A multicenter phase l/ll study of obatoclax mesylate administered as a 3- Or 24-hour infusion in older patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia Journal Article


Authors: Schimmer, A. D.; Raza, A.; Carter, T. H.; Claxton, D.; Erba, H.; DeAngelo, D. J.; Tallman, M. S.; Goard, C.; Borthakur, G.
Article Title: A multicenter phase l/ll study of obatoclax mesylate administered as a 3- Or 24-hour infusion in older patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia
Abstract: Purpose: An open-label phase l/ll study of single-agent obatoclax determined a maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and schedule, safety, and efficacy in older patients (≥70 yr) with untreated acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Experimental Design: Phase I evaluated the safety of obatoclax infused for 3 hours on 3 consecutive days (3 h×3 d) in 2-week cycles. Initial obatoclax dose was 30 mg/day (3 h×3 d; n = 3). Obatoclax was increased to 45 mg/day (3 h×3 d) if ≤1 patient had a dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) and decreased to 20 mg/day (3 h×3 d) if DLT occurred in ≥2 patients. In the phase II study, 12 patients were randomized to receive obatoclax at the dose identified during phase I (3 h×3 d) or 60 mg/ day administered by continuous infusion over 24 hours for 3 days (24 h×3 d) to determine the morphologic complete response rate. Results: In phase I, two of three patients receiving obatoclax 30 mg/day (3 h×3 d) experienced grade 3 neurologic DLTs (confusion, ataxia, and somnolence). Obatoclax was decreased to 20 mg/day (3 h×3 d). In phase II, no clinically relevant safety differences were observed between the 20 mg/day (3 h×3 d; n = 7) and 60 mg/day (24 h×3 d; n = 5) arms. Neurologic and psychiatric adverse events were most common and were generally transient and reversible. Complete response was not achieved in any patient. Conclusions: Obatoclax 20 mg/day was the MTD (3 h×3 d) in older patients with AML. In the schedules tested, single-agent obatoclax was not associated with an objective response. Evaluation in additional subgroups or in combination with other chemotherapy modalities may be considered for future study..
Keywords: clinical article; controlled study; aged; acute granulocytic leukemia; fatigue; drug dose reduction; drug efficacy; drug safety; drug withdrawal; randomized controlled trial; continuous infusion; coughing; dizziness; dyspnea; febrile neutropenia; pneumonia; confusion; multicenter study; acute heart infarction; drug response; maximum tolerated dose; somnolence; drug dose increase; drug dose regimen; catheter infection; heart atrium fibrillation; speech disorder; ataxia; obatoclax; mood disorder; phase 2 clinical trial (topic); phase 1 clinical trial (topic); cytokine release syndrome; acute sinusitis; very elderly; human; male; female; article
Journal Title: PLoS ONE
Volume: 9
Issue: 10
ISSN: 1932-6203
Publisher: Public Library of Science  
Date Published: 2014-10-01
Start Page: e108694
Language: English
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108694
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC4186779
PUBMED: 25285531
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 3 November 2014 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Martin Stuart Tallman
    651 Tallman