Falco, Jacob D. Soumerai, Tatyana A. Feldman, and Lindsey E. Roeker
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Supplementary Data from Adding Umbralisib and Ublituximab (U2) to Ibrutinib in Patients with CLL: A Phase II Study of an MRD-Driven Approach
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- 2023
24. Supplemental Figure 4 from Phase I/Ib Study of the Efficacy and Safety of Buparlisib and Ibrutinib Therapy in MCL, FL, and DLBCL with Serial Cell-Free DNA Monitoring
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Connie Lee Batlevi, Dana W.Y. Tsui, Anas Younes, Heiko Schöder, Venkatraman Seshan, Gilles Salles, Jurgen Rademaker, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Alison Moskowitz, Craig H. Moskowitz, Anita Kumar, Steven M. Horwitz, David Straus, Audrey Hamilton, Pamela Drullinsky, John F. Gerecitano, Matthew J. Matasar, Paul A. Hamlin, Stephanie De Frank, Chelsea Nichols, Reiko Nakajima, Karissa Whiting, Laure Michaud, and Caitlin M. Stewart
- Abstract
Supplemental Figure S4. Progression-free survival Kaplan-Meier curves based on PET and ctDNA parameters. A. PFS based on baseline SUV categorized into lower and higher than median. B. PFS based on baseline tumor glycolysis level lower or higher than median. C. PFS based on baseline metabolic tumor volume (MTV) lower or higher than median.
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- 2023
25. Data from Assessment of the Efficacy of Therapies Following Venetoclax Discontinuation in CLL Reveals BTK Inhibition as an Effective Strategy
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Toby A. Eyre, John N. Allan, Bruce D. Cheson, Kayla Bigelow, Colleen Dorsey, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Amber C. King, Julie M. Goodfriend, Chadi Nabhan, Hanna B. Weissbrot, Jason C. Lee, Neil Bailey, Erica B. Bhavsar, Talha Munir, Nicolas Martinez-Calle, Christopher P. Fox, Thomas D. Rodgers, Stephen J. Schuster, Timothy J. Voorhees, Kentson Lam, Rachael Pocock, Othman S. Akhtar, Pratik Shah, Krista M. Isaac, Ariel F. Grajales-Cruz, Sirin Khajavian, Andrea Sitlinger, Allison M. Winter, Kate J. Whitaker, Christine A. Garcia, Helen Parry, Craig A. Portell, Paul M. Barr, Joanna Rhodes, Catherine C. Coombs, Michael Choi, Bita Fakhri, Satyen Gohil, John M. Pagel, Jeffrey J. Pu, Pallawi Torka, Alan P. Skarbnik, Jacqueline Barrientos, Javier A. Pinilla-Ibarz, Guilherme Fleury Perini, Maryam Sarraf Yazdy, Chaitra S. Ujjani, Mazyar Shadman, Danielle Brander, Nicole Lamanna, Brian T. Hill, Ryan Jacobs, Lindsey E. Roeker, and Anthony R. Mato
- Abstract
Purpose:Venetoclax-based therapy is a standard-of-care option in first-line and relapsed/refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Patient management following venetoclax discontinuation remains nonstandard and poorly understood.Experimental Design:To address this, we conducted a large international study to identify a cohort of 326 patients who discontinued venetoclax and have been subsequently treated. Coprimary endpoints were overall response rate (ORR) and progression-free survival for the post-venetoclax treatments stratified by treatment type [Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitor (BTKi), PI3K inhibitor (PI3Ki), and cellular therapies].Results:We identified patients with CLL who discontinued venetoclax in the first-line (4%) and relapsed/refractory settings (96%). Patients received a median of three therapies prior to venetoclax; 40% were BTKi naïve (n = 130), and 81% were idelalisib naïve (n = 263). ORR to BTKi was 84% (n = 44) in BTKi-naïve patients versus 54% (n = 30) in BTKi-exposed patients. We demonstrate therapy selection following venetoclax requires prior novel agent exposure consideration and discontinuation reasons.Conclusions:For BTKi-naïve patients, selection of covalently binding BTKis results in high ORR and durable remissions. For BTKi-exposed patients, covalent BTK inhibition is not effective in the setting of BTKi resistance. PI3Kis following venetoclax do not appear to result in durable remissions. We conclude that BTKi in naïve or previously responsive patients and cellular therapies following venetoclax may be the most effective strategies.See related commentary by Rogers, p. 3501
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- 2023
26. Supplemental Figure 3 from Phase I/Ib Study of the Efficacy and Safety of Buparlisib and Ibrutinib Therapy in MCL, FL, and DLBCL with Serial Cell-Free DNA Monitoring
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Connie Lee Batlevi, Dana W.Y. Tsui, Anas Younes, Heiko Schöder, Venkatraman Seshan, Gilles Salles, Jurgen Rademaker, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Alison Moskowitz, Craig H. Moskowitz, Anita Kumar, Steven M. Horwitz, David Straus, Audrey Hamilton, Pamela Drullinsky, John F. Gerecitano, Matthew J. Matasar, Paul A. Hamlin, Stephanie De Frank, Chelsea Nichols, Reiko Nakajima, Karissa Whiting, Laure Michaud, and Caitlin M. Stewart
- Abstract
Supplemental Figure S3. A. Waterfall plot based on RECIL criteria. RECIL introduces the minimal response category which is a 10-30% reduction in the sum of longest diameters of target lesions. B. Event-free survival Kaplan-Meier curve.
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- 2023
27. Supplementary Figure S1 from The PARP Inhibitor Veliparib Can Be Safely Added to Bendamustine and Rituximab and Has Preliminary Evidence of Activity in B-Cell Lymphoma
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John F. Gerecitano, Nishant Mishra, Fallon France, Thu O. Dang, Christine Jarjies, Richard F. Little, Alice Chen, Zhigang Zhang, Brian Kiesel, Jan H. Beumer, Alan L. Ho, Richard D. Carvajal, Devika Gajria, Matthew G. Fury, Martin H. Voss, David M. Hyman, Mrinal M. Gounder, Jason A. Konner, Carol S. Portlock, Steven M. Horwitz, Matthew J. Matasar, Anas Younes, Alison J. Moskowitz, David J. Straus, Ariela Noy, Paul A. Hamlin, M. Lia Palomba, Craig H. Moskowitz, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Jacob D. Soumerai
- Abstract
CONSORT Diagram.
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- 2023
28. Supplemental Figure 2 from Assessment of the Efficacy of Therapies Following Venetoclax Discontinuation in CLL Reveals BTK Inhibition as an Effective Strategy
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Toby A. Eyre, John N. Allan, Bruce D. Cheson, Kayla Bigelow, Colleen Dorsey, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Amber C. King, Julie M. Goodfriend, Chadi Nabhan, Hanna B. Weissbrot, Jason C. Lee, Neil Bailey, Erica B. Bhavsar, Talha Munir, Nicolas Martinez-Calle, Christopher P. Fox, Thomas D. Rodgers, Stephen J. Schuster, Timothy J. Voorhees, Kentson Lam, Rachael Pocock, Othman S. Akhtar, Pratik Shah, Krista M. Isaac, Ariel F. Grajales-Cruz, Sirin Khajavian, Andrea Sitlinger, Allison M. Winter, Kate J. Whitaker, Christine A. Garcia, Helen Parry, Craig A. Portell, Paul M. Barr, Joanna Rhodes, Catherine C. Coombs, Michael Choi, Bita Fakhri, Satyen Gohil, John M. Pagel, Jeffrey J. Pu, Pallawi Torka, Alan P. Skarbnik, Jacqueline Barrientos, Javier A. Pinilla-Ibarz, Guilherme Fleury Perini, Maryam Sarraf Yazdy, Chaitra S. Ujjani, Mazyar Shadman, Danielle Brander, Nicole Lamanna, Brian T. Hill, Ryan Jacobs, Lindsey E. Roeker, and Anthony R. Mato
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Supplemental Figure 2: Progression free survival of patients without prior BTKi exposure who had progressed on venetoclax and were then treated with BTKi.
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- 2023
29. Supplementary Figure Legends from The PARP Inhibitor Veliparib Can Be Safely Added to Bendamustine and Rituximab and Has Preliminary Evidence of Activity in B-Cell Lymphoma
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John F. Gerecitano, Nishant Mishra, Fallon France, Thu O. Dang, Christine Jarjies, Richard F. Little, Alice Chen, Zhigang Zhang, Brian Kiesel, Jan H. Beumer, Alan L. Ho, Richard D. Carvajal, Devika Gajria, Matthew G. Fury, Martin H. Voss, David M. Hyman, Mrinal M. Gounder, Jason A. Konner, Carol S. Portlock, Steven M. Horwitz, Matthew J. Matasar, Anas Younes, Alison J. Moskowitz, David J. Straus, Ariela Noy, Paul A. Hamlin, M. Lia Palomba, Craig H. Moskowitz, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Jacob D. Soumerai
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Supplementary Figure Legends
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- 2023
30. Data from Adding Umbralisib and Ublituximab (U2) to Ibrutinib in Patients with CLL: A Phase II Study of an MRD-Driven Approach
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Anthony R. Mato, Lori A. Leslie, Peter Sportelli, Hari P. Miskin, Dana Paskalis, Michelle Purdom, Teja Turpuseema, Rosalba Martignetti, Sabrina Kdiry, Elizabeth McCarthy, Meghan C. Thompson, Carissa Laudati, Kristen Battiato, Yehudit Fox, Sonia Lebowitz, Camila Pena Velasquez, David J. Straus, Jae H. Park, Lorenzo Falchi, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Colleen Dorsey, Gail Panton, Victoria Falco, Jacob D. Soumerai, Tatyana A. Feldman, and Lindsey E. Roeker
- Abstract
Purpose:Ibrutinib has transformed the management of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), though its use is limited by toxicity and resistance. In this study, we utilized an “add on” approach for patients who had been treated with ibrutinib in the front-line or relapsed/refractory settings with detectable MRD. Umbralisib and ublituximab (U2) were added on to ibrutinib, patients were treated until achieving undetectable-MRD (U-MRD), and then they entered a period of treatment-free observation (TFO).Patients and Methods:Patients were eligible if they received ibrutinib in any line of therapy for at least 6 months and had detectable MRD (flow cytometry, –4 cutoff for U-MRD). U2 was added to ibrutinib, and patients were monitored serially for MRD. Once U-MRD was achieved or a total of 24 cycles were administered, patients entered a period of TFO. The primary study objective was rate of U-MRD. Secondary endpoints included safety and durability of clinical benefit after treatment discontinuation.Results:Twenty-eight patients were enrolled of whom 27 were evaluable for efficacy. Patients received ibrutinib for a median of 21 months (range 7–67) prior to study enrollment. Fourteen patients (52%) have achieved U-MRD per protocol whereas 78% had at least one U-MRD evaluation. Seventeen patients (63%) have entered TFO after a median of 6.4 months on triplet therapy. Progression-free survival at 12 months was estimated at 95%. Grade ≥3 adverse events were hypertension 7%, diarrhea 4%, and increased ALT/AST 4%.Conclusions:This triplet approach utilizes the addition of U2 to ibrutinib as an MRD-driven time-limited therapy. This therapy was well tolerated and effective. TFO following this therapy appears durable in ongoing follow-up.
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- 2023
31. Supplemental Figure 1 from Assessment of the Efficacy of Therapies Following Venetoclax Discontinuation in CLL Reveals BTK Inhibition as an Effective Strategy
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Toby A. Eyre, John N. Allan, Bruce D. Cheson, Kayla Bigelow, Colleen Dorsey, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Amber C. King, Julie M. Goodfriend, Chadi Nabhan, Hanna B. Weissbrot, Jason C. Lee, Neil Bailey, Erica B. Bhavsar, Talha Munir, Nicolas Martinez-Calle, Christopher P. Fox, Thomas D. Rodgers, Stephen J. Schuster, Timothy J. Voorhees, Kentson Lam, Rachael Pocock, Othman S. Akhtar, Pratik Shah, Krista M. Isaac, Ariel F. Grajales-Cruz, Sirin Khajavian, Andrea Sitlinger, Allison M. Winter, Kate J. Whitaker, Christine A. Garcia, Helen Parry, Craig A. Portell, Paul M. Barr, Joanna Rhodes, Catherine C. Coombs, Michael Choi, Bita Fakhri, Satyen Gohil, John M. Pagel, Jeffrey J. Pu, Pallawi Torka, Alan P. Skarbnik, Jacqueline Barrientos, Javier A. Pinilla-Ibarz, Guilherme Fleury Perini, Maryam Sarraf Yazdy, Chaitra S. Ujjani, Mazyar Shadman, Danielle Brander, Nicole Lamanna, Brian T. Hill, Ryan Jacobs, Lindsey E. Roeker, and Anthony R. Mato
- Abstract
Supplemental Figure 1: Overall survival of entire cohort from initiation of venetoclax.
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- 2023
32. Supplemental Figure 2 from Phase I/Ib Study of the Efficacy and Safety of Buparlisib and Ibrutinib Therapy in MCL, FL, and DLBCL with Serial Cell-Free DNA Monitoring
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Connie Lee Batlevi, Dana W.Y. Tsui, Anas Younes, Heiko Schöder, Venkatraman Seshan, Gilles Salles, Jurgen Rademaker, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Alison Moskowitz, Craig H. Moskowitz, Anita Kumar, Steven M. Horwitz, David Straus, Audrey Hamilton, Pamela Drullinsky, John F. Gerecitano, Matthew J. Matasar, Paul A. Hamlin, Stephanie De Frank, Chelsea Nichols, Reiko Nakajima, Karissa Whiting, Laure Michaud, and Caitlin M. Stewart
- Abstract
Supplemental Figure S2. A. Comparison of treatment-related and -unrelated adverse events occurring in >10% of evaluable patients.
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- 2023
33. Data from The PARP Inhibitor Veliparib Can Be Safely Added to Bendamustine and Rituximab and Has Preliminary Evidence of Activity in B-Cell Lymphoma
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John F. Gerecitano, Nishant Mishra, Fallon France, Thu O. Dang, Christine Jarjies, Richard F. Little, Alice Chen, Zhigang Zhang, Brian Kiesel, Jan H. Beumer, Alan L. Ho, Richard D. Carvajal, Devika Gajria, Matthew G. Fury, Martin H. Voss, David M. Hyman, Mrinal M. Gounder, Jason A. Konner, Carol S. Portlock, Steven M. Horwitz, Matthew J. Matasar, Anas Younes, Alison J. Moskowitz, David J. Straus, Ariela Noy, Paul A. Hamlin, M. Lia Palomba, Craig H. Moskowitz, Andrew D. Zelenetz, and Jacob D. Soumerai
- Abstract
Purpose: The PARP inhibitor veliparib enhances the cytotoxicity of alkylating agents. This phase I study evaluated veliparib with the bifunctional alkylator bendamustine (VB) in patients with relapsed/refractory lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and solid malignancies, with a cohort expansion of VB with rituximab (VBR) in patients with B-cell lymphomas.Experimental Design: This dose-escalation study evaluated safety, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary efficacy of veliparib (20–400 mg twice a day, days 1–7 of 28-day cycle) and bendamustine (70 and 90 mg/m2 intravenously, days 1 and 2). A cohort expansion was conducted, which combined veliparib and bendamustine at the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) with rituximab (375 mg/m2, day 1) in patients with B-cell lymphomas. Thirty-four patients were treated in seven dose-escalation cohorts and seven patients in the dose-expansion cohort.Results: The MTD was veliparib 300 mg twice daily plus bendamustine 90 mg/m2. Dose-limiting toxicities (DLT) were anemia, nausea, hypertension, and hyperhidrosis. Grade ≥3 toxicities included lymphopenia (87.8%), anemia (19.5%), neutropenia (12.2%), thrombocytopenia (9.8%), leukopenia (9.8%), nausea (7.3%), and hypophosphatemia (7.3%). Apparent veliparib clearance was slightly lower than previously reported. Of 14 patients with lymphoma evaluable for response, five of seven (71%) on VB and six of seven (86%) on VBR achieved objective response. One patient with multiple myeloma achieved partial response.Conclusions: VB and VBR were generally well-tolerated. VBR had preliminary clinical activity in patients with B-cell lymphoma, which warrants further investigation in a phase II trial. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01326702. Clin Cancer Res; 23(15); 4119–26. ©2017 AACR.
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- 2023
34. Supplemental Figure 1 from Phase I/Ib Study of the Efficacy and Safety of Buparlisib and Ibrutinib Therapy in MCL, FL, and DLBCL with Serial Cell-Free DNA Monitoring
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Connie Lee Batlevi, Dana W.Y. Tsui, Anas Younes, Heiko Schöder, Venkatraman Seshan, Gilles Salles, Jurgen Rademaker, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Alison Moskowitz, Craig H. Moskowitz, Anita Kumar, Steven M. Horwitz, David Straus, Audrey Hamilton, Pamela Drullinsky, John F. Gerecitano, Matthew J. Matasar, Paul A. Hamlin, Stephanie De Frank, Chelsea Nichols, Reiko Nakajima, Karissa Whiting, Laure Michaud, and Caitlin M. Stewart
- Abstract
Supplemental Figure S1. Dosing of patients on study. A. MCL cohort. B. FL cohort. C. DLBCL cohort.
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- 2023
35. Brentuximab Vedotin Combined with Chemotherapy in Newly Diagnosed, Early-Stage, Unfavorable-Risk Hodgkin Lymphoma: Extended Follow-up with Evaluation of Baseline Metabolic Tumor Volume and PET2
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Robert Stuver, Laure Michaud, Carla Casulo, Ranjana H. Advani, Elizabeth L. Budde, Paul M. Barr, Connie Lee Batlevi, Philip C Caron, Louis S. Constine, Savita Dandapani, Pamela Drullinsky, Jonathan W. Friedberg, Clare Grieve, Audrey Hamilton, Paul A. Hamlin, Richard Hoppe, Steven M. Horwitz, Niloufer Khan, Matthew J. Matasar, Ariela Noy, M.Lia Palomba, Heiko Schoder, David J. Straus, Shreya Vemuri, Joachim Yahalom, Joanna C. Yang, Anas Younes, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Craig H. Moskowitz, Anita Kumar, and Alison J. Moskowitz
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
36. Molecular Profiling across Lymphoma Subtypes Using MSK-Impact Next Generation Sequencing
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Connie Lee Batlevi, Esther Drill, Michelle Okwali, Ryan Ptashkin, Philip C Caron, Zachary D. Epstein-Peterson, Lorenzo Falchi, Audrey Hamilton, Paul A. Hamlin, Steven M. Horwitz, Andrew M. Intlekofer, William T. Johnson, Niloufer Khan, Anita Kumar, Jennifer Kimberly Lue, Matthew J. Matasar, Alison J. Moskowitz, Ariela Noy, Colette Owens, Maria Lia Palomba, David J. Straus, Santosha Vardhana, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Maria E. Arcila, Ahmet Dogan, Venkatraman Seshan, Gilles Salles, Ahmet Zehir, and Anas Younes
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
37. Efficacy and Safety of Single-Agent Zandelisib Administered By Intermittent Dosing in Patients with Relapsed or Refractory (R/R) Follicular Lymphoma (FL): Final Results of the Tidal Phase 2 Study
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Andrew D. Zelenetz, Wojciech Jurczak, Vincent Ribrag, Kim M. Linton, Graham P. Collins, Mark Bishton, Javier López Jiménez, Bhagirathbhai Dholaria, Andrea Mengarelli, Tycel J. Phillips, Nagendra Prasad Sungala, Henry Chan, Gerardo Musuraca, Oonagh Sheehy, Junyi Yan, Weiming Xu, Michel Azoulay, and Pier Luigi Zinzani
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
38. Immune Signature of Pembrolizumab Plus Gemcitabine, Vinorelbine, and Liposomal Doxorubicin As Second-Line Therapy for Relapsed or Refractory Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma
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Beatriz Wills, Nivetha Ganesan, Gunjan L. Shah, Phillip Wong, Kimon V. Argyropoulos, Filiz Sen, Ahmet Dogan, David J. Straus, Ariela Noy, Anita Kumar, Heiko Schoder, Laure Michaud, Maria Lia Palomba, Lorenzo Falchi, Oscar B Lahoud, Paul A. Hamlin, Joachim Yahalom, William T. Johnson, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Andrew M. Intlekofer, Colette Owens, Connie Lee Batlevi, Audrey Hamilton, Philip C Caron, Steven M. Horwitz, Natasha Galasso, Helen Hancock, Theresa Davey, Alayna Santarosa, Leslie Perez, Charisse Capadona, Brittney Munayirji, Matthew J. Matasar, Georgios Pongas, Ellie Casper, Gilles Salles, Craig H. Moskowitz, Santosha Vardhana, and Alison J. Moskowitz
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
39. Kinase Dead BTK Mutations Confer Resistance to Covalent and Noncovalent BTK Inhibitors but Are Susceptible to Clinical Stage BTK Degraders
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Skye Montoya, Jessie Bourcier, Meghan C. Thompson, Mark Noviski, May Tan, Eric Wang, Xiaoli Mi, Nivetha Brathaban, Carla Barrientos Risso, Daniel Tsai, Jordan Ye, Jacob Jahn, Gabriel Pardo, Lee Cabuhat, Ryan Notti, Alejandro Pardo, Maurizio Affer, Stephanie Yung, James Luliano, Janine Powers, Daniel W Robbins, Vindhya Nawaratne, Tulasigeri M Totiger, Camila Pena-Velasquez, Joanna M. Rhodes, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Lindsey E. Roeker, Hao Lu, Adam Linley, Anthony R. Mato, Omar Abdel-Wahab, and Justin Taylor
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
40. Safety and Efficacy of the PI3Kδ Inhibitor Zandelisib in Combination with the BTK Inhibitor Zanubrutinib in Patients with Relapsed/Refractory (R/R) Follicular Lymphoma (FL) or Mantle Cell Lymphoma (MCL)
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Jacob D. Soumerai, Catherine S. Diefenbach, Felipe Samaniego, Abhijeet Kumar, Michaela L. Tsai, Adam S. Asch, Deepa Jagadeesh, Vaishalee P. Kenkre, Izidore S. Lossos, Huda Salman, Farrukh T. Awan, Lu Miao, Richard G. Ghalie, and Andrew D. Zelenetz
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
41. Long-Term Outcome of Patients with Follicular Lymphoma Is Not Fundamentally Affected By KMT2D, EZH2, and Crebbp Mutational Status
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Kurt S. Bantilan, Kayleigh Rutherford, Joseph McCarter, Noushin Farnoud, Juan E. Arango-Ossa, Elli Papaemmanuil, and Andrew D. Zelenetz
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
42. Characterization of a Large Cohort of Patients with Nodal Marginal Zone Lymphoma Shows Prolonged Survival, Time-to-Treatment, and Time-to-Transformation
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Robert Stuver, Esther Drill, David Qualls, Michelle Okwali, Connie Lee Batlevi, Philip C Caron, Zachary D. Epstein-Peterson, Lorenzo Falchi, Audrey Hamilton, Paul A. Hamlin, Steven M. Horwitz, Andrew M. Intlekofer, William T. Johnson, Niloufer Khan, Oscar B Lahoud, Jennifer Kimberly Lue, Matthew J. Matasar, Alison J. Moskowitz, Ariela Noy, M.Lia Palomba, Santosha Vardhana, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Gilles Salles, and David J. Straus
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Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
43. Phase I/Ib Study of the Efficacy and Safety of Buparlisib and Ibrutinib Therapy in MCL, FL, and DLBCL with Serial Cell-Free DNA Monitoring
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Audrey Hamilton, Heiko Schöder, Karissa Whiting, Reiko Nakajima, Dana W.Y. Tsui, Steven M. Horwitz, Alison J. Moskowitz, Stephanie De Frank, Caitlin Stewart, Craig H. Moskowitz, John F. Gerecitano, Laure Michaud, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Venkatraman E. Seshan, Paul A. Hamlin, Connie Lee Batlevi, Pamela Drullinsky, David J. Straus, Jürgen Rademaker, Gilles Salles, Chelsea Nichols, Anita Kumar, Matthew J. Matasar, and Anas Younes
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Adult ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Morpholines ,Buparlisib ,Follicular lymphoma ,Aminopyridines ,Lymphoma, Mantle-Cell ,Article ,Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Piperidines ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Bruton's tyrosine kinase ,Adverse effect ,biology ,business.industry ,Adenine ,medicine.disease ,Rash ,Lymphoma ,Pyrimidines ,chemistry ,Ibrutinib ,biology.protein ,Pyrazoles ,Mantle cell lymphoma ,Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cell-Free Nucleic Acids - Abstract
Purpose: Activation of Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) represent parallel, synergistic pathways in lymphoma pathogenesis. As predominant PI3Kδ inhibition is a possible mechanism of tumor escape, we proposed a clinical trial of dual BTK and pan-PI3K inhibition. Patients and Methods: We conducted a single-center phase I/Ib trial combining a BTK inhibitor (ibrutinib) and a pan-PI3K inhibitor (buparlisib) in 37 patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) B-cell lymphoma. Buparlisib and ibrutinib were administered orally, once daily in 28-day cycles until progression or unacceptable toxicity. The clinical trial is registered with clinicaltrials.gov, NCT02756247. Results: Patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) receiving the combination had a 94% overall response rate (ORR) and 33-month median progression-free survival; ORR of 31% and 20% were observed in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and follicular lymphoma, respectively. The maximum tolerated dose was ibrutinib 560 mg plus buparlisib 100 mg and the recommended phase II dose was ibrutinib 560 mg plus buparlisib 80 mg. The most common grade 3 adverse events were rash/pruritis/dermatitis (19%), diarrhea (11%), hyperglycemia (11%), and hypertension (11%). All grade mood disturbances ranging from anxiety, depression, to agitation were observed in 22% of patients. Results from serial monitoring of cell-free DNA samples corresponded to radiographic resolution of disease and tracked the emergence of mutations known to promote BTK inhibitor resistance. Conclusions: BTK and pan-PI3K inhibition in mantle cell lymphoma demonstrates a promising efficacy signal. Addition of BCL2 inhibitors to a BTK and pan-PI3K combination remain suitable for further development in mantle cell lymphoma.
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- 2022
44. Zanubrutinib, obinutuzumab, and venetoclax with minimal residual disease-driven discontinuation in previously untreated patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma: a multicentre, single-arm, phase 2 trial
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Colette Owens, Allison P. Jacob, Jade Ruiters, Sidney Sechio, Audrey Hamilton, Clare Grieve, Puja Chadha, Mikhail Roshal, Tak Takvorian, Daneal Portman, Anthony R. Mato, Krista J Scorsune, Jason Carter, Ahmet Dogan, Lauren Ramos, Ai Ni, Natascha Nolet, Juliana M.L. Biondo, Jane Huang, Ephraim P. Hochberg, Anita Kumar, Stephanie Hughes, Morgan Choma, M. Lia Palomba, Rosalba Martignetti, Ariela Noy, Jeffrey A. Barnes, Meghan C. Thompson, P. Connor Johnson, Jeremy S. Abramson, Connie Lee Batlevi, Julia M Lynch, Qun Wu, Chaya Friedman, Erel Joffe, Joanna Mi, Brianne McGree, Elizabeth Simkins, Venkatraman E. Seshan, Matthew J. Matasar, Kelsey Flaherty, Omar Abdel-Wahab, Lindsey E. Roeker, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Jacob D. Soumerai, and Neena Mahajan
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Population ,Neutropenia ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Gastroenterology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Piperidines ,Obinutuzumab ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Sulfonamides ,education.field_of_study ,Venetoclax ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic ,medicine.disease ,Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell ,Minimal residual disease ,Lymphoma ,Regimen ,Pyrimidines ,chemistry ,Pyrazoles ,Female ,Mantle cell lymphoma ,business - Abstract
Summary Background We hypothesised that combining zanubrutinib with obinutuzumab and venetoclax (BOVen) as an initial therapy for chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and small lymphocytic lymphoma would lead to high rates of undetectable minimal residual disease (MRD), and we explored MRD as a biomarker for directing treatment duration. Methods This multicenter, investigator-initiated, single-arm, phase 2 trial took place at two two academic medical centres in the USA. Patients were eligible for the primary cohort if they had treatment-naive chronic lymphocytic leukaemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma, required therapy, and were at least 18 years of age with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status up to 2. BOVen was administered in 28 day cycles (oral zanubrutinib at 160 mg twice per day starting in cycle 1 on day 1; intravenous obinutuzumab at 1000 mg on day 1 [split over day 1 with 100 mg and day 2 with 900 mg for an absolute lymphocyte count >25 000 cells per μL or lymph nodes >5 cm in diameter], day 8, and day 15 of cycle 1, and day 1 of cycles 2–8; and oral venetoclax ramp up to 400 mg per day starting in cycle 3 on day 1) and discontinued after 8–24 cycles when prespecified undetectable MRD criteria were met in the peripheral blood and bone marrow. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients that reached undetectable MRD in both the peripheral blood and bone marrow (flow cytometry cutoff less than one chronic lymphocytic leukaemia cell per 10 000 leukocytes [ clinicaltrials.gov ( NCT03824483 ). The primary cohort is closed to recruitment, and recruitment continues in the TP53-mutated mantle cell lymphoma cohort. Findings Between March 14, 2019, and Oct 10, 2019, 47 patients were screened for eligibility, and 39 patients were enrolled and treated. Median age was 62 years (IQR 52–70) with 30 (77%) of 39 male participants and nine (23%) of 39 female participants. 28 (72%) of 39 patients had unmutated immunoglobulin heavy-chain variable-region and five (13%) of 39 had 17p deletion or TP53 mutation. After a median follow-up of 25·8 months (IQR 24·0–27·3), 33 (89%) of 37 patients (95% CI 75–97) had undetectable MRD in both blood and bone marrow, meeting the prespecified undetectable MRD criteria to stop therapy after a median of ten cycles (IQR 8–12), which includes two cycles of zanubrutinib and obinutuzumab before starting venetoclax. After median surveillance after treatment of 15·8 months (IQR 13·0–18·6), 31 (94%) of 33 patients had undetectable MRD. The most common adverse events were thrombocytopenia (23 [59%] of 39), fatigue (21 [54%]), neutropenia (20 [51%]), and bruising (20 [51%]), and the most common adverse event at grade 3 or worse was neutropenia (seven [18%]) in the intention-to-treat population. One death occurred in a patient with intracranial haemorrhage on day 1 of cycle 1 after initiating intravenous heparin for pulmonary emboli. Interpretation BOVen was well tolerated and met its primary endpoint, with 33 (89%) of 37 previously untreated patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma reaching undetectable MRD in both peripheral blood and bone marrow despite a median treatment duration of only 10 months, owing to our undetectable MRD-driven treatment discontinuation design. These data support further evaluation of the BOVen regimen in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia and small lymphocytic lymphoma with treatment duration guided by early MRD response kinetics. Funding Beigene, Genentech (Roche), Grais-Cutler Fund, Lymphoma Research Fund, Lymphoma Research Foundation, American Cancer Society, Farmer Family Foundation, and the National Instititutes of Health and National Cancer Institute.
- Published
- 2021
45. Time to second treatment can be used to predict overall survival in chronic lymphocytic leukemia: identifying risk factors to help guide treatment selection
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Kurt S. Bantilan, Neil E. Kay, Sameer A. Parikh, Kari G. Rabe, Timothy G. Call, Jose F. Leis, Wei Ding, Susan L. Slager, Jacob D. Soumerai, Lindsey E. Roeker, Anthony Mato, and Andrew D. Zelenetz
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Hematology - Abstract
Targeted therapies have largely replaced chemoimmunotherapy (CIT) in first-line treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). We aimed to develop a prognostic model to determine who would benefit from first-line CIT vs target therapy. In follicular lymphoma, time from diagnosis to second treatment (TT2T) correlates better with overall survival (OS) than time from diagnosis to first treatment (TT1T). We hypothesized that TT2T is a potential surrogate for OS in CLL. In a model-building cohort (
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- 2022
46. Successful implementation of outpatient R ± DHAX (rituximab, dexamethasone, oxaliplatin, cytarabine) for select patients with lymphoma: a single-center experience
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Anas Younes, Joy C. Jarrett, Anita Kumar, Tara A. Duggan, Alison J. Moskowitz, Megan H. Leary, Ariela Noy, Colette Owens, Lorenzo Falchi, Gottfried von Keudell, Michael J Buege, Brianne N. Dixon, Paul A. Hamlin, Phuong H. Dao, Matthew J. Matasar, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Terry K. Pak, Philip Caron, and Audrey Hamilton
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lymphoma ,Hospital bed ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Single Center ,Dexamethasone ,Patient satisfaction ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Outpatients ,medicine ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Cytarabine ,Hematology ,Oxaliplatin ,Oncology ,Emergency medicine ,Rituximab ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
R ± DHAX has been traditionally administered to inpatient due to the timing of chemotherapy administration and the perceived need for close monitoring of adverse effects. To administer R ± DHAX outpatient, a multidisciplinary task force created clinical and educational guidelines which were implemented through two phases: pilot and expansion. The pilot program determined the feasibility of transitioning R ± DHAX outpatient at a single infusion site. The expansion phase led to a service-wide implementation across all outpatient sites. A total of 40 patients were included, of which 23 patients completed all cycles, outpatient, 12 transitioned inpatient to outpatient administration, and 5 transitioned outpatient to inpatient administration. The success rate of outpatient R ± DHAX administration was 90% (36 patients successfully completed outpatient administration/40 total patients). No cytarabine-related cerebellar or ophthalmic toxicity was reported. Outpatient R ± DHAX saved 192 hospital days. R ± DHAX could be successfully administered outpatient with minimal safety concerns and reduced hospital bed utilization.
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- 2021
47. NCCN Guidelines® Insights: B-Cell Lymphomas, Version 5.2021
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L. Elizabeth Budde, Rachel Rabinovitch, Beth Christian, Paolo Caimi, Joseph Tuscano, Jakub Svoboda, Thomas M. Habermann, Ann S. LaCasce, Martha Glenn, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Jeremy S. Abramson, Nadia Khan, Megan S. Lim, Bita Fakhri, Nancy L. Bartlett, Praveen Ramakrishnan, Julie E. Chang, Kenneth B. Roberts, Sven de Vos, Leo I. Gordon, Stephen D. Smith, Erin Reid, Julie M. Vose, Mayur Narkhede, Ranjana H. Advani, Mary A. Dwyer, Bhagirathbhai Dholaria, Boyu Hu, Eric D. Hsi, Hayder Saeed, Hema Sundar, Lode J. Swinnen, Chris R. Kelsey, Luis Fayad, Susan Krivacic, Mark S. Kaminski, and Francisco J. Hernandez-Ilizaliturri
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business.industry ,Kinase ,medicine.medical_treatment ,EZH2 ,Follicular lymphoma ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,Lymphoma ,Targeted therapy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Cancer research ,medicine ,Mantle cell lymphoma ,business ,B cell - Abstract
In the last decade, a better understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas has resulted in the development of novel targeted therapies, such as small molecule inhibitors of select kinases in the B-cell receptor pathway, antibody–drug conjugates, and small molecules that target a variety of proteins (eg, CD-19, EZH2, and XPO-1–mediated nuclear export). Anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy, first approved for relapsed/refractory (R/R) diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, has also emerged as a novel treatment option for R/R follicular lymphoma and mantle cell lymphoma. These NCCN Guideline Insights highlight the new targeted therapy options included in the NCCN Guidelines for B-Cell Lymphomas for the treatment of R/R disease.
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- 2021
48. Long-term outcomes of patients with limited-stage ocular adnexal DLBCL treated with combined modality therapy in the rituximab era
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David Qualls, Brandon S. Imber, Michelle Okwali, Paul A. Hamlin, Anita Kumar, Oscar B. Lahoud, Matthew J. Matasar, Ariela Noy, Colette Owens, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Victoria S. North, Heiko Schöder, Ahmet Dogan, Gilles Salles, Joachim Yahalom, and Lorenzo Falchi
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Hematology - Published
- 2022
49. Reduced-intensity conditioning hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for chronic lymphocytic leukemia and Richter’s transformation
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Anthony R. Mato, Doris M. Ponce, Esperanza B. Papadopoulos, Oscar B Lahoud, Lindsey E. Roeker, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Sean M. Devlin, Juliet N. Barker, Boglarka Gyurkocza, Parastoo B. Dahi, James W. Young, Guenther Koehne, Sergio Giralt, Molly Maloy, Craig S. Sauter, Ann A. Jakubowski, Miguel Perales, and Hugo Castro-Malaspina
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Transplantation Conditioning ,Clinical Trials and Observations ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Chronic lymphocytic leukemia ,Graft vs Host Disease ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Disease ,Richter's transformation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,neoplasms ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Cancer ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Total body irradiation ,medicine.disease ,Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell ,Confidence interval ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Reduced Intensity Conditioning ,business ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) may potentially cure patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and Richter’s transformation (CLL-RT) or CLL without RT, but the impact of novel agents on HSCT is unclear. CLL-RT patients have a grave prognosis, and their outcomes after HSCT are uncertain. We conducted a retrospective analysis of all 58 CLL patients, including 23 CLL-RT patients, who underwent reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) HSCT at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (New York, NY) between September 2006 and April 2017. With a median follow-up of 68 months (range, 24-147 months), 5-year progression-free survival (PFS) was 40% (95% confidence interval [CI], 28%-56%), and overall survival (OS) was 58% (95% CI, 48%-74%). The 1-year graft-versus-host disease/relapse-free survival (GRFS) was 38% (95% CI, 25%-50%). Patients with CLL-RT and CLL patients without RT had comparable outcomes. In both cohorts, treatment-sensitive response and ≤3 previous lines of therapy produced superior PFS and OS. Outcomes were agnostic to adverse cytogenetic and molecular features. Novel agents did not have a negative impact on HSCT outcomes. Total body irradiation (TBI)-containing RIC yielded inferior PFS, OS, and GRFS. CLL-RT patients older than age 55 years who had an HSCT Comorbidity Index score of ≥2 demonstrated inferior OS. This study, which is the largest series of RIC-HSCT for patients with CLL-RT, provides evidence supporting RIC-HSCT in early remission courses for patients with CLL-RT and poor-risk CLL patients. TBI-containing RIC should be considered with caution.
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- 2021
50. Brentuximab Vedotin Combined With Chemotherapy in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Early-Stage, Unfavorable-Risk Hodgkin Lymphoma
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Steven M. Horwitz, Philip Caron, Pamela Drullinsky, Joachim Yahalom, Matthew J. Matasar, Connie Lee Batlevi, Anita Kumar, Esther Drill, A. Joseph, Audrey Hamilton, Ranjana H. Advani, Richard T. Hoppe, Heiko Schöder, Jonathan W. Friedberg, Joanna C. Yang, Elizabeth Budde, Paul A. Hamlin, Louis S. Constine, Maria Lia Palomba, Craig H. Moskowitz, Anas Younes, Shreya Vemuri, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Niloufer Khan, Clare Grieve, David J. Straus, Carla Casulo, Leana Laraque, Alison J. Moskowitz, Paul M. Barr, Ariela Noy, and S.V. Dandapani
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Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pilot Projects ,Newly diagnosed ,Vinblastine ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Stage (cooking) ,Brentuximab vedotin ,Adverse effect ,Neoplasm Staging ,Brentuximab Vedotin ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Middle Aged ,Hodgkin Disease ,Progression-Free Survival ,United States ,Dacarbazine ,Doxorubicin ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,Hodgkin lymphoma ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
PURPOSE To improve curability and limit long-term adverse effects for newly diagnosed early-stage (ES), unfavorable-risk Hodgkin lymphoma. METHODS In this multicenter study with four sequential cohorts, patients received four cycles of brentuximab vedotin (BV) and doxorubicin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (AVD). If positron emission tomography (PET)-4–negative, patients received 30-Gy involved-site radiotherapy in cohort 1, 20-Gy involved-site radiotherapy in cohort 2, 30-Gy consolidation-volume radiotherapy in cohort 3, and no radiotherapy in cohort 4. Eligible patients had ES, unfavorable-risk disease. Bulk disease defined by Memorial Sloan Kettering criteria (> 7 cm in maximal transverse or coronal diameter on computed tomography) was not required for cohorts 1 and 2 but was for cohorts 3 and 4. The primary end point was to evaluate safety for cohort 1 and to evaluate complete response rate by PET for cohorts 2-4. RESULTS Of the 117 patients enrolled, 116 completed chemotherapy, with the median age of 32 years: 50% men, 98% stage II, 86% Memorial Sloan Kettering–defined disease bulk, 27% traditional bulk (> 10 cm), 52% elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, 21% extranodal involvement, and 56% > 2 involved lymph node sites. The complete response rate in cohorts 1-4 was 93%, 100%, 93%, and 97%, respectively. With median follow-up of 3.8 years (5.9, 4.5, 2.5, and 2.2 years for cohorts 1-4), the overall 2-year progression-free and overall survival were 94% and 99%, respectively. In cohorts 1-4, the 2-year progression-free survival was 93%, 97%, 90%, and 97%, respectively. Adverse events included neutropenia (44%), febrile neutropenia (8%), and peripheral neuropathy (54%), which was largely reversible. CONCLUSION BV + AVD × four cycles is a highly active and well-tolerated treatment program for ES, unfavorable-risk Hodgkin lymphoma, including bulky disease. The efficacy of BV + AVD supports the safe reduction or elimination of consolidative radiation among PET-4–negative patients.
- Published
- 2021
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