Daratumumab Improves Depth of Response and Progression-free Survival in Transplant-ineligible, High-risk, Newly Diagnosed Multiple Myeloma

Author:

Jakubowiak Andrzej J1,Kumar Shaji2,Medhekar Rohan3,Pei Huiling4,Lefebvre Patrick5,Kaila Shuchita3,He Jianming6,Lafeuille Marie-Hélène5,Cortoos Annelore3,Londhe Anil4,Mavros Panagiotis3,Lin Thomas S3,Usmani Saad Z7

Affiliation:

1. University of Chicago Medical Center , Chicago, IL , USA

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Hematology, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN , USA

3. Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC , Horsham, PA , USA

4. Janssen Research & Development , Raritan, NJ , USA

5. Analysis Group, Inc. , Montreal, QC , Canada

6. Janssen Global Services, LLC , Raritan, NJ , USA

7. Levine Cancer Institute, Atrium Health , Charlotte, NC , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Patients with high-risk, newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (HR-NDMM) who are ineligible for autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) have limited first-line treatment options. Recent meta-analyses evaluating the impact of incorporating daratumumab in the backbone regimen on progression-free survival (PFS) have found mixed results in these patients. Materials and Methods A pooled analysis of patient-level data for ASCT-ineligible patients with HR-NDMM [ie, del(17p), t(4;14), t(14;16)] from the MAIA and ALCYONE trials; stratified by study identifier and adjusting for cytogenetic abnormality subtype, baseline performance status, International Staging System stage, myeloma type, and renal impairment; was conducted. Impact of daratumumab on PFS and rates of complete response or better (≥CR), minimal residual disease (MRD)-negative CR, very good partial response or better (≥VGPR), and overall response (ORR) was compared to control. Results Among 101 patients in the daratumumab and 89 patients in the control cohort, median follow-up was 43.7 months. Daratumumab reduced the risk of progression or death by 41% (adjusted hazard ratio for PFS [95% confidence interval (CI)] = 0.59 [0.41-0.85]) versus control. At 36 months, the estimated proportion of patients who did not progress and were still alive was 41.3% in the daratumumab and 19.9% in the control cohort. Rates of ≥CR (41.6% vs. 22.5%), MRD-negative CR (24.8% vs. 5.6%), ≥VGPR (75.2% vs. 46.1%), and ORR (92.1% vs. 74.2%) were higher for daratumumab versus control. Conclusion These findings demonstrate that incorporation of daratumumab in frontline treatment regimens reduced the risk of progression or death and improved response rates among ASCT-ineligible HR-NDMM patients.

Funder

Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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