Daratumumab in transplant-eligible patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma: final analysis of clinically relevant subgroups in GRIFFIN
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Published:2024-07-08
Issue:1
Volume:14
Page:
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ISSN:2044-5385
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Container-title:Blood Cancer Journal
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Blood Cancer J.
Author:
Chari AjaiORCID, Kaufman Jonathan L.ORCID, Laubach JacobORCID, Sborov Douglas W., Reeves BrandiORCID, Rodriguez Cesar, Silbermann Rebecca, Costa Luciano J.ORCID, Anderson Larry D.ORCID, Nathwani Nitya, Shah Nina, Bumma Naresh, Holstein Sarah A.ORCID, Costello Caitlin, Jakubowiak AndrzejORCID, Wildes Tanya M., Orlowski Robert Z.ORCID, Shain Kenneth H., Cowan Andrew J., Pei Huiling, Cortoos Annelore, Patel Sharmila, Lin Thomas S., Voorhees Peter M.ORCID, Usmani Saad Z.ORCID, Richardson Paul G.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractThe randomized, phase 2 GRIFFIN study (NCT02874742) evaluated daratumumab plus lenalidomide/bortezomib/dexamethasone (D-RVd) in transplant-eligible newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM). We present final post hoc analyses (median follow-up, 49.6 months) of clinically relevant subgroups, including patients with high-risk cytogenetic abnormalities (HRCAs) per revised definition (del[17p], t[4;14], t[14;16], t[14;20], and/or gain/amp[1q21]). Patients received 4 induction cycles (D-RVd/RVd), high-dose therapy/transplant, 2 consolidation cycles (D-RVd/RVd), and lenalidomide±daratumumab maintenance (≤ 2 years). Minimal residual disease–negativity (10−5) rates were higher for D-RVd versus RVd in patients ≥ 65 years (67.9% vs 17.9%), with HRCAs (54.8% vs 32.4%), and with gain/amp(1q21) (61.8% vs 28.6%). D-RVd showed a trend toward improved progression-free survival versus RVd (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]) in patients ≥ 65 years (0.29 [0.06–1.48]), with HRCAs (0.38 [0.14–1.01]), and with gain/amp(1q21) (0.42 [0.14–1.27]). In the functional high-risk subgroup (not MRD negative at the end of consolidation), the hazard ratio was 0.82 (0.35–1.89). Among patients ≥ 65 years, grade 3/4 treatment-emergent adverse event (TEAE) rates were higher for D-RVd versus RVd (88.9% vs 77.8%), as were TEAEs leading to discontinuation of ≥ 1 treatment component (37.0% vs 25.9%). One D-RVd patient died due to an unrelated TEAE. These results support the addition of daratumumab to RVd in transplant-eligible patients with high-risk NDMM.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference44 articles.
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