Long-term outcomes with frontline nilotinib versus imatinib in newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase: ENESTnd 10-year analysis

Author:

Kantarjian Hagop M.ORCID,Hughes Timothy P.,Larson Richard A.ORCID,Kim Dong-WookORCID,Issaragrisil Surapol,le Coutre Philipp,Etienne Gabriel,Boquimpani Carla,Pasquini Ricardo,Clark Richard E.ORCID,Dubruille Viviane,Flinn Ian W.,Kyrcz-Krzemien Slawomira,Medras Ewa,Zanichelli Maria,Bendit Israel,Cacciatore Silvia,Titorenko Ksenia,Aimone Paola,Saglio Giuseppe,Hochhaus Andreas

Abstract

AbstractIn the ENESTnd study, with ≥10 years follow-up in patients with newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in chronic phase, nilotinib demonstrated higher cumulative molecular response rates, lower rates of disease progression and CML-related death, and increased eligibility for treatment-free remission (TFR). Cumulative 10-year rates of MMR and MR4.5 were higher with nilotinib (300 mg twice daily [BID], 77.7% and 61.0%, respectively; 400 mg BID, 79.7% and 61.2%, respectively) than with imatinib (400 mg once daily [QD], 62.5% and 39.2%, respectively). Cumulative rates of TFR eligibility at 10 years were higher with nilotinib (300 mg BID, 48.6%; 400 mg BID, 47.3%) vs imatinib (29.7%). Estimated 10-year overall survival rates in nilotinib and imatinib arms were 87.6%, 90.3%, and 88.3%, respectively. Overall frequency of adverse events was similar with nilotinib and imatinib. By 10 years, higher cumulative rates of cardiovascular events were reported with nilotinib (300 mg BID, 16.5%; 400 mg BID, 23.5%) vs imatinib (3.6%), including in Framingham low-risk patients. Overall efficacy and safety results support the use of nilotinib 300 mg BID as frontline therapy for optimal long-term outcomes, especially in patients aiming for TFR. The benefit-risk profile in context of individual treatment goals should be carefully assessed.

Funder

Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Oncology,Cancer Research,Hematology

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