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2016-12-06T21:13:59.000Z

Highlights from ASH 2016: Abstract 589 – Results of the Randomized Phase II Study Decider (AMLSG 14-09) Comparing Decitabine with or without Valproic Acid and with or without All-Trans Retinoic Acid

Dec 6, 2016
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On Monday 5th December, at the 58th Annual Meeting & Exposition of the American Society of Hematology (ASH) in San Diego, CA, there was an enriching session focusing on “Acute Myeloid Leukemia: Clinical Studies: New Drugs for Older AML

Michael Lübbert, MD1 and colleagues from the Oncology and Stem Cell Transplantation, Medical Center University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, presented the data they collected from their Phase 2 study.

Decitabine (DAC) is a novel chemotherapeutic agent, at present there is an interest as to whether this hypomethylating agent (HMA) can improve outcomes in elderly patients. There have already been some studies conducted using decitabine for this patient group. Of note, Priya Malik and Amanda F Cashen reported that the results of a large randomized international phase III study comparing decitabine to supportive care and cytarabine in elderly Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)  patients demonstrated significantly improved complete remission rates. However, the survival difference was not significant.

There have been pre-clinical studies that suggest that the efficacy of HMAs can be improved through synergistic effects with Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) and All-Trans Retinoic Acid (ATRA).

This study was designed to evaluate whether the addition of either Valproic Acid (VPA) (HDACi activity) or ATRA or both to DAC as first-line treatment of elderly AML patients could improve the efficacy of DAC monotherapy. 204 newly diagnosed fit AML patients were randomized with a median age 76 years.

At the congress, the lead investigator shared the results of this Phase 2 trial on an intent to treat basis.

The key highlights were: 

  • 147 patients, received only a single course of DAC. These patients achieved an Objective Response Rate (ORR) (usually achieved only after >3 courses) of 17.5% and median Overall Survival (OS) 6.2 months
  •  Effect on ORR of VPA vs no VPA (17.8 vs 17.2%): Odds Ratio (OR) 1.06, CI [0.51,2.21], P = 0.88;
  •  Effect on ORR of ATRA vs no ATRA (21.9 vs 13.5%): OR 1.80, CI [0.86,3.79], P = 0.12
  • Effect on OS of VPA vs no VPA (6.2 vs 6.4 months median OS): HR 0.94, CI [0.70,1.28], P = 0.70
  • Effect on OS of ATRA vs no ATRA (8.2 vs 5.1 months median OS): HR 0.65, CI [0.48,0.88], P = 0.006
  • There were no significant differences in toxicity observed between the different treatment arms

In summary, the authors reported that VPA did not affect ORR or OS.  Whereas, a clinically significant synergistic effect of ATRA in combination with standard dose DAC was observed.

Abstract 589

Background: Despite the recent approval of DNA-hypomethylating agents (HMAs) for treatment of elderly AML patients (pts) ineligible for induction, their prognosis is still poor, and rational, effective HMA-based combination treatments are under study. Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) show synergism with HMAs in vitro. ATRA - as single agent clinically ineffective in non-M3 AML - in combination with HMAs also shows in vitro synergistic antileukemic activity in non-M3 AML cells. We previously conducted a non-randomized phase II trial in elderly non-fit AML pts with DAC (3-dy schedule), given alone or combined with ATRA (45 mg/m2 dy 4-28, only during course 2), with encouraging results (Lübbert et al., Haematologica 2012). We now expanded this approach to a 4-arm randomized phase II study (2x2 factorial design) asking whether the addition of either VPA (HDACi activity) or ATRA or both to DAC as first-line treatment of elderly AML pts might improve the effect of DAC monotherapy (NCT00867672).

Patients and Methods: Inclusion criteria: newly diagnosed pts >60 yr unfit for induction (reasons for treatment decision prospectively captured) with non-M3 AML (WHO, de novo or after antecedent hematologic disorder [AHD], therapy-associated [t]AML), ECOG performance status (PS) 0-2. Pts with >30,000 WBC/µl were to receive a short course of hydroxyurea. Treatment: DAC 20 mg/m2 dy 1-5 (treatment arms A/B/C/D), VPA p.o. continuously (target serum levels: 50-110 mg/l) from dy 6 (arms B/D), ATRA p.o. dy 6-28 (arms C/D) of each 28-dy course (repeated until relapse/progression, prohibitive toxicity, withdrawal or death). Key endpoints: objective response rate (ORR): CR/CRi/PR (ELN criteria), overall survival (OS). Sample size calculation was based on the primary endpoint ORR, assuming an ORR of 25% in arm A (Lübbert et al., Haematologica 2012). For a power of 80% (test in this phase II study at 1-sided alpha=0.1) for an increase of ORR to 40% with VPA or ATRA, 176 pts were necessary, planned sample size 200. Efficacy analyses were performed in the intention-to-treat (ITT) population including all randomized pts for whom treatment was started. VPA was investigated by comparing arms B+D vs arms A+C, ATRA by comparing arms C+D vs arms A+B. ORR was analyzed with logistic regression, OS with Cox regression, without adjustment for prognostic factors. Odds ratios (OR) for the effect on ORR and hazard ratios (HR) for the effect on death with 95% confidence intervals (CI), and two-sided p values of the tests of no treatment effect are presented. Central hematopathological review by an independent morphologist was conducted in a blinded fashion as to treatment arms.

Results: Between 12/2011 and 2/2015, 204 pts were randomized (4 were excluded from the analysis because no treatment was administered). Median age: 76 yrs (interquartile range 72-79, range 61-92), ECOG PS 0/1/2-3: 19/61/20%: 52% had an HCT-CI >3, 16.5% WBC >30.000/µl, 31.5% poor cytogenetics (ELN), 51% had an AHD, 13.5% tAML (characteristics overall balanced across all 4 treatment arms). A median of 3 DAC courses were administered (per arm: 2/3/5.5/4), however 53 pts (26.5%), who were older, with reduced PS and a higher HCT-CI compared to the other 147 pts, received only a single course. The ORR (usually achieved only after >3 courses) was 17.5%, median OS 6.2 mths (arm A: 8.5% and 4.8 CI [2.8,7.6] mths, arm B: 17.5% and 6.1 CI [3.7,7.2] mths, arm C: 26.1% and 8.4 CI [4.0,14.0] mths, arm D: 18% and 7.7 CI [4.6,11.2] mths, respectively). Effect on ORR of VPA vs no VPA (17.8 vs 17.2%): OR 1.06, CI [0.51,2.21], p=0.88; of ATRA vs no ATRA (21.9 vs 13.5%): OR 1.80, CI [0.86,3.79], p=0.12. Effect on OS of VPA vs no VPA (6.2 vs 6.4 mths median OS): HR 0.94, CI [0.70,1.28], p=0.70; of ATRA vs no ATRA (8.2 vs 5.1 months median OS): HR 0.65, CI [0.48,0.88], p=0.006 (after adjustment for PS, HCT-CI, WBC, LDH: HR 0.59, CI [0.43,0.82], p=0.002). Improved survival with ATRA was also seen in pts with poor cytogenetics. Toxicities (predominantly hematologic) did not show relevant differences between the 4 treatment arms.

Conclusions: Based on this ITT analysis of a randomized trial, the addition of ATRA to standard-dose DAC resulted in a higher ORR and in a clinically relevant extension of OS, without additional (hematologic and non-hematologic) toxicity. In contrast, the addition of VPA did not affect ORR or OS.

  1. Lübbert, M. et al. Results of the Randomized Phase II Study Decider (AMLSG 14-09) Comparing Decitabine (DAC) with or without Valproic Acid (VPA) and with or without All-Trans Retinoic Acid (ATRA) Add-on in Newly Diagnosed Elderly Non-Fit AML Patients
    Abstract #589: ASH 58th Annual Meeting and Exposition, San Diego, CA.
  2. Malik P & Cashen A.F. Decitabine in the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia in elderly patients. Cancer Manag Res. 2014; 6: 53–61. Published online 2014 Feb 3. DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S40600.

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