Trial eligibility, treatment patterns and outcome for venetoclax-based therapy in AML: a prospective cohort study

Blood Adv. 2024 Dec 5:bloodadvances.2024014014. doi: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2024014014. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Venetoclax (Ven) plus hypomethylating agents are considered standard-of-care for patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) judged ineligible for intensive chemotherapy (IC). Real-world studies complement clinical trials, since patterns of patient selection, treatment-exposure and post-remission management may vary. This prospective observational multi-center study included 209 newly diagnosed IC-ineligible patients with a median age 75 years (interquartile range, 71-81 years). A high proportion of patients had secondary AML (53.7%), adverse-risk disease (35.3%), and complex karyotype (15.5%). At a median follow-up of 22.5 months (range 0.1-43), median overall-survival (mOS) was 11.7 months (95% Confidence Interval [CI] 9.9,15.4). Composite complete remission (CRc) was achieved in 65.2% (CR 44.4%; CRi 20.8%). Of responding patients, 21.1% underwent stem-cell transplantation. When stratified based on VIALE-A original eligibility criteria, mOS was 17.8 months for patients meeting eligibility criteria and 10.7 months for patients who did not (p=0.027). AML ontogeny (p=0.024), reduced kidney function (p=0.001), Charlson co-morbidity index (CCI; p=0.0017), ELN-risk (p=0.01) and body-mass index (p=0.0298) were significantly associated with OS. Multivariant Cox-regression analysis confirmed independent association of OS with AML ontogeny (p=0.012), CCI (p=0.033) and ELN-risk (p=0.019). Patients enrolled in the latter half of the study period demonstrated improved OS compared to those enrolled earlier (p=0.026). This prospective observational study highlights outcomes of patient subgroups, including those excluded from registration trials. (clinicaltrials.gov: #NCT03987958).

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT03987958