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RNA-seq of newly diagnosed patients in the PADIMAC study leads to a bortezomib/lenalidomide decision signature

Authors :
Rakesh Popat
Laura Clifton-Hadley
Mahnaz Abbasian
Pieter Sonneveld
John Ambrose
Heather Oakervee
Matthew Streetly
Stephen Schey
Michael A Chapman
Jonathan J Keats
Fenella Willis
Kwee Yong
Charles Crawley
Paul Smith
Anna Lach
Michael F. Quinn
Jamie Cavenagh
Josephine Crowe
Mickey Koh
Nivette Braganza
Javier Herrero
Nicholas Counsell
Toyin Adedayo
Guy Pratt
Andres Virchis
Jonathan Sive
Mark Cook
Gordon Cook
Roger G. Owen
Claire Roddie
Chapman, Michael A [0000-0001-8342-0606]
Herrero, Javier [0000-0001-7313-717X]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Hematology
Source :
Blood, 132(20), 2154-2165. American Society of Hematology
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Improving outcomes in multiple myeloma will involve not only development of new therapies but also better use of existing treatments. We performed RNA sequencing on samples from newly diagnosed patients enrolled in the phase 2 PADIMAC (Bortezomib, Adriamycin, and Dexamethasone Therapy for Previously Untreated Patients with Multiple Myeloma: Impact of Minimal Residual Disease in Patients with Deferred ASCT) study. Using synthetic annealing and the large margin nearest neighbor algorithm, we developed and trained a 7-gene signature to predict treatment outcome. We tested the signature in independent cohorts treated with bortezomib- and lenalidomide-based therapies. The signature was capable of distinguishing which patients would respond better to which regimen. In the CoMMpass data set, patients who were treated correctly according to the signature had a better progression-free survival (median, 20.1 months vs not reached; hazard ratio [HR], 0.40; confidence interval [CI], 0.23-0.72; P = .0012) and overall survival (median, 30.7 months vs not reached; HR, 0.41; CI, 0.21-0.80; P = .0049) than those who were not. Indeed, the outcome for these correctly treated patients was noninferior to that for those treated with combined bortezomib, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone, arguably the standard of care in the United States but not widely available elsewhere. The small size of the signature will facilitate clinical translation, thus enabling more targeted drug regimens to be delivered in myeloma.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
132
Issue :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8556896472fa246e1d0816c6d45cb76c