New findings reported in early December at the 2018 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hematology provide good news for patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) who are younger than age 70. According to findings reported at the meeting from a phase 3 clinical trial known as ECOG-ACRIN 1912, starting therapy with a targeted therapy instead of starting with a chemotherapy regimen improves outcomes in patients with CLL, specifically for patients under age 70.
The study investigated the use of the targeted therapy Imbruvica (ibrutinib), a kinase inhibitor, in combination with the monoclonal antibody Rituxan (rituximab), as the first treatment for patients with CLL instead of the currently used standard practice of starting treatment with a chemotherapy with Fludara (fludarabine) plus cyclophosphamide in combination with Rituxan. Imbruvica is approved by the FDA for use as a first-line treatment in patients with CLL, but doctors usually start treatment with the chemotherapy regimen as the first treatment option in patients with CLL.
Targeted Therapy Outperforms Chemotherapy
Overall, the results showed that using the oral pill Imbruvica and then adding Rituxan extended the time of survival without signs of the disease by 65% and the time of overall survival by 83% compared with the current standard of care of starting treatment with the intravenous (IV) chemotherapy plus Rituxan regimen.
In addition, patients who received the chemotherapy-free, pill-based Imbruvica and Rituxan treatment had fewer side effects than the patients who received the chemotherapy plus Rituxan regimen.
This study is the first phase 3 clinical trial that has compared the use of Imbruvica plus Rituxan versus the standard of care of chemotherapy plus Rituxan as the first treatment in patients with CLL younger than age 70.
“We found that ibrutinib-based therapy is both more effective and less toxic than our previous best therapy for patients with CLL who are age 70 and under,” said lead study investigator Tait D. Shanafelt, MD, a Hematology Professor at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.
“These findings have immediate practice-changing implications. They establish the combination of ibrutinib plus rituximab as the most effective first-line treatment to date for CLL patients age 70 and younger,” Dr. Shanafelt said.
He explained that younger patients with CLL are at an increased risk for death, because CLL usually occurs at an older age, around age 70 or later. Therefore, finding a treatment that improves their condition and extends their survival is significant and is good news for patients and their doctors.
Longer Life Expectancy
“In this group of patients, CLL has a greater impact on life expectancy, because their CLL developed at a younger age than is typical. Patients enrolled in the trial were a higher-risk group than in historical studies,” he added.
The study included 529 patients with CLL, who were divided into 2 groups—one group received the targeted therapy Imbruvica with Rituxan as first treatment (first-line therapy), and the other group received chemotherapy plus Rituxan as their first treatment. In the Imbruvica plus Rituxan arm, patients received Imbruvica therapy alone for the first month, and then Rituxan was added for a total of 7 treatment cycles, followed by Imbruvica alone until the CLL progressed. The chemotherapy plus Rituxan group received treatment for a total of 6 cycles.
At an average time of almost 3 years (33.4 months), the average time without CLL progression and the overall survival were not reached, meaning that patients continued to respond to treatment with the targeted therapy of Imbruvica plus Rituxan. Furthermore, the use of the oral targeted therapy regimen reduced the likelihood that the disease will progress by more than half (65%) compared with the chemotherapy regimen.
Key Points
- New findings from a clinical trial bring good news for patients with CLL who are younger than age 70
- Younger patients with CLL are at an increased risk for death, because CLL usually occurs around age 70
- New findings show that starting treatment with a targeted therapy instead of chemotherapy extends survival without disease progression
- In addition, the side effects generally were less severe with the oral treatment than with chemotherapy
Side Effects
Another important benefit of using the combination of Imbruvica and Rituxan is the significantly fewer side effects seen with this treatment option than with the chemotherapy regimen. Severe (grades 3 to 5) side effects were reported in 58.5% of the patients who received Imbruvica and Rituxan compared with 72% of patients who received the chemotherapy regimen, a significantly lower rate of serious side effects.
The most serious side effects reported in patients who received the targeted therapy regimen were low white blood cells (or neutropenia), anemia, low platelet count (or thrombocytopenia), infection, and neutropenic fever (low number of neutrophils, signaling infection). However, significantly more patients (7.4%) who received Imbruvica had severe hypertension than those who received the chemotherapy regimen (1.9%).
Implications for Doctors & Patients
Dr. Shanafelt and other experts pointed out at the meeting that these findings represent a paradigm shift, namely, a change in current practice from using 6 months of IV chemotherapy to an unlimited treatment time with the oral therapy.
“The most important take-home message is that this late-breaking study demonstrates a paradigm shift away from chemotherapy to targeted therapy to improve outcomes for our patients,” said Aaron Gerds, MD, MS, Assistant Professor in the department of Hematology and Medical Oncology at the Cleveland Clinic Taussig Cancer Institute in Ohio. “This study should change practice.”
Patient Resources
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society
www.lls.org/leukemia/chronic-lymphocytic-leukemia/treatment/chemotherapy-and-drug-therapy
Suite Hope
www.nccn.org/patients/guidelines/cll/40/