Lenalidomide and prednisone for myelofibrosis: Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) phase 2 trial E4903

Ruben A Mesa, Xiaopan Yao, Larry D Cripe, Chin Yang Li, Mark Litzow, Elisabeth Paietta, Jacob M Rowe, Ayalew Tefferi, Martin S Tallman, Ruben A Mesa, Xiaopan Yao, Larry D Cripe, Chin Yang Li, Mark Litzow, Elisabeth Paietta, Jacob M Rowe, Ayalew Tefferi, Martin S Tallman

Abstract

A multicenter Eastern Cooperative Group (ECOG) phase 2 trial assessed whether adding prednisone to lenalidomide would improve previously reported responses in persons with myelofibrosis (MF). Forty-eight subjects with anemia (42 evaluable) received lenalidomide, 10 mg/d, with a 3-month low-dose prednisone taper. Ten subjects received 3 months, and 25 received 6 months of therapy. Myelosuppression was the main toxicity with 88% with ≥ grade 3 hematologic toxicity and 45% ≥ grade 3 nonhematologic toxicity. There were responses in 10 subjects (23%) using the International Working Group for Myelofibrosis Research and Treatment (IWG-MRT)-defined clinical improvement of anemia in 8 (19%) and/or decreased spleen size in 4 (10%). Serial bone marrow analysis showed no resolution of disease-related fibrosis or angiogenesis. With a median follow-up of 2.3 years, 23 subjects are alive. Lenali-domide and prednisone for myelofibro-sis evaluated through a multicentered-cooperative group mechanism is only modestly active and myelosuppre-sive. This study was registered at https://ichgcp.net/clinical-trials-registry/NCT00227591" title="See in ClinicalTrials.gov">NCT00227591.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Patient distribution and outcomes on E4903 on the use of lenalidomide plus a prednisone taper in subjects with myelofibrosis. IWG-MRT spleen response: > 50% reduction in palpable component below the left costal margin (for spleen > 10 cm at baseline), complete absence of palpable component if < 10 cm at baseline. IWG-MRT anemia response: > 2 g/dL improvement in hemoglobin or becoming transfusion independent (if originally transfusion dependent).

Source: PubMed

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