Matching-adjusted indirect comparison of brexucabtagene autoleucel (ZUMA-2) and pirtobrutinib (BRUIN) in patients with relapsed/refractory mantle cell lymphoma previously treated with a covalent Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor Journal Article


Authors: Salles, G.; Chen, J. M. H.; Zhang, I.; Kerbauy, F.; Wu, J. J.; Wade, S. W.; Nunes, A.; Feng, C.; Kloos, I.; Peng, W.; Snider, J. T.; Maciel, D.; Chan, K.; Keeping, S.; Shah, B.
Article Title: Matching-adjusted indirect comparison of brexucabtagene autoleucel (ZUMA-2) and pirtobrutinib (BRUIN) in patients with relapsed/refractory mantle cell lymphoma previously treated with a covalent Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Abstract: Introduction: Patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) often require multiple lines of treatment and have a poor prognosis, particularly after failing covalent Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor (cBTKi) therapy. Newer treatments such as brexucabtagene autoleucel (brexu-cel, chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy) and pirtobrutinib (non-covalent BTKi) show promise in improving outcomes. Methods: Without direct comparative evidence, an unanchored matching-adjusted indirect comparison was conducted to estimate the relative treatment effects of brexu-cel and pirtobrutinib for post-cBTKi R/R MCL. Using logistic propensity score models, individual patient-level data from ZUMA-2 brexu-cel-infused population (N = 68) were weighted to match pre-specified clinically relevant prognostic factors based on study-level data from the BRUIN cBTKi pre-treated cohort (N = 90). The base-case model incorporated the five most pertinent factors reported in ≥ 50% of both trial populations: morphology, MCL International Prognostic Index, number of prior lines of therapy, disease stage, and prior autologous stem cell transplant. A sensitivity analysis additionally incorporated TP53 mutation and Ki-67 proliferation. Relative treatment effects were expressed as odds ratios (ORs) or hazard ratios (HRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Results: In the base-case model, brexu-cel was associated with higher rates of objective response (OR 10.39 [95% CI 2.81–38.46]) and complete response (OR 10.11 [95% CI 4.26–24.00]), and improved progression-free survival (HR 0.44 [95% CI 0.25–0.75]), compared to pirtobrutinib. Overall survival and duration of response favored brexu-cel over pirtobrutinib but the differences crossed the bounds for statistical significance. Findings were consistent across the adjusted and unadjusted analyses. Conclusions: Findings suggest that brexu-cel may offer clinically and statistically significant benefits regarding objective response, complete response, and progression-free survival compared to pirtobrutinib among patients with R/R MCL after prior cBTKi therapy. Given the short follow-up and high degree of censoring in BRUIN, an analysis incorporating updated BRUIN data may provide more definitive overall survival results. © The Author(s) 2024.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; treatment response; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; gene mutation; major clinical study; overall survival; cancer recurrence; comparative study; cancer staging; sensitivity analysis; cell proliferation; progression free survival; mantle cell lymphoma; protein kinase inhibitor; cohort analysis; autologous stem cell transplantation; pyrimidines; protein p53; tyrosine kinase inhibitors; protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor; drug dose escalation; protein kinase inhibitors; piperidines; pyrimidine derivative; adoptive immunotherapy; immunotherapy, adoptive; lymphoma, mantle-cell; non-hodgkin lymphoma; piperidine derivative; clinical outcome; procedures; bruton tyrosine kinase; very elderly; humans; human; male; female; article; agammaglobulinaemia tyrosine kinase; chimeric antigen receptor t-cell immunotherapy; car t cell therapy; bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitor; matching-adjusted indirect comparison; pirtobrutinib; maic; brexucabtagene autoleucel; btk protein, human; kte-x19; mantle cell lymphoma international prognostic index; brexu-cel
Journal Title: Advances in Therapy
Volume: 41
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0741-238X
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2024-05-01
Start Page: 1938
End Page: 1952
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s12325-024-02822-z
PUBMED: 38494543
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11052850
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Gilles Andre Salles
    269 Salles