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Mogamulizumab versus vorinostat in previously treated cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (MAVORIC): an international, open-label, randomised, controlled phase 3 trial

Authors :
Youn H Kim
Martine Bagot
Lauren Pinter-Brown
Alain H Rook
Pierluigi Porcu
Steven M Horwitz
Sean Whittaker
Yoshiki Tokura
Maarten Vermeer
Pier Luigi Zinzani
Lubomir Sokol
Stephen Morris
Ellen J Kim
Pablo L Ortiz-Romero
Herbert Eradat
Julia Scarisbrick
Athanasios Tsianakas
Craig Elmets
Stephane Dalle
David C Fisher
Ahmad Halwani
Brian Poligone
John Greer
Maria Teresa Fierro
Amit Khot
Alison J Moskowitz
Amy Musiek
Andrei Shustov
Barbara Pro
Larisa J Geskin
Karen Dwyer
Junji Moriya
Mollie Leoni
Jeffrey S Humphrey
Stacie Hudgens
Dmitri O Grebennik
Kensei Tobinai
Madeleine Duvic
Sunil Abhyankar
Oleg Akilov
Onder Alpdogan
Marie Beylot-Barry
Erin Boh
Dolores Caballero
Richard Cowan
Brigitte Dreno
Reinhard Dummer
Timothy Fenske
Francine Foss
Noriko Fukuhara
Pratyush Giri
Koji Habe
Toshihisa Hamada
Kiyohiko Hatake
Shinsuke Iida
Osamu Ishikawa
Lars Iversen
Eiji Kiyohara
Hiroshi Koga
Neil Korman
Bryone Jean Kuss
Zanetta Lamar
Frederick Lansigan
Mary Jo Lechowicz
Adam Lerner
Nina Magnolo
Lawrence Mark
Tomomitsu Miyagaki
Javier Munoz
Jan Peter Nicolay
Kaoru Nishiwaki
Hiroyuki Okamoto
Mikio Ohtsuka
Theresa Pacheco
Christiane Querfeld
Ronald Peter Rapini
Shigetoshi Sano
Maiko Tanaka
Michael D. Tharp
Jiro Uehara
Hidefumi Wada
Jillian Wells
Ryan A. Wilcox
Basem William
Kentaro Yonekura
Kim, Youn H
Bagot, Martine
Pinter-Brown, Lauren
Rook, Alain H
Porcu, Pierluigi
Horwitz, Steven M
Whittaker, Sean
Tokura, Yoshiki
Vermeer, Maarten
Zinzani, Pier Luigi
Sokol, Lubomir
Morris, Stephen
Kim, Ellen J
Ortiz-Romero, Pablo L
Eradat, Herbert
Scarisbrick, Julia
Tsianakas, Athanasio
Elmets, Craig
Dalle, Stephane
Fisher, David C
Halwani, Ahmad
Poligone, Brian
Greer, John
Fierro, Maria Teresa
Khot, Amit
Moskowitz, Alison J
Musiek, Amy
Shustov, Andrei
Pro, Barbara
Geskin, Larisa J
Dwyer, Karen
Moriya, Junji
Leoni, Mollie
Humphrey, Jeffrey S
Hudgens, Stacie
Grebennik, Dmitri O
Tobinai, Kensei
Duvic, Madeleine
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Cutaneous T-cell lymphomas are rare non-Hodgkin lymphomas with substantial morbidity and mortality in advanced disease stages. We compared the efficacy of mogamulizumab, a novel monoclonal antibody directed against C-C chemokine receptor 4, with vorinostat in patients with previously treated cutaneous T-cell lymphoma.In this open-label, international, phase 3, randomised controlled trial, we recruited patients with relapsed or refractory mycosis fungoides or Sézary syndrome at 61 medical centres in the USA, Denmark, France, Italy, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland, the UK, Japan, and Australia. Eligible patients were aged at least 18 years (in Japan, ≥20 years), had failed (for progression or toxicity as assessed by the principal investigator) at least one previous systemic therapy, and had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance score of 1 or less and adequate haematological, hepatic, and renal function. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) using an interactive voice web response system to mogamulizumab (1·0 mg/kg intravenously on a weekly basis for the first 28-day cycle, then on days 1 and 15 of subsequent cycles) or vorinostat (400 mg daily). Stratification was by cutaneous T-cell lymphoma subtype (mycosis fungoides vs Sézary syndrome) and disease stage (IB-II vs III-IV). Since this study was open label, patients and investigators were not masked to treatment assignment. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival by investigator assessment in the intention-to-treat population. Patients who received one or more doses of study drug were included in the safety analyses. This study is ongoing, and enrolment is complete. This trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01728805.Between Dec 12, 2012, and Jan 29, 2016, 372 eligible patients were randomly assigned to receive mogamulizumab (n=186) or vorinostat (n=186), comprising the intention-to-treat population. Two patients randomly assigned to mogamulizumab withdrew consent before receiving study treatment; thus, 370 patients were included in the safety population. Mogamulizumab therapy resulted in superior investigator-assessed progression-free survival compared with vorinostat therapy (median 7·7 months [95% CI 5·7-10·3] in the mogamulizumab group vs 3·1 months [2·9-4·1] in the vorinostat group; hazard ratio 0·53, 95% CI 0·41-0·69; stratified log-rank p0·0001). Grade 3-4 adverse events of any cause were reported in 75 (41%) of 184 patients in the mogamulizumab group and 76 (41%) of 186 patients in the vorinostat group. The most common serious adverse events of any cause were pyrexia in eight (4%) patients and cellulitis in five (3%) patients in the mogamulizumab group; and cellulitis in six (3%) patients, pulmonary embolism in six (3%) patients, and sepsis in five (3%) patients in the vorinostat group. Two (67%) of three on-treatment deaths with mogamulizumab (due to sepsis and polymyositis) and three (33%) of nine on-treatment deaths with vorinostat (two due to pulmonary embolism and one due to bronchopneumonia) were considered treatment-related.Mogamulizumab significantly prolonged progression-free survival compared with vorinostat, and could provide a new, effective treatment for patients with mycosis fungoides and, importantly, for Sézary syndrome, a subtype that represents a major therapeutic challenge in cutaneous T-cell lymphoma.Kyowa Kirin.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8475d7d251c9235227444c08d963e299