Long-term efficacy of first-line ibrutinib treatment for chronic lymphocytic leukaemia in patients with TP53 aberrations: a pooled analysis from four clinical trials. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • TP53 aberrations [del(17p) or TP53 mutation] predict poor survival with chemoimmunotherapy in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). We evaluated long-term efficacy and safety of first-line ibrutinib-based therapy in patients with CLL bearing TP53 aberrations in a pooled analysis across four studies: PCYC-1122e, RESONATE-2 (PCYC-1115/16), iLLUMINATE (PCYC-1130) and ECOG-ACRIN E1912. The pooled analysis included 89 patients with TP53 aberrations receiving first-line treatment with single-agent ibrutinib (n = 45) or ibrutinib in combination with an anti-CD20 antibody (n = 44). All 89 patients had del(17p) (53% of 89 patients) and/or TP53 mutation (91% of 58 patients with TP53 sequencing results available). With a median follow-up of 49·8 months (range, 0·1-95·9), median progression-free survival was not reached. Progression-free survival rate and overall survival rate estimates at four years were 79% and 88%, respectively. Overall response rate was 93%, including complete response in 39% of patients. No new safety signals were identified in this analysis. Forty-six percent of patients remained on ibrutinib treatment at last follow-up. With median follow-up of four years (up to eight years), results from this large, pooled, multi-study data set suggest promising long-term outcomes of first-line ibrutinib-based therapy in patients with TP53 aberrations. Registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01500733, NCT01722487, NCT02264574 and NCT02048813).

authors

  • Allan, John
  • Shanafelt, Tait
  • Wiestner, Adrian
  • Moreno, Carol
  • O'Brien, Susan M
  • Li, Jianling
  • Krigsfeld, Gabriel
  • Dean, James P
  • Ahn, Inhye E

publication date

  • December 5, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Adenine
  • Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell
  • Piperidines
  • Tumor Suppressor Protein p53

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC9299890

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85120453383

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1111/bjh.17984

PubMed ID

  • 34865212

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 196

issue

  • 4