Litcius/Paper detail

Oral ixazomib, lenalidomide, and dexamethasone for transplant-ineligible patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma

Thierry Façon, Christopher P. Venner, Nizar J. Bahlis, Fritz Offner, Darrell White, Lionel Karlin, Lotfi Benboubker, Sophie Rigaudeau, Philippe Rodon, Éric Voog, Sung‐Soo Yoon, Kenshi Suzuki, Hirohiko Shibayama, Xiaoquan Zhang, Philip Twumasi‐Ankrah, Godwin Yung, Robert M. Rifkin, Philippe Moreau, Sagar Lonial, Shaji Kumar, Paul G. Richardson, S. Vincent Rajkumar

2021Blood98 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Continuous lenalidomide-dexamethasone (Rd)-based regimens are among the standards of care in transplant-ineligible newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM) patients. The oral proteasome inhibitor ixazomib is suitable for continuous dosing, with predictable, manageable toxicities. In the double-blind, placebo-controlled TOURMALINE-MM2 trial, transplant-ineligible NDMM patients were randomized to ixazomib 4 mg (n = 351) or placebo (n = 354) plus Rd. After 18 cycles, dexamethasone was discontinued and treatment was continued using reduced-dose ixazomib (3 mg) and lenalidomide (10 mg) until progression/toxicity. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS). Median PFS was 35.3 vs 21.8 months with ixazomib-Rd vs placebo-Rd, respectively (hazard ratio [HR], 0.830; 95% confidence interval, 0.676-1.018; P = .073; median follow-up, 53.3 and 55.8 months). Complete (26% vs 14%; odds ratio [OR], 2.10; P < .001) and ≥ very good partial response (63% vs 48%; OR, 1.87; P < .001) rates were higher with ixazomib-Rd vs placebo-Rd. In a prespecified high-risk cytogenetics subgroup, median PFS was 23.8 vs 18.0 months (HR, 0.690; P = .019). Overall, treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) were mostly grade 1/2. With ixazomib-Rd vs placebo-Rd, 88% vs 81% of patients experienced grade ≥3 TEAEs, 66% vs 62% serious TEAEs, and 35% vs 27% TEAEs resulting in regimen discontinuation; 8% vs 6% died on study. Addition of ixazomib to Rd was tolerable with no new safety signals and led to a clinically meaningful PFS benefit of 13.5 months. Ixazomib-Rd is a feasible option for certain patients who can benefit from an all-oral triplet combination. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01850524.

Topics & Concepts

IxazomibMedicineLenalidomideHazard ratioPlaceboInternal medicineMultiple myelomaAdverse effectClinical endpointSurgeryRandomized controlled trialConfidence intervalCarfilzomibPathologyAlternative medicineMultiple Myeloma Research and TreatmentsProtein Degradation and InhibitorsPI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling in cancer