Original Articles
Better quality of response to lenalidomide plus dexamethasone is associated
with improved clinical outcomes in patients with relapsed or refractory multiple
myeloma
Jean-Luc Harousseau,1 Meletios A. Dimopoulos,2 Michael Wang,3 Alessandro Corso,4 Christine Chen,5 Michel Attal,6
Andrew Spencer,7 Zhinuan Yu,8 Marta Olesnyckyj,8 Jerome B. Zeldis,8 Robert D. Knight,8 and Donna M. Weber3
1
Centre René Gauducheau, Bd Jacques Monod, France; 2Department of Clinical Therapeutics, University of Athens School of
Medicine, Athens, Greece; 3M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA; 4Division of Hematology, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico
S. Matteo, University of Pavia, Italy; 5Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 6Division of Hematology, Centre
Hospitalier Université de Purpan, Toulouse, France; 7Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia, and 8Celgene Corporation,
Summit, NJ, USA
ABSTRACT
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Background
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This retrospective pooled analysis of two phase III trials (MM-009/MM-010) compared clinical
outcomes of patients who achieved a complete response or very good partial response to treatment with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone with the outcomes of those who only achieved
a partial response.
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Design and Methods
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Patients (n=353) received lenalidomide (25 mg/day for 21 days of each 28-day cycle) plus dexamethasone (40 mg on days 1–4, 9–12, and 17–20 for four cycles, and only on days 1–4 after
the first four cycles). Time to response, duration of response, time-to-progression, overall survival, and adverse events were investigated for patients who had a complete or very good partial response and compared with those of patients who had a partial response.
or
Results
Manuscript received on
August 20, 2009. Revised
version arrived on May 4, 2010.
Manuscript accepted on May 6,
2010.
Correspondence:
Jean-Luc Harousseau,
Centre René Gauducheau,
Bd Jacques Monod, Nantes
St. Herblain 44805, France.
E-mail:
jl-harousseau@nantes.fnclcc.fr
Conclusions
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At the time of unblinding, 32% of patients had achieved a complete or very good partial
response and 28% had a partial response. Half (50.5%) of the patients who had a partial
response as their initial response achieved a complete or very good partial response with further
treatment. The probability of achieving a complete or very good partial response with continued lenalidomide treatment decreased with delayed achievement of a partial response (by cycle
4 versus later); however, it remained clinically significant. With an extended follow-up of 48
months, the median response duration, time-to-progression, and overall survival were longer
in patients with a complete or very good partial response than in those with a partial response
(24.0 versus 8.3 months, P<0.001; 27.7 versus 12.0 months, P<0.001; not reached versus 44.2
months, P=0.021, respectively). The benefit of a complete or very good partial response was
independent of when it was achieved.
Funding: the authors received
editorial support in the
preparation of this manuscript,
funded by Celgene.
The authors were fully
responsible for the content
of this manuscript and editorial
decisions concerning it.
Continuing treatment with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone to achieve best response, in the
absence of disease progression and toxicity, provided deeper remissions and greater clinical
benefit over time for patients in this study.
Key words: lenalidomide, dexamethasone, multiple myeloma, response, clinical benefit, efficacy.
Citation: Harousseau JL, Dimopoulos MA, Wang M, Corso A, Chen C, Attal M, Spencer A, Yu Z,
Olesnyckyj M, Zeldis JB, Knight RD, and Weber DM. Better quality of response to lenalidomide
plus dexamethasone is associated with improved clinical outcomes in patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. Haematologica 2010;95(10):1738-1744.
doi:10.3324/haematol.2009.015917
©2010 Ferrata Storti Foundation. This is an open-access paper.
1738
haematologica | 2010; 95(10)
Continued lenalidomide in relapsed-refractory MM
Design and Methods
Patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma who
achieve a complete response (CR) or a very good partial
response (VGPR) to high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation are more likely to have a
favorable long-term survival than those achieving less than
a CR/VGPR.1-4 The prognostic impact of the quality of
response has been demonstrated primarily in newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma treated with highdose therapy, whereas there is less information regarding
patients with relapsed or refractory disease. The major reason for the scarcity of such data in patients with relapsed
or refractory disease is the small number of patients who
achieved CR/VGPR in historical studies, leading to a lack
of power in demonstrating significant differences. With
the availability of new therapeutic options, such as
lenalidomide and bortezomib, higher response rates have
been achieved allowing for assessment of the prognostic
impact of response quality in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. Recently, the benefit of CR on response
duration was demonstrated among patients treated with
bortezomib.5,6
Lenalidomide (Revlimid®; Celgene Corporation, NJ,
USA) is an oral immunomodulatory compound, which has
demonstrated significant efficacy in the treatment of
patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma.7,8 In
two recent phase III trials (MM-009 and MM-010) in this
population of patients, lenalidomide plus dexamethasone
treatment led to an overall response rate (with overall
response defined as a partial response [PR] or better) of
more than 60% (61.0% in MM-009 and 60.2% in MM010), a CR rate of approximately 15% (14.1% and 15.9%,
respectively), a median time-to-progression of at least 11.1
months (11.1 months and 11.3 months, respectively), and
a median overall survival of at least 29.6 months (29.6
months and not yet reached at study unblinding in MM009 and MM-010, respectively).9,10 In both studies overall
response rate, CR rate, time-to-progression, and overall
survival were significantly superior with lenalidomide plus
dexamethasone compared with dexamethasone alone.9,10
The long-term follow-up study of patients from these registration trials demonstrated a significant benefit in overall
survival with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone (median
overall survival of 38.0 versus 31.6 months with placebo
plus dexamethasone, P=0.045).11
Recent studies have shown that the overall response rate
and the quality of response achieved with lenalidomide
treatments increased over time in patients with newly
diagnosed multiple myeloma.12,13
As treatment with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone
increases the number of patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma who achieve a CR/VGPR, it is important to determine whether relapsed or refractory patients
who achieve this high quality of response have a clinically
measurable benefit in comparison with patients who
achieve only a PR. A subanalysis of pooled data from the
MM-009 and MM-010 trials was performed in order to
evaluate the effects on outcomes in patients with relapsed
or refractory multiple myeloma treated with lenalidomide
plus dexamethasone who achieved a CR or VGPR as best
response compared with the outcomes in those who
achieved a PR.
Pooled data from 353 patients randomized to the lenalidomide
plus dexamethasone arm of two large multicenter, double-blind,
placebo-controlled studies (MM-009 and MM-010) were analyzed. The protocols of these two studies were described in detail
in the primary publications.9,10 When the predetermined O’Brien–
Fleming boundary for the superiority of lenalidomide over placebo
was crossed, the study was unblinded and patients were allowed
to cross over to open-label administration of lenalidomide at disease progression, or at the discretion of the investigator. Response
to treatment was assessed by the investigators and reviewed centrally.
For the purpose of this analysis, the European Group for Blood
and Marrow Transplantation (EBMT) criteria, as protocol-specified for the MM-009 and MM-010 studies, were adapted with the
inclusion of VGPR under the International Myeloma Working
Group (IMWG) uniform response criteria.9,10,14,15 According to
these criteria, responses were defined as follows: CR: no M-protein detectable by immunofixation in the serum and urine, disappearance of any soft tissue plasmacytomas, and 5% or fewer plasma cells in the bone marrow; VGPR (which includes near-CR): Mprotein detectable by immunofixation but not on electrophoresis
or 90% or greater reduction in serum M-protein and urine M-protein level less than 100 mg/24 hours; PR: 50% or greater reduction
of serum M-protein and reduction in 24-hour urinary M-protein
by 90% or more or to less than 200 mg/24 hours. Patients who
achieved a CR/VGPR as their best response were assigned to one
group (the CR/VGPR group) and those with a PR as their best
response were assigned to the other group. Differences in time to
response, duration of response, time-to-progression, overall survival, and adverse events between patients who achieved
CR/VGPR as their best response and those who achieved PR as
their best response were investigated.
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Introduction
haematologica | 2010; 95(10)
Selection of patients
Eligible patients were aged at least 18 years, had progressive
multiple myeloma after one or more treatments, and measurable
disease that was susceptible to dexamethasone. Patients were considered dexamethasone-resistant if there was evidence of disease
progression during previous high-dose dexamethasone-containing
therapy (total monthly dexamethasone dose >200 mg).
Measurable disease was defined as a serum M-protein level of 500
mg/dL or more, or a urine Bence-Jones protein level of 200 mg/24
hours or more. Additional eligibility criteria included: an Eastern
Cooperative Oncology Group performance status score of 2 or
more; serum aspartate aminotransferase or alanine aminotransferase levels less than three times the upper limit of normal; serum
bilirubin levels less than twice the upper limit of normal; serum
creatinine levels of less than 2.5 mg/L; an absolute neutrophil
count of more than 1,000 cells/mm3; and platelet counts of more
than 75,000/mm3 for patients with less than 50% bone marrow
plasma cells, and more than 30,000/mm3 for patients with 50% or
more bone marrow plasma cells. Women of childbearing potential
were required to use contraception, have a negative pregnancy
test, and agree to a monthly pregnancy test until 4 weeks after discontinuation of the study drug.
Treatments
During each 28-day cycle, patients received oral lenalidomide
(25 mg/day for 21 days in each cycle) plus dexamethasone (40 mg
on days 1–4, 9–12, and 17–20 for four cycles, and only on days 1–
4 after the first four cycles). Patients were treated until disease progression or unmanageable toxicity. The dose of lenalidomide was
to be modified if grade 3/4 adverse events occurred. Treatment
1739
J.L. Harousseau et al.
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Extended follow-up: time to response and duration
of response
The reduction of M-protein levels over time in all
responders shows that the first evidence of response was
observed as early as the first cycle and that the depth of
response increased over time (Figure 1). The cumulative
response over time for patients who achieved a
CR/VGPR is shown in Figure 2. In these patients, best
responses were reported as early as cycle 3 (Figure 2), and
37% (42 of 114) of the patients achieved the response by
cycle 4. Of patients who achieved a CR/VGPR as best
response, 82% showed a PR at first evaluation and subsequently achieved the CR/VGPR with further treatment
cycles. Of the patients who had a documented PR as
their initial response, 50.5% (n=94) eventually achieved
a CR/VGPR as best response with further treatment
cycles. For patients who achieved an initial documented
PR by cycle 4, the estimated probability of achieving a
subsequent CR/VGPR was 43%, and for those achieving
an initial PR by cycle 6, the probability of achieving
CR/VGPR was 38%. Although the probability of a
CR/VGPR decreased with delayed achievement of PR,
the CR/VGPR achieved with the lenalidomide plus dexamethasone treatment regimen continued to be clinically
significant. Patients who achieved a CR/VGPR as best
response had a longer median duration of response compared with patients whose best response was a PR (24.0
months versus 8.3 months, P<0.001).
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Blood counts and physical examinations were performed on
days 1 and 15 (and day 8 of cycle 1) during cycles 1–3, and on day
1 of each cycle thereafter. Serum and urine protein electrophoresis
studies were performed on day 1 of each 28-day cycle and at the
end of treatment. Initial response was defined as the first documented response that could be confirmed at the following assessment; an unconfirmed first response was not scored as an initial
response. Response duration was defined as the time from the first
documented response to the first documentation of progressive
disease in the trial, or censored at the last assessment if no progressive disease was documented. Time-to-progression was measured from the date of randomization to the date of the first assessment showing progression. Progressive disease was defined by
any of the following criteria: an absolute increase of more than 500
mg/dL in serum M-protein compared with nadir; an absolute
increase in urine M-protein greater than 200 mg/24 hours; new or
increased size of bone lesions or plasmacytomas; or development
of hypercalcemia (serum calcium greater than 11.5 mg/dL) in addition to a change from immunofixation-negative CR to an
immunofixation-positive state. Patients who died before evidence
of disease progression were censored at the last evaluation for
assessment of time-to-progression. Response duration, time-toprogression, and overall survival were assessed at the time of the
updated analysis, with a median follow-up of 48 months for surviving patients. An additional landmark analysis was performed at
12 months of follow-up on patients who were progression-free
and remained on-study. Adverse events were graded according to
the National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria (version
2, 2007).
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Assessments
receive oral lenalidomide plus dexamethasone were evaluated. Among the 353 patients treated with lenalidomide
plus dexamethasone in these clinical trials, 114 (32.3%)
achieved a CR/VGPR and 100 (28.3%) patients had a PR
at the time of unblinding. Patients who only achieved a
PR had a longer median time since diagnosis (3.6 years
versus 2.8 years, P=0.024), had received more prior
antimyeloma regimens and/or stem cell transplants
(P=0.038), and more prior thalidomide (41% versus 24%,
P=0.008) compared with those patients who achieved a
CR/VGPR as best response (Table 1). The median duration of treatment was longer in patients who achieved
CR/VGPR as best response than in those who had a PR
(16.0 months, [range 2.3–25.6] versus 12.8 months [range
2.3–22.7], respectively). However, the median number of
treatment cycles until the occurrence of best response
was five for both groups.
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was withheld until adverse events were resolved, and treatment
was restarted at the next lower dose. The dosage modifications
were 15 mg/day (level 1), 10 mg/day (level 2), and 5 mg/day (level
3). For grade 3/4 neutropenia without other adverse events, the
first dose-modification was 25 mg/day plus granulocyte colonystimulating factor at a dose of 5 mg per kilogram of body weight.
To manage dexamethasone-related adverse events, the dose of
dexamethasone was modified to 40 mg/day for 4 days every 2
weeks (dose level –1) or every 4 weeks (dose level –2), or 20
mg/day for 4 days every 4 weeks (dose level –3) at the discretion
of the investigator.
Statistical analyses
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Differences between the two groups of responders (those with
CR/VGPR as best response versus those with PR as best response)
with regards to the patients’ characteristics at baseline were tested
with pooled t-tests for continuous variables (e.g. age and time
since diagnosis), or with Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables
(e.g. sex). The medians for time-to-event variables involving censoring (response duration, time-to-progression and overall survival) are based on Kaplan-Meier estimates, and the differences in
these variables between the two groups of responders are based
on two-tailed unstratified log-rank tests of the curves. Statistical
significance was evaluated at the 0.05 alpha level. Analyses were
performed using Statistical Analysis System version 9.1 (SAS
Institute, Inc., Cary, NC, USA). The analyses performed were not
pre-specified in the protocol and no adjustment for multiplicity
was made.
Results
Patients’ characteristics
Data from the 353 patients who were randomized to
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Outcomes
At a median follow-up of 48 months (data up to July
2008), 32.5% (37 of 114) of patients whose best response
was a CR/VGPR and 56.0% (56 of 100) of patients who
achieved PR had progressed. The median time-toprogression was significantly longer in patients whose
best response was a CR/VGPR than in patients with PR
as their best response (27.7 versus 12.0 months, P<0.001)
(Table 2, Figure 3). The 1-year progression rate was 25%
and 52% in patients achieving CR/VGPR and PR, respectively.
Importantly, for patients who achieved a higher quality of response, the benefit in terms of time-toprogression did not depend on when the CR/VGPR was
achieved. Specifically, a comparison of time-toprogression between patients who achieved a CR/VGPR
within four cycles and those who achieved the
CR/VGPR after cycle 4 showed no significant difference
haematologica | 2010; 95(10)
Continued lenalidomide in relapsed-refractory MM
P=0.04). The median duration of response was also significantly longer in patients who had achieved a
CR/VGPR (37 months) than in those who had achieved a
PR (22 months; P=0.04). The 12-month landmark analysis survival rates were 70% and 56% in the CR/VGPR
and PR groups, respectively. The median survival was
not reached in the CR/VGPR group and was 51 months
in the PR group, but this difference was not statistically
significant (P=0.27).
Adverse events
Neutropenia and thrombocytopenia were the most
common grade 3/4 adverse events among the CR/VGPR
and PR groups (Table 3). Grade 3/4 deep vein thrombosis
occurred in 9.6% of the CR/VGPR group and in 10% of
the PR group. A total of 7.9% (n=9) of CR/VGPR group
patients and 13% (n=13) of PR group patients discontinued treatment due to adverse events.
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(hazard ratio [HR] 1.5; P=0.26). Likewise, time-toprogression did not differ between patients who
achieved a CR/VGPR prior to cycle 6 and those who
achieved the CR/VGPR after cycle 6 (HR 1.8; P=0.13). Of
note, patients who achieved a CR/VGPR within four
cycles tended to have lower β2-microglobulin levels compared with those who achieved a CR/VGPR after cycle 4
(P=0.20); no other differences in baseline characteristics
were noted between these two groups (data not shown).
At 48 months of follow-up, 59.6% (68 of 114) of
patients who achieved a CR/VGPR versus 42% (42 of
100) of patients who had a PR remained alive. The median overall survival was significantly longer in patients
whose best response was CR/VGPR than in patients
whose best response was a PR (not yet reached versus
44.2 months, P=0.021) (Table 2, Figure 4).
A supportive analysis was performed using the original
EBMT criteria, comparing CR/near-CR versus PR. Results
were comparable with the analysis presented in this
manuscript (data not shown).
Discussion
Landmark analysis at 12 months
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This subanalysis of pooled data from the lenalidomide
plus dexamethasone arms of two phase III multicenter,
double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trials
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At 12 months 110 patients were included in the landmark analysis: 74 with a CR/VGPR and 36 with a PR.
The median time-to-progression was significantly longer
in patients who had achieved a CR/VGPR than in those
who had achieved a PR (41 months versus 27 months;
80
70
60
62 (35–84)
60.0/40.0
3.6
(0.4–14.2)
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Median age, years (range)
64 (33–86)
Sex (M/F), %
58.8/41.2
Median time since diagnosis,
2.8
years (range)
(0.5–14.6)
Durie-Salmon stage, n (%)
I
8 (7.0)
II
30 (26.3)
III
76 (66.7)
Missing
0
ECOG performance status score, n (%)
0
40 (35.1)
1
54 (47.4)
2
15 (13.2)
Missing
5 (4.4)
β2-microglobulin level, n (%)
≤2.5 mg/L
37 (32.5)
>2.5 mg/L
77 (67.5)
N. of prior therapies, n (%)
1
29 (25.4)
2
47 (41.2)
3
31 (27.2)
>3
7 (6.1)
Type of prior therapies, n (%)
Thalidomide
27 (23.7)
Bortezomib
10 (8.8)
Transplantation
65 (57.0)
Melphalan
53 (46.5)
Doxorubicin
54 (47.4)
P
value
0.047
0.890
0.024
40
30
20
First evidence of response; ≥25% drop (n=214)
≥50%drop (n=214)
≥75%drop (n=190)
≥90%drop (n=150)
100% drop (n=124)
10
0
1 2
3 4 5
6 7 8
0.244
3 (3.0)
34 (34.0)
62 (62.0)
1 (1.0)
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Cycles
Figure 1. Accumulated maximum serum M-protein reduction after
lenalidomide plus dexamethasone by treatment cycle for all
patients achieving at least a partial response as best response.
0.082
49 (49.0)
43 (43.0)
7 (7.0)
1 (1.0)
0.473
38 (38.0)
62 (62.0)
0.038
13 (13.0)
39 (39.0)
34 (34.0)
14 (14.0)
41 (41.0)
7 (7.0)
67 (67.0)
42 (42.0)
58 (58.0)
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0.008
0.801
0.008
0.582
0.133
7.0
Past cycles
Current cycle
8.8
7.0
7.0
3.5
8
9
5.3
4.4
10
11
20.2
34.2
2.6
3
CR: complete response; PR: partial response; VGPR: very good PR; ECOG: Eastern
Cooperative Oncology Group.
haematologica | 2010; 95(10)
Patients %
PR
(n=100)
Patients with CR/VGPR %
CR/VGPR
(n=114)
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Characteristic
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Table 1. Baseline characteristics of patients who achieved a CR/VGPR
or PR with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone treatment.
4
5
6
7
13-20
Treatment cycle
Figure 2. Cumulative response by treatment cycle for patients with
complete response (CR)/very good partial response (VGPR) to
lenalidomide plus dexamethasone (n=114). The numbers above the
bars indicate the first occurrence of best response.
1741
J.L. Harousseau et al.
100
100
80
Surviving patients %
Progression-free patients %
80
60
40
CR/VGPR
20
PR
0
0
20
40
60
60
CR/VGPR
40
PR
20
0
80
0
12
24
36
48
60
72
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Months
Months
Figure 4. Kaplan-Meier estimate of overall survival by quality of
response to lenalidomide plus dexamethasone (median follow-up of
48 months). The estimated overall survival for patients treated with
lenalidomide plus dexamethasone in the intent-to-treat population,
per quality of response group. CR: complete response; PR: partial
response; VGPR: very good PR.
(MM-009 and MM-010) demonstrated that the response
achieved with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone
improves over time. Over 50% of patients with an initial
documented PR subsequently achieved a CR/VGPR and
patients who achieved a PR by cycle 6 still had a substantial probability (38%) of achieving a CR/VGPR with continued treatment. This suggests a role for improving the
quality of response as a relevant treatment objective in
the management of some patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma.
The present analysis also demonstrated that quality of
response was a prognostic factor for the most clinically
relevant outcomes: time-to-progression and overall survival. At a median follow-up of 48 months, patients who
achieved a CR/VGPR as best response showed significantly longer time-to-progression, duration of response,
and overall survival compared to patients whose best
response was a PR. The beneficial impact of CR and
VGPR on patients’ outcomes was first reported in the
frontline setting after autologous stem cell transplantation, as reviewed recently.16 In the relapsed setting, the
correlation between quality of response and improved
outcomes was previously demonstrated with bortezomib in a subanalysis of the Assessment of Proteasome
Inhibition for Extending Remissions (APEX) trial.6
Although the APEX subanalysis did not show any effect
on time-to-progression, and the median overall survival
was not reached, patients who achieved a CR had a significantly longer treatment-free interval and time to alternative therapy, compared with those who achieved a
VGPR/PR. In the present analysis, the benefit of achieving CR/VGPR over PR on time-to-progression was maintained regardless of when the CR/VGPR was achieved.
In the last few years, CR rates have improved with the
emergence of novel therapies such as bortezomib,
thalidomide and lenalidomide, and can be even further
improved if these drugs are used in combinations, for
example bortezomib with melphalan,17 cyclophosphamide and prednisone,18 dexamethasone,19 vorinos-
Table 2. Time-to-progression and overall survival for patients responding to treatment with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone.
Fo
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Figure 3. Kaplan-Meier estimate of time-to-progression by quality of
response to lenalidomide plus dexamethasone (median follow-up of
48 months). The estimated time-to-progression for patients treated
with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone in the intent-to-treat population, per quality of response group. CR: complete response; PR: partial response; VGPR: very good PR.
Median response
24.0
duration (months)
Median time-to-progression 27.7
(months)
Overall survival (%)
NR
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CR/VGPR
PR
(n=114) (n=100)
8.3
12.0
44.2
HR
(95% CI)
Log
rank
P value
0.449
(0.313-0.643)
0.448
(0.313-0.641)
0.636
(0.431-0.937)
<0.001
<0.001
0.021
Medians and 95% confidence intervals (CI) are based on Kaplan-Meier estimates. P values are based on two-tailed log rank tests of survival curve differences between the
quality of response groups. CR: complete response; HR: hazard ratio; NR: not reached;
PR: partial response; VGPR: very good PR.
tat,20 and lenalidomide.21 Whereas the more aggressive
goal to achieve CR may be justified in high-risk patients,
the impact of CR on outcomes seems to be less important in indolent disease and elderly patients, in whom the
toxicity of multiple drug regimens may outweigh treatment benefits.16
A comparison between the results of landmark analysis at 12 months and the longer follow-up at 48 months
showed that the benefit of achieving CR/VGPR on overall survival was observed at some point after 12 months.
Taken together these results highlight the importance of
continued treatment in order to achieve optimal outcomes and are in agreement with the preliminary results
of a study with lenalidomide and dexamethasone which
showed that continued treatment significantly predicted
prolonged overall survival. Patients who had achieved a
PR or better and continued treatment had an overall survival of 50.9 months compared with 35.0 months in
patients who discontinued due to adverse events, withdrawal of consent, or other reasons.22 The dose at which
treatment is continued may also affect outcomes. A separate analysis showed that patients who had dose reduc-
haematologica | 2010; 95(10)
Continued lenalidomide in relapsed-refractory MM
PR, %
(n=100)
39.5
13.2
11.4
10.5
9.6
9.6
3.5
6.1
6.1
3.5
5.3
5.3
5.3
5.3
3.5
2.6
0.9
44.0
16.0
8.0
6.0
10.0
5.0
8.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
4.0
3.0
2.0
0.0
5.0
5.0
5.0
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Neutropenia
Thrombocytopenia
Anemia
Pneumonia
Deep vein thrombosis
Hyperglycemia
Hypokalemia
Asthenia
Fatigue
Muscle weakness
Lymphopenia
Leukopenia
Confusional state
Hypophosphatemia
Diarrhea
Depression
Constipation
CR/VGPR, %
(n=114)
CR: complete response; PR: partial response; VGPR: very good PR.
©
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ta
St
or
ti
tions after 12 months of lenalidomide plus dexamethasone therapy experienced significantly longer progression-free survival compared to patients who required a
dose reduction within the first 12 months (P=0.007).23
Previous reports have shown that lenalidomide plus
dexamethasone is well tolerated for the treatment of
patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma.9,10
In the current analysis, the longer median duration of
treatment in the CR/VGPR group was not associated
with more toxicity than in the PR group and the frequency of grade 3/4 adverse events was similar between these
two groups.
Therefore, in the absence of disease progression and
safety concerns, patients whose initial response is limited to a PR should continue lenalidomide plus dexamethasone treatment, at least as long as the best response
has not yet been achieved, in order to provide the greatest opportunity to achieve the best outcomes.
Altogether, lenalidomide plus dexamethasone is a generally well-tolerated therapy, which may offer optimal
benefit with continued use. To further improve the tolerability of the regimen, the dexamethasone dose can be
reduced to help manage the adverse events.24 When
lenalidomide is given as continuous therapy the combination of antiproliferative and immune-stimulatory
effects may allow for constant suppression of tumor
regrowth. The sustained treatment effect achieved via
this mechanism is demonstrated by the efficacy of single-agent lenalidomide in patients with uniformly
advanced relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma (MM-
Fo
Adverse event
014),25 and provides an additional rationale for the study
of lenalidomide in the setting of maintenance therapy.
More aggressive sequential approaches using multiple
drug combinations can be spared for salvage treatment.
Future prospective studies are needed to understand the
optimal use of multiple drug combinations and the role
of maintenance therapy in the upfront and relapsed settings.
The present study is limited by the retrospective
nature of the analysis. The longer overall survival and
time-to-progression observed in patients who achieved a
CR/VGPR compared with in those who achieved only a
PR might result from a potential selection bias, since the
duration of survival alone can influence the chance of a
patient achieving a CR/VGPR with long-term treatment.
Although the duration of treatment was slightly longer in
patients who achieved a CR/VGPR than in those who
had a PR, the median number of treatment cycles to best
response was five cycles for both groups of patients.
Another limitation is that we did not distinguish
between patients who had a near-CR and those with a
VGPR (not near-CR) in our re-review of response. As discussed recently, compared with VGPR, CR is associated
with a better outcome.16 It is possible that are differences
in outcomes between patients who achieve a near-CR (as
utilized in the MM-009/MM-010 primary studies) and
those who have a VPGR (defined simply by 90% reduction of the M-component in the serum and/or a urinary
M-protein level of less than 100 mg/24 hours). However,
the small numbers of patients in each of the near-CR and
VGPR (not near-CR) groups precluded meaningful comparisons. Moreover, since it is difficult to separate nearCR from VGPR in cases of very small M-component
spikes on electrophoresis,16 and the level of response may
not be different enough to show significantly different
outcomes, we regarded near-CR and VGPR as one category as defined for the IMWG uniform response criteria.15
In conclusion, results from the present subanalysis
indicate that the response to treatment with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone can improve over time, advocating for the continued benefit of lenalidomide beyond
treating to achieve initial response. Moreover, the quality
of response has a positive prognostic impact, as patients
who achieved a CR/VGPR as their best response had significantly longer time-to-progression, duration of
response and overall survival, compared to patients
whose best response was a PR, regardless of when the
CR/VGPR was achieved.
da
tio
n
Table 3. Grade 3 or higher adverse events occurring in at least 5% of
patients responding to lenalidomide plus dexamethasone.
haematologica | 2010; 95(10)
Authorship and Disclosures
The information provided by the authors about contributions
from persons listed as authors and in acknowledgments is available with the full text of this paper at www.haematologica.org.
Financial and other disclosures provided by the authors using
the ICMJE (www.icmje.org) Uniform Format for Disclosure of
Competing Interests are also available at www.haematologica.org.
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