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Clinical characteristics and outcomes of black patients with mycosis fungoides and Sézary syndrome: a subgroup analysis of the phase III MAVORIC trial

W. Thomas Johnson, Saritha Kartan, Kelsey Sokol, Neda Nikbakht, Pierluigi Porcu

2021Leukemia & lymphoma/Leukemia and lymphoma21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Treatment-specific responses and comprehensive disease characteristics are limited in black patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). These shortcomings prompted us to perform a subgroup analysis of black patients enrolled in the MAVORIC trial – an international, randomized, phase 3 trial comparing mogamulizumab vs. vorinostat in relapsed/refractory mycosis fungoides (MF) and Sézary syndrome (SS). Ten percent (N = 37) of the entire MAVORIC population (N = 372) identified as black. Significant clinical differences in black patients when compared to non-black patients included a younger median age at enrollment (53 vs. 66 years; p < 0.001), an increased frequency of MF as opposed to SS (73% vs. 52.8%; p < 0.001), and higher rates of earlier-stage disease (IB-IIA) at enrollment (37.8% vs. 21.2%; p = 0.022). Mogamulizumab offered similar response rates and progression-free survival in black patients (7.57 months) compared to the entire MAVORIC population (7.7 months) and was associated with a similar safety profile.

Topics & Concepts

Mycosis fungoidesMedicineBrentuximab vedotinInternal medicinePopulationRefractory (planetary science)Peripheral T-cell lymphomaClinical trialSubgroup analysisDermatologyOncologyLymphomaGastroenterologyImmunologyHodgkin lymphomaConfidence intervalT cellPhysicsAstrobiologyImmune systemEnvironmental healthCutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders researchT-cell and Retrovirus StudiesFungal Infections and Studies
Clinical characteristics and outcomes of black patients with mycosis fungoides and Sézary syndrome: a subgroup analysis of the phase III MAVORIC trial | Litcius