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Ofatumumab retreatment and maintenance in patients with fludarabine-refractory CLL

Authors :
Jennifer Phillips
Rita Rizzi
Jiri Mayer
Anders Österborg
William G. Wierda
Geoffrey W. Chan
Piotr B. Kozlowski
Steen Lisby
Johannes Schetelig
Brigitte Dreyfus
Georg Hess
Christian Beck
Peter Hillmen
Andrzej Hellman
Martin Spacek
Michael Pfreundschuh
Martin J. S. Dyer
Lukas Smolej
Anna Schuh
Ira Gupta
Source :
ResearcherID
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

6584 Background: In Study 406, the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody ofatumumab (ofa), given as monotherapy over 6 months, showed 47% overall response rate (ORR) in patients (pts) with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) refractory to fludarabine and alemtuzumab (FA-ref), or to fludarabine with bulky (>5cm) lymphadenopathy (BF-ref). The effects of ofa retreatment (retx) and maintenance (mt) are unknown. Methods: Pts who responded to ofa and then progressed or had stable disease (SD) in Study 406, were offered retx in Study 416 (NCT00802737; GSK/Genmab) with ofa 1 x 300 mg + 7 x 2000 mg weekly followed by mt with ofa 2000 mg monthly for up to 2 years (if SD or better). Primary endpoint was ORR (1996 NCI-WG). Safety and time to event outcomes were also assessed. Results: Of 29 pts enrolled, 7 had SD and 22 had partial response (PR) and progressed in Study 406. Pts were defined per Study 406: 17 FA-ref, 11 BF-ref, 1 “other”. Pretreatment characteristics were similar between groups. Pts received a median of 12 doses (range 3-32); 86% had 8 doses, 3% received all 32 doses. 72% of pts had infusion-related adverse events (AEs), 41% at 1st infusion, mostly grade 1-2. The most common grade >3 AE occurring up to 60 days after last tx was infection (38%); the most common was pneumonia (17%). 3 pts (10%) had fatal infections, all bronchopneumonia. Clinical efficacy is shown in Table. Comparative analysis to Study 406 is ongoing. Conclusions: The response to ofatumumab (ofa) as induction retreatment and progression-free survival in this limited number of pts was similar to 1st treatment (Study 406). Ofa maintenance had some clinical benefit for pts with advanced CLL. Ofa was well-tolerated with no unexpected toxicities. [Table: see text]

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ResearcherID
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f9d99721d1f4ea7db0a5336a3f2654e