Assessment of the efficacy of therapies following venetoclax discontinuation in CLL reveals BTK inhibition as an effective strategy Journal Article


Authors: Mato, A. R.; Roeker, L. E.; Jacobs, R.; Hill, B. T.; Lamanna, N.; Brander, D.; Shadman, M.; Ujjani, C. S.; Yazdy, M. S.; Perini, G. F.; Pinilla-Ibarz, J. A.; Barrientos, J.; Skarbnik, A. P.; Torka, P.; Pu, J. J.; Pagel, J. M.; Gohil, S.; Fakhri, B.; Choi, M.; Coombs, C. C.; Rhodes, J.; Barr, P. M.; Portell, C. A.; Parry, H.; Garcia, C. A.; Whitaker, K. J.; Winter, A. M.; Sitlinger, A.; Khajavian, S.; Grajales-Cruz, A. F.; Isaac, K. M.; Shah, P.; Akhtar, O. S.; Pocock, R.; Lam, K.; Voorhees, T. J.; Schuster, S. J.; Rodgers, T. D.; Fox, C. P.; Martinez-Calle, N.; Munir, T.; Bhavsar, E. B.; Bailey, N.; Lee, J. C.; Weissbrot, H. B.; Nabhan, C.; Goodfriend, J. M.; King, A. C.; Zelenetz, A. D.; Dorsey, C.; Bigelow, K.; Cheson, B. D.; Allan, J. N.; Eyre, T. A.
Article Title: Assessment of the efficacy of therapies following venetoclax discontinuation in CLL reveals BTK inhibition as an effective strategy
Abstract: Purpose: Venetoclax-based therapy is a standard-of-care option in first-line and relapsed/refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Patient management following venetoclax discontinuation remains nonstandard and poorly understood. Experimental Design: To address this, we conducted a large international study to identify a cohort of 326 patients who discontinued venetoclax and have been subsequently treated. Coprimary endpoints were overall response rate (ORR) and progression-free survival for the post-venetoclax treatments stratified by treatment type [Bruton's tyrosine kinase inhibitor (BTKi), PI3K inhibitor (PI3Ki), and cellular therapies]. Results: We identified patients with CLL who discontinued venetoclax in the first-line (4%) and relapsed/refractory settings (96%). Patients received a median of three therapies prior to venetoclax; 40% were BTKi naive (n = 130), and 81% were idelalisib naive (n = 263). ORR to BTKi was 84% (n = 44) in BTKi-naive patients versus 54% (n = 30) in BTKi-exposed patients. We demonstrate therapy selection following venetoclax requires prior novel agent exposure consideration and discontinuation reasons. Conclusions: For BTKi-naive patients, selection of covalently binding BTKis results in high ORR and durable remissions. For BTKi-exposed patients, covalent BTK inhibition is not effective in the setting of BTKi resistance. PI3Kis following venetoclax do not appear to result in durable remissions. We conclude that BTKi in naive or previously responsive patients and cellular therapies following venetoclax may be the most effective strategies.
Keywords: rituximab; bcl2; outcomes; resistance; chronic lymphocytic-leukemia; ibrutinib
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 26
Issue: 14
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2020-07-15
Start Page: 3589
End Page: 3596
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000551370100013
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.Ccr-19-3815
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 32198151
PMCID: PMC8588795
Notes: Article; Proceedings Paper -- 61st Annual Meeting and Exposition of the American-Society-of-Hematology (ASH) -- DEC 07-10, 2019 -- Orlando, FL -- Source: Wos
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MSK Authors
  1. Andrew D Zelenetz
    767 Zelenetz
  2. Amber Courtney King
    32 King
  3. Anthony R Mato
    235 Mato
  4. Lindsey Elizabeth Roeker
    132 Roeker
  5. Colleen Dorsey
    16 Dorsey