A randomized phase 3 study of ixazomib–dexamethasone versus physician’s choice in relapsed or refractory AL amyloidosis

  • Angela Dispenzieri
  • , Efstathios Kastritis
  • , Ashutosh D. Wechalekar
  • , Stefan O. Schönland
  • , Kihyun Kim
  • , Vaishali Sanchorawala
  • , Heather J. Landau
  • , Fiona Kwok
  • , Kenshi Suzuki
  • , Raymond L. Comenzo
  • , Deborah Berg
  • , Guohui Liu
  • , Arun Kumar
  • , Douglas V. Faller
  • , Giampaolo Merlini

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

49 Scopus citations

Abstract

In the first phase 3 study in relapsed/refractory AL amyloidosis (TOURMALINE-AL1 NCT01659658), 168 patients with relapsed/refractory AL amyloidosis after 1–2 prior lines were randomized to ixazomib (4 mg, days 1, 8, 15) plus dexamethasone (20 mg, days 1, 8, 15, 22; n = 85) or physician’s choice (dexamethasone ± melphalan, cyclophosphamide, thalidomide, or lenalidomide; n = 83) in 28-day cycles until progression or toxicity. Primary endpoints were hematologic response rate and 2-year vital organ deterioration or mortality rate. Only the first primary endpoint was formally tested at this interim analysis. Best hematologic response rate was 53% with ixazomib–dexamethasone vs 51% with physician’s choice (p = 0.76). Complete response rate was 26 vs 18% (p = 0.22). Median time to vital organ deterioration or mortality was 34.8 vs 26.1 months (hazard ratio 0.53; 95% CI, 0.32–0.87; p = 0.01). Median treatment duration was 11.7 vs 5.0 months. Adverse events of clinical importance included diarrhea (34 vs 30%), rash (33 vs 20%), cardiac arrhythmias (26 vs 15%), nausea (24 vs 14%). Despite not meeting the first primary endpoint, all time-to-event data favored ixazomib–dexamethasone. These results are clinically relevant to this relapsed/refractory patient population with no approved treatment options.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)225-235
Number of pages11
JournalLeukemia
Volume36
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022

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