Phase 2 study of natalizumab plus standard corticosteroid treatment for high-risk acute graft-versus-host disease Journal Article


Authors: Malki, M. M. A.; London, K.; Baez, J.; Akahoshi, Y.; Hogan, W. J.; Etra, A.; Choe, H.; Hexner, E.; Langston, A.; Abhyankar, S.; Ponce, D. M.; Defilipp, Z.; Kitko, C. L.; Adekola, K.; Reshef, R.; Ayuk, F.; Capellini, A.; Chanswangphuwana, C.; Eder, M.; Eng, G.; Gandhi, I.; Grupp, S.; Gleich, S.; Holler, E.; Javorniczky, N. R.; Kasikis, S.; Kowalyk, S.; Morales, G.; Özbek, U.; Rösler, W.; Spyrou, N.; Yanik, G.; Young, R.; Chen, Y. B.; Nakamura, R.; Ferrara, J. L. M.; Levine, J. E.
Article Title: Phase 2 study of natalizumab plus standard corticosteroid treatment for high-risk acute graft-versus-host disease
Abstract: Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract is the main cause of nonrelapse mortality (NRM) after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. Ann Arbor (AA) scores derived from serum biomarkers at onset of GVHD quantify GI crypt damage; AA2/3 scores correlate with resistance to treatment and higher NRM. We conducted a multicenter, phase 2 study using natalizumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody that blocks T-cell trafficking to the GI tract through the alpha 4 subunit of alpha 4 beta 7 integrin, combined with corticosteroids as primary treatment for patients with new onset AA2/3 GVHD. Seventy-five patients who were evaluable were enrolled and treated; 81% received natalizumab within 2 days of starting corticosteroids. Therapy was well tolerated with no treatment emergent adverse events in >10% of patients. Outcomes for patients treated with natalizumab plus corticosteroids were compared with 150 well-matched controls from the MAGIC database whose primary treatment was corticosteroids alone. There were no significant differences in overall or complete response between patients treated with natalizumab plus corticosteroids and those treated with corticosteroids alone (60% vs 58%; P = .67% and 48% vs 48%; P = 1.0, respectively) including relevant subgroups. There were also no significant differences in NRM or overall survival at 12 months in patients treated with natalizumab plus corticosteroids compared with controls treated with corticosteroids alone (38% vs 39%; P = .80% and 46% vs 54%; P = .48, respectively). In this multicenter biomarker-based phase 2 study, natalizumab combined with corticosteroids failed to improve outcome of patients with newly diagnosed high-risk GVHD.
Keywords: cyclophosphamide; blood; biomarker; therapy; cell transplantation; trial; prevention; blockade; score; vedolizumab
Journal Title: Blood Advances
Volume: 7
Issue: 17
ISSN: 2473-9529
Publisher: American Society of Hematology  
Date Published: 2023-09-12
Start Page: 5189
End Page: 5198
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001081972200001
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2023009853
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC10505783
PUBMED: 37235690
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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  1. Doris Ponce
    257 Ponce