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Front-line Treatment of BCR-ABL+ Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) With Dasatinib (CML1113)

G

Gruppo Italiano Malattie EMatologiche dell'Adulto

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Chronic Myeloid Leukemia

Treatments

Behavioral: Dasatinib discontinuation

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01761890
RSO ID 714 (Other Identifier)
CML1113

Details and patient eligibility

About

The GIMEMA CML Working Party promotes a multicentric, observational, non company sponsored, prospective study of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) patients treated frontline with dasatinib. Patients will be followed for 5 years. This study will help the definition of guidelines for the treatment of CML patients in early phases.

The primary objective of the study is to describe, in the clinical practice, the rate of events leading to permanent discontinuation after 2 years of treatment with dasatinib as frontline therapy in newly diagnosed CML patients.

Full description

The primary objective is to describe, in the clinical practice, the rate of events leading to permanent discontinuation after 2 years of treatment with dasatinib as frontline therapy in newly diagnosed CML patients. Imatinib mesylate, a protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) targeting BCR-ABL, has become in the last decade the standard of care for Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia (CML) in chronic phase (CP)1-3. Dasatinib is a second generation TKI, effective in imatinib-resistant and imatinib-intolerant patients, which demonstrated superior efficacy to imatinib in early CP BCR-ABL+ CML patients 4,6,7. Most data on second generation TKIs are from company-sponsored studies, generally implemented in selected referral centres. The long-term outcome is still unknown. The high rate of study discontinuation observed within the phase 3 study may influence the mid-term and the long-term data interpretation6,7. A long-term post-marketing surveillance in large independent trial is extremely important to confirm the feasibility of a frontline treatment with the second generation TKI dasatinib and to evaluate the efficacy in a nationwide experience. Moreover, obtaining a deep molecular response is extremely relevant in order to consider TKIs discontinuation. This condition is known as "Complete Molecular Response" (CMR) and is further defined according to the sensitivity achieved (for the definition see the "Criteria of evaluation" section). As far as treatment discontinuation, two experiences have been published so far, aimed at evaluating the persistence of the CMR after imatinib discontinuation. The first was a pilot study32 where 12 patients were included. These 12 patients discontinued imatinib after at least 2 years of CMR (median duration of negativity, 32 months). Six patients displayed a molecular relapse with a detectable BCR-ABL transcript at 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 months. Imatinib was then reintroduced and led to a novel molecular response. Six other patients (50%) still have an undetectable level of BCR-ABL transcript after a median follow-up of 18 months (range, 9-24 months). The results of this pilot trial have been confirmed and extended in a second trial, the STIM trial33: 100 patients were enrolled, median follow-up 17 months, 69 patients with at least 12 months follow-up: 42 (61%) of these 69 patients relapsed (40 before 6 months, one patient at month 7, and one at month 19). At 12 months, the probability of persistent CMR for these 69 patients was 41% (95% CI 29-52). All patients who relapsed responded to reintroduction of imatinib. An increase of the CMR rate could possibly translate in a higher proportion of patients candidate to stopping anti-CML treatment, with higher probability of remaining disease-free in the long term. Interestingly, dasatinib was able to induce higher 36-month cumulative MR4 and MR4.5 rates than imatinib7. The advantages of this possible future scenario could be: first, the possibility of treatment discontinuation at least in patients with chronic clinical adverse events; second, a potential reduction of the costs of TKI treatment (after the introduction of TKI, the costs of CML treatment is increasing year by year, with the increasing prevalence of CML patients).

In summary, 1) Most data on second generation TKIs are from company-sponsored studies; 2) The high rate of study discontinuation observed within the phase III study may influence the data interpretation; 3) A long-term post-marketing surveillance in large independent trial is extremely important to confirm the efficacy in a nationwide experience; 4) The persistence of CMR after TKI discontinuation have been described in selected patients with "deep" molecular response; 5) A stable CMR is a pre-requisite for treatment discontinuation; 6) A detailed description of the kinetic of the molecular response, potentially related to a subsequent treatment discontinuation, will be done.

Enrollment

147 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Cytogenetic and/or molecular confirmed diagnosis of Ph+ and/or BCR-ABL+ CML; Age 18 years;
  • Early chronic phase, less than 6 months from diagnosis. Prior treatment with Hydroxyurea or Anagrelide is allowed;
  • Signed written informed consent according to ICH/EU/GCP and national local laws prior to any study procedures.

Exclusion criteria

  • Prior treatment with any protein tyrosin-kinase inhibitor (TKI) or interferon;
  • Recommendations and precautions before allocating a new CML case to dasatinib are fully described in the prescribing information.

Trial design

147 participants in 1 patient group

CML patients
Treatment:
Behavioral: Dasatinib discontinuation

Trial contacts and locations

37

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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