Long-term outcomes of patients with large B-cell lymphoma treated with axicabtagene ciloleucel and prophylactic corticosteroids
Oluwole, Olalekan O; Forcade, Edouard; Muñoz, Javier; de Guibert, Sophie; Vose, Julie M; Bartlett, Nancy L; Lin, Yi; Deol, Abhinav; McSweeney, Peter; Goy, Andre H; Kersten, Marie José; Jacobson, Caron A; Farooq, Umar; Minnema, Monique C; Thieblemont, Catherine; Timmerman, John M; Stiff, Patrick; Avivi, Irit; Tzachanis, Dimitrios; Zheng, Yan; Vardhanabhuti, Saran; Nater, Jenny; Shen, Rhine R; Miao, Harry; Kim, Jenny J; van Meerten, Tom
(2024) Bone Marrow Transplantation, volume 59, issue 3, pp. 366 - 372
(Article)
Abstract
ZUMA-1 safety management cohort 6 investigated the impact of prophylactic corticosteroids and earlier corticosteroids and/or tocilizumab on the incidence and severity of cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and neurologic events (NEs) following axicabtagene ciloleucel (axi-cel) in patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma (R/R LBCL). Prior analyses of cohort 6 with limited
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follow-up demonstrated no Grade ≥3 CRS, a low rate of NEs, and high response rates, without negatively impacting axi-cel pharmacokinetics. Herein, long-term outcomes of cohort 6 (N = 40) are reported (median follow-up, 26.9 months). Since the 1-year analysis (Oluwole, et al. Blood. 2022;138[suppl 1]:2832), no new CRS was reported. Two new NEs occurred in two patients (Grade 2 dementia unrelated to axi-cel; Grade 5 axi-cel-related leukoencephalopathy). Six new infections and eight deaths (five progressive disease; one leukoencephalopathy; two COVID-19) occurred. Objective and complete response rates remained at 95% and 80%, respectively. Median duration of response and progression-free survival were reached at 25.9 and 26.8 months, respectively. Median overall survival has not yet been reached. Eighteen patients (45%) remained in ongoing response at data cutoff. With ≥2 years of follow-up, prophylactic corticosteroids and earlier corticosteroids and/or tocilizumab continued to demonstrate CRS improvement without compromising efficacy outcomes, which remained high and durable.
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Keywords: Transplantation, Hematology, Journal Article
ISSN: 0268-3369
Publisher: Springer Nature
Note: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.
(Peer reviewed)