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Long-term outcome of a phase 2 trial with nilotinib 400 mg twice daily in first-line treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia

Authors :
Gabriele Gugliotta
Luciano Levato
Antonella Russo Rossi
Carmen Fava
Mariella D'Adda
Michele Cedrone
Bruno Martino
Elena Trabacchi
Marzia Salvucci
Fausto Castagnetti
Gianantonio Rosti
Giuliana Alimena
Fabio Stagno
Giuseppe Saglio
Simona Soverini
Maria Teresa Bochicchio
Fabrizio Pane
Monica Bocchia
Mario Tiribelli
Emilio Usala
Michele Baccarani
Massimo Breccia
Michele Cavo
Francesco Cavazzini
Giovanni Martinelli
Gugliotta, Gabriele
Castagnetti, Fausto
Breccia, Massimo
Levato, Luciano
D’Adda, Mariella
Stagno, Fabio
Tiribelli, Mario
Salvucci, Marzia
Fava, Carmen
Martino, Bruno
Cedrone, Michele
Bocchia, Monica
Trabacchi, Elena
Cavazzin, Francesco
Usala, Emilio
Rossi, Antonella Russo
Bochicchio, Maria Teresa
Soverini, Simona
Alimena, Giuliana
Cavo, Michele
Pane, Fabrizio
Martinelli, Giovanni
Saglio, Giuseppe
Baccarani, Michele
Rosti, Gianantonio
D'Adda, Mariella
Cavazzini, Francesco
Russo Rossi, Antonella
Bochicchio, MARIA TERESA
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Nilotinib is a second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor that has been approved for the first-line treatment of chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia, based on the results of a prospective randomized study of nilotinib versus imatinib (ENESTnd). Apart from this registration study, very few data are currently available on first-line nilotinib treatment. We report here the long-term, 6-year results of the first investigator-sponsored, GIMEMA multicenter phase 2, single-arm trial with nilotinib 400 mg twice daily as first-line treatment in 73 patients with chronic-phase chronic myeloid leukemia. Six-year overall survival and progression-free survival rates were 96%, with one death after progression to blast phase. At 6 years, 75% of the patients were still on nilotinib. The cumulative incidence of major molecular response was 98%; only one patient had a confirmed loss of major molecular response. The cumulative incidence of deep molecular response (MR 4.0) was 76%. Deep molecular response was stable (≥ 2 years) in 34% of these patients. Cardiovascular adverse events, mainly due to arterial thrombosis, occurred in 11/73 patients (15%), after 24 to 76 months of therapy. They were more frequent in elderly patients, and in those with baseline cardiovascular risk factors. None was fatal, although there was a relevant morbidity. This is the study with the longest follow-up of a high dose of nilotinib (400 mg twice daily): it highlights the high efficacy and the cardiovascular toxicity of the drug (CTG.NCT.00481052).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3a9ff6b37e44a0e4517906699c541d4e