Carfilzomib, rituximab, and dexamethasone (CaRD) treatment offers a neuropathy-sparing approach for treating Waldenström's macroglobulinemia

Steven P Treon, Christina K Tripsas, Kirsten Meid, Sandra Kanan, Patricia Sheehy, Stacey Chuma, Lian Xu, Yang Cao, Guang Yang, Xia Liu, Christopher J Patterson, Diane Warren, Zachary R Hunter, Barry Turnbull, Irene M Ghobrial, Jorge J Castillo, Steven P Treon, Christina K Tripsas, Kirsten Meid, Sandra Kanan, Patricia Sheehy, Stacey Chuma, Lian Xu, Yang Cao, Guang Yang, Xia Liu, Christopher J Patterson, Diane Warren, Zachary R Hunter, Barry Turnbull, Irene M Ghobrial, Jorge J Castillo

Abstract

Bortezomib frequently produces severe treatment-related peripheral neuropathy (PN) in Waldenström's macroglobulinemia (WM). Carfilzomib is a neuropathy-sparing proteasome inhibitor. We examined carfilzomib, rituximab, and dexamethasone (CaRD) in symptomatic WM patients naïve to bortezomib and rituximab. Protocol therapy consisted of intravenous carfilzomib, 20 mg/m2 (cycle 1) and 36 mg/m(2) (cycles 2-6), with intravenous dexamethasone, 20 mg, on days 1, 2, 8, and 9, and rituximab, 375 mg/m(2), on days 2 and 9 every 21 days. Maintenance therapy followed 8 weeks later with intravenous carfilzomib, 36 mg/m(2), and intravenous dexamethasone, 20 mg, on days 1 and 2, and rituximab, 375 mg/m(2), on day 2 every 8 weeks for 8 cycles. Overall response rate was 87.1% (1 complete response, 10 very good partial responses, 10 partial responses, and 6 minimal responses) and was not impacted by MYD88(L265P) or CXCR4(WHIM) mutation status. With a median follow-up of 15.4 months, 20 patients remain progression free. Grade ≥2 toxicities included asymptomatic hyperlipasemia (41.9%), reversible neutropenia (12.9%), and cardiomyopathy in 1 patient (3.2%) with multiple risk factors, and PN in 1 patient (3.2%) which was grade 2. Declines in serum IgA and IgG were common. CaRD offers a neuropathy-sparing approach for proteasome inhibitor-based therapy in WM. This trial is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01470196.

© 2014 by The American Society of Hematology.

Source: PubMed

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