© 2024 MJH Life Sciences™ and CURE - Oncology & Cancer News for Patients & Caregivers. All rights reserved.
Darlene Dobkowski, Managing Editor for CURE® magazine, has been with the team since October 2020 and has covered health care in other specialties before joining MJH Life Sciences. She graduated from Emerson College with a Master’s degree in print and multimedia journalism. In her free time, she enjoys buying stuff she doesn’t need from flea markets, taking her dog everywhere and scoffing at decaf.
Adults with graft-versus-host disease who were treated with a three-drug regimen with cyclophosphamide after transplant may have improved survival rate compared with those treated with a two-drug regimen.
Patients treated with a three-drug regimen — cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil — after undergoing a stem cell transplant had increased one-year graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) relapse-free survival compared with those treated with a two-drug regimen, according to findings from a phase 3 trial.
Results from the BMT CTN 1703 trial were presented at the 2022 American Society for Hematology Annual Meeting.
“Based upon these results, we believe that post-transplant cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus and (mycophenolate) should be the standard GVHD prophylaxis in well-matched adults (undergoing) reduced-intensity transplantation,” Dr. Shernan Holtan, associate professor of medicine in the Division of Hematology, Oncology, and Transplantation at University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis, said during her late-breaking abstract presentation on the findings.
Researchers enrolled 431 patients aged 18 years and older with hematologic malignancies who were undergoing reduced-intensity conditioning allogenic hematopoietic cell transplantation.
Patients were treated with either post-transplant cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil (214 patients) or tacrolimus plus methotrexate (217 patients).
The primary focus of this trial was GVHD relapse-free survival (the length of time after treatment that a patient survives without any signs or symptoms of cancer) and progression-free survival (the time after treatment that a patient with cancer lives with the disease without worsening).
“This is a time-to-event end point, where the events are defined as grade 3 to 4 acute GVHD, chronic GVHD requiring systemic immunosuppression, relapse/progression or death within the first year,” Holtan said during the presentation
Researchers found that patients treated with post-transplant cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil had a significantly lower hazard for GVHD relapse or progression-free survival versus those treated with tacrolimus plus methotrexate.
The post-transplant cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil group had a higher adjusted one-year GVHD relapse-free survival rate (52.7%) compared with the tacrolimus plus methotrexate group (34.9%).
“This was owed to a reduction in severe and acute and chronic (GVHD) approximately by two-fold in the arms,” Holtan said.
At day 100 of the study, grade 3 to 4 acute GVHD accounted for 6.3% of patients in the post-transplant cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil group compared with 14.7% in the tacrolimus plus methotrexate group. These rates for chronic GVHD requiring immunosuppressive therapy at one year was 12.5% in the triplet group vs 25% in the doublet group.
At one year, both groups had similar rates of relapse/progression (20.8% versus 20.2%) and overall survival (the time when a patient with cancer is still alive) after transplant (77% versus 72.2%) when post-transplant cyclophosphamide, tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil was compared with tacrolimus plus methotrexate. Additionally, GVHD-free survival was 61.9% versus 44.9% in each respective arm and transplant-related mortality rates were 12.3% versus 17.2%.
“These improved (GVHD) outcomes did not come at the expense of relapse,” Holtan said.
The rates of grade 2/3 infection were similar in the three-drug and two-drug combination groups (40% versus 30.4%). Notably, most infections occurred early.
“We observed more grade 2 infections but not grade 3 infections, and most of these occurred in the first month,” Holtan explained.
She mentioned that further research is already underway.
“We're looking forward to future analyses where we will have patient-reported outcomes and microbiota studies from our companion protocol, BMT CTN 1801,” Holtan said.
For more news on cancer updates, research and education, don’t forget to subscribe to CURE®’s newsletters here.
Related Content: