Comparison of Infectious Complications with BCMA-directed Therapies in Multiple Myeloma
Author:
Lesokhin Alexander1ORCID, Nath Karthik1, Shekarkhand Tala1, Nemirovsky David1, Derkach Andriy2ORCID, Costa Bruno Almeida1ORCID, Nishimura Noriko1, Farzana Tasmin1, Rueda Colin1, Chung David1ORCID, Landau Heather3ORCID, Lahoud Oscar1ORCID, Scordo Michael1, Shah Gunjan2ORCID, Hassoun Hani1ORCID, Maclachlan Kylee1ORCID, Korde Neha4ORCID, Shah Urvi1ORCID, Tan Carlyn Rose1ORCID, Hultcrantz Malin1ORCID, Giralt Sergio5ORCID, Usmani Saad1ORCID, Shahid Zainab1, Mailankody Sham1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center 2. MSKCC 3. Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center 4. korden@mskcc.org 5. Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
Abstract
Abstract
B-cell-maturation-antigen (BCMA)-directed therapies are highly active for multiple myeloma, but infections are emerging as a major challenge. In this retrospective, single-center analysis we evaluated infectious complications after BCMA-targeted chimeric-antigen-receptor T-cell therapy (CAR-T), bispecific-antibodies (BsAb) and antibody-drug-conjugates (ADC). The primary endpoint was severe (grade ≥ 3) infection incidence. Amongst 256 patients, 92 received CAR-T, 55 BsAb and 109 ADC. The incidence of severe infections was higher with BsAb (40%) than CAR-T (26%) or ADC (8%), including grade 5 infections (7% vs 0% vs 0%, respectively). Comparing T-cell redirecting therapies, the incidence rate of severe infections was significantly lower with CAR-T compared to BsAb at 1-year (incidence-rate-ratio [IRR] = 0.43, 95%CI 0.25–0.76, P = 0.004). During periods of treatment-emergent hypogammaglobulinemia, BsAb recipients had higher infection rates (IRR:2.27, 1.31–3.98, P = 0.004) and time to severe infection (HR 2.04, 1.05–3.96, P = 0.036) than their CAR-T counterparts. During periods of non-neutropenia, CAR-T recipients had a lower risk (HR 0.44, 95%CI 0.21–0.93, P = 0.032) and incidence rate (IRR:0.32, 95% 0.17–0.59, P < 0.001) of severe infections than BsAb. In conclusion, we observed an overall higher and more persistent risk of severe infections with BsAb. Our results also suggest a higher infection risk during periods of hypogammaglobulinemia with BsAb, and with neutropenia in CAR-T recipients.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference28 articles.
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