[HTML][HTML] Nilotinib vs nilotinib plus pegylated interferon-alpha2b induction and nilotinib or pegylated interferon-alpha2b maintenance therapy for newly diagnosed BCR …

A Hochhaus, S Saussele, GM Baerlocher… - Blood, 2018 - Elsevier
A Hochhaus, S Saussele, GM Baerlocher, TH Brümmendorf, A Burchert, P La Rosée…
Blood, 2018Elsevier
Abstract Introduction: The TIGER (CML V)-study (NCT01657604) is a multicenter,
randomized phase III trial to evaluate efficacy and tolerability of nilotinib (NIL) 2* 300mg/d
monotherapy vs NIL 2* 300mg/d+ pegylated interferon alpha2b (Peg-IFN) and the option to
discontinue therapy after Peg-IFN maintenance as first line therapy for chronic myeloid
leukemia (CML) patients in chronic phase. Methods: Recruitment started in August 2012
with a pilot phase, aiming to validate the recommended dose of PEG-IFN. 25 pilot phase …
Abstract
Introduction: The TIGER (CML V)-study (NCT01657604) is a multicenter, randomized phase III trial to evaluate efficacy and tolerability of nilotinib (NIL) 2*300mg/d monotherapy vs NIL 2*300mg/d + pegylated interferon alpha2b (Peg-IFN) and the option to discontinue therapy after Peg-IFN maintenance as first line therapy for chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients in chronic phase.
Methods: Recruitment started in August 2012 with a pilot phase, aiming to validate the recommended dose of PEG-IFN. 25 pilot phase patients (pts) were treated with the combination of NIL 2*300 mg daily and PEG-IFN (30-50μg/week according to tolerability and commenced after >6 weeks NIL monotherapy). During the main phase of the study, newly diagnosed pts were randomized between NIL 2*300 mg/d and NIL/PEG-IFN combination in accordance with the approach which was confirmed to be feasible during the pilot phase. After at least 2 years NIL based induction therapy and achievement of major molecular remission (MMR, BCR-ABL transcript level ≤0.1% according to the international scale, IS), maintenance therapy (NIL vs PEG-IFN) started. Requirements for treatment discontinuation were treatment duration of at least 3 years with stable MR4 (BCR-ABL ≤0.01%) for at least one year. NIL therapy was reinitiated in case of molecular recurrence, defined as loss of MMR. The major co-endpoints of the study are (i) rate of MMR at 18 months (NIL vs NIL+PEG-IFN), and (ii) rate of continuous MMR 12 and 24 months after discontinuation of NIL vs PEG-IFN. Efficacy and safety data are presented without specification of the randomized therapy during the ongoing study.
Results: Within 5 years, a total of 717 pts (429 male; median age 51, range 18-85 years; 13.3% EUTOS high risk) were recruited from 111 sites in Germany, Switzerland, and the Czech Republic. Median observation time since recruitment was 30.3 months. 396 pts concluded the induction phase and reached the maintenance phase of the study. 138 pts achieved and maintained MR4 (BCR-ABL ≤0.01% IS) for at least one year during the maintenance phase and discontinued all therapy. With regard to efficacy in the two treatment arms, 79.5% reached MMR at 12 mo. (95% confidence interval (CI): [76.1-82.7%]), 84.9% at 18 mo. (95% CI: [81.4-88.0%]), and 89.4% at 24 mo. (95% CI: [86.0-92.2%]) after randomization. Probabilities of adverse events of grade 1-5 after 12 mo. of therapy were 83.7 (95% CI: [79.2-87.3%]) and 90.0% (95% CI: [85.8-93.0%]), and of grade 3-5 after 3 years 39.6 (95% CI: [33.4-45.7%]) and 49.5% (95% CI: [42.7-56.0%]) for the two treatment arms. Twelve pts progressed to accelerated phase or blast crisis; four of them died from blast crisis. A total of 13 patients received 14 allogeneic stem cell transplantations in chronic phase (n=7) or blast crisis (n=7). In total, 19 pts died, five related to CML, three from vascular complications.
Conclusions: This interim analysis demonstrates feasibility of 1st-line treatment with NIL 2*300 mg/d combined with PEG-IFN 30-50 μg/week. Molecular response during the first 24 mo. favourably compares with data from recent NIL based studies (ENESTnd, NCT00471497; ENEST1st, NCT01061177) and permits access to the maintenance phase (NIL vs PEG-IFN monotherapies) for the majority of patients - with the potential of treatment-free remission.
The study was conducted by the German CML Study Group in cooperation with the Schweizerische Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Klinische Krebsforschung (SAKK) and the Ostdeutsche Studiengruppe Hämatologie und Onkologie (OSHO).
Disclosures
Hochhaus: Takeda: Research Funding; Bristol-Myers Squibb: Research …
Elsevier