Impact of minimal residual disease status in patients with relapsed/refractory acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated with inotuzumab ozogamicin in the phase III INO-VATE trial

Elias Jabbour, Nicola Gökbuget, Anjali Advani, Matthias Stelljes, Wendy Stock, Michaela Liedtke, Giovanni Martinelli, Susan O'Brien, Tao Wang, A. Douglas Laird, Erik Vandendries, Alexander Neuhof, Kevin Nguyen, Naveen Dakappagari, Daniel J. DeAngelo, Hagop Kantarjian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

30 Scopus citations

Abstract

Minimal residual disease (MRD) negativity is a key prognostic indicator of outcome in acute lymphocytic leukemia. In the INO-VATE trial (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT01564784), patients with relapsed/refractory acute lymphocytic leukemia who received inotuzumab versus standard chemotherapy achieved greater remission and MRD-negativity rates as well as improved overall survival: hazard ratio 0.75, one-sided P = 0.0105. The current analysis assessed the prognostic value of MRD negativity at the end of inotuzumab treatment. All patients who received inotuzumab (n = 164) were included. Among patients with complete remission/complete remission with incomplete hematologic response (CR/CRi; n = 121), MRD-negative status (by multiparametric flow cytometry) was defined as <1 × 10–4 blasts/nucleated cells. MRD negativity was achieved in 76 patients at the end of treatment. Compared with MRD-positive, MRD-negative status with CR/CRi was associated with significantly improved overall survival and progression-free survival, respectively: hazard ratio (97.5% confidence interval; one-sided P-value) 0.512 (97.5% CI [0.313–0.835]; P = 0.0009) and 0.423 (97.5% CI [0.256–0.699]; P < 0.0001). Median overall survival was 14.1 versus 7.2 months, in the MRD-negative versus MRD-positive groups. Patients in first salvage who achieved MRD negativity at the end of treatment experienced significantly improved survival versus that seen in MRD-positive patients, particularly for those patients who proceeded to stem cell transplant. Among patients with relapsed/refractory acute lymphocytic leukemia who received inotuzumab, those with MRD-negative CR/CRi had the best survival outcomes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number106283
JournalLeukemia Research
Volume88
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2020

Keywords

  • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia
  • Inotuzumab ozogamicin
  • Minimal residual disease

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Hematology
  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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