A randomized phase 3 study of ixazomib–dexamethasone versus physician’s choice in relapsed or refractory AL amyloidosis Journal Article


Authors: Dispenzieri, A.; Kastritis, E.; Wechalekar, A. D.; Schönland, S. O.; Kim, K.; Sanchorawala, V.; Landau, H. J.; Kwok, F.; Suzuki, K.; Comenzo, R. L.; Berg, D.; Liu, G.; Kumar, A.; Faller, D. V.; Merlini, G.
Article Title: A randomized phase 3 study of ixazomib–dexamethasone versus physician’s choice in relapsed or refractory AL amyloidosis
Abstract: In the first phase 3 study in relapsed/refractory AL amyloidosis (TOURMALINE-AL1 NCT01659658), 168 patients with relapsed/refractory AL amyloidosis after 1–2 prior lines were randomized to ixazomib (4 mg, days 1, 8, 15) plus dexamethasone (20 mg, days 1, 8, 15, 22; n = 85) or physician’s choice (dexamethasone ± melphalan, cyclophosphamide, thalidomide, or lenalidomide; n = 83) in 28-day cycles until progression or toxicity. Primary endpoints were hematologic response rate and 2-year vital organ deterioration or mortality rate. Only the first primary endpoint was formally tested at this interim analysis. Best hematologic response rate was 53% with ixazomib–dexamethasone vs 51% with physician’s choice (p = 0.76). Complete response rate was 26 vs 18% (p = 0.22). Median time to vital organ deterioration or mortality was 34.8 vs 26.1 months (hazard ratio 0.53; 95% CI, 0.32–0.87; p = 0.01). Median treatment duration was 11.7 vs 5.0 months. Adverse events of clinical importance included diarrhea (34 vs 30%), rash (33 vs 20%), cardiac arrhythmias (26 vs 15%), nausea (24 vs 14%). Despite not meeting the first primary endpoint, all time-to-event data favored ixazomib–dexamethasone. These results are clinically relevant to this relapsed/refractory patient population with no approved treatment options. © 2021, The Author(s).
Journal Title: Leukemia
Volume: 36
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0887-6924
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2022-01-01
Start Page: 225
End Page: 235
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41375-021-01317-y
PUBMED: 34168284
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8727292
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 February 2022 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Heather Jolie Landau
    419 Landau