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Safety and Efficacy from a Phase 1b/2 Study of IMGN632 in Combination with Azacitidine and Venetoclax for Patients with CD123-Positive AML

Conference Correspondent

An unmet clinical need exists for novel active therapies that improve clinical outcomes for unfit or elderly patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Based on encouraging preclinical evidence, this phase 1b/2 study evaluated the safety, tolerability, and antileukemic activity of the triplet combination consisting of the antibody–drug conjugate IMGN632 targeting CD123 (alpha subunit of the IL-3 receptor) plus azacitidine and venetoclax in patients with CD123-positive AML. Initial safety and antileukemic activity findings are summarized here.

The study included 5 dose-escalation cohorts that received the triplet combination. Of these, 4 cohorts dosed IMGN632 on day 7 of each cycle (day 7: C15A50V8, C15A50V14, C15A75V21, C45A50V8; C for IMGN632 [15 or 45 mcg/kg], A for azacitidine [50 or 75 mg/m2 × 1-7 days], V for venetoclax [400 mg once daily for 8, 14, or 21 days], and 1 cohort dosed on day 1 of each cycle (day 1: C15A50V14).

A total of 51 evaluable patients were included in this analysis. The median age of the study population was 67 years; 27% of patients had secondary AML, and 49% were classified as adverse risk per European LeukemiaNet. Patients had received a median of 2 prior therapies, 35% were primary refractory, 51% had prior venetoclax exposure, and 20% had FLT3 mutations.

The most common any-grade treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) that occurred in >20% of patients were infusion-related reactions (IRRs; 33%), febrile neutropenia (31%), hypophosphatemia (26%), dyspnea (28%), diarrhea (22%), hypokalemia (22%), nausea (22%), vomiting (22%), pneumonia (20%), and fatigue (28%). The most common grade ≥3 TEAEs were febrile neutropenia (26%), pneumonia (16%), IRRs (2%), hypophosphatemia (2%), and dyspnea (8%). There were no reports of tumor lysis syndrome, veno-occlusive disease, capillary leak syndrome, or cytokine release syndrome. Treatment discontinuations due to adverse events were reported in 8% of patients. The 30-day and 60-day mortality rates were 0% and 10%, respectively.

In the overall efficacy evaluable population, including all doses and schedules (n = 46), the objective response rate (ORR) was 48%, the composite complete remission (CCR) rate was 30%, which included 4 complete responses (CRs), 8 CRs with partial hematologic recovery, 1 CR with incomplete platelet recovery, and 1 CR with incomplete hematologic recovery. Higher response rates were achieved in the higher intensity cohorts (IMGN632 dose 45 mcg/kg or 14-21 days of venetoclax) on the day 7 schedule (n = 29); ORR was 59% and the CCR rate was 38%. Among other subsets of interest, the venetoclax-naïve cohort (n = 15) achieved an ORR of 73% and a CCR rate of 53%, the FLT3 internal tandem duplication mutant cohort (n = 9) achieved an ORR of 89% and a CCR rate of 79%. Responses were also achieved in the cohort of patients who had failed the hypomethylating agent + VEN combination (ORR, 42%; CCR, 25%). Among the 17 responders in the higher intensity cohorts, 6 (35%) patients went on to receive a transplantation.

Based on these results, it was concluded that the novel triplet combination of IMGN632 plus azacitidine and venetoclax was associated with a manageable safety profile and promising antileukemic activity in patients with relapsed/refractory AML.

Source: Daver N, et al. ASH 2021; abstr 372.

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