Daratumumab, Lenalidomide, and Dexamethasone for Multiple Myeloma

Meletios Α. Dimopoulos(Universidad de Navarra), Albert Oriol(University College London), Hareth Nahi(University College London), Jesús F. San Miguel(Navarre Institute of Health Research), Nizar J. Bahlis(Universidad de Navarra), Saad Z. Usmani(Universidad de Navarra), Neil Rabin(University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust), Robert Z. Orlowski(University College London), Mieczysław Komarnicki(University College London), Kenshi Suzuki(Universidad de Navarra), Torben Plesner(University of Southern Denmark), Sung‐Soo Yoon(Universidad de Navarra), Dina Ben Yehuda(Hadassah Medical Center), Paul G. Richardson(University College London), Hartmut Goldschmidt(Universidad de Navarra), Donna Reece(Universidad de Navarra), Steen Lisby(Genmab (Denmark)), Nushmia Z. Khokhar(Universidad de Navarra), Lisa O’Rourke(Janssen (United States)), Christopher Chiu(Janssen (United States)), Xiang Qin(University College London), Mary Guckert(University College London), Tahamtan Ahmadi(Janssen (United States)), Philippe Moreau(University College London)
New England Journal of Medicine
October 5, 2016
Cited by 1,430Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Daratumumab showed promising efficacy alone and with lenalidomide and dexamethasone in a phase 1-2 study involving patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. METHODS: In this phase 3 trial, we randomly assigned 569 patients with multiple myeloma who had received one or more previous lines of therapy to receive lenalidomide and dexamethasone either alone (control group) or in combination with daratumumab (daratumumab group). The primary end point was progression-free survival. RESULTS: white cells), as compared with 4.6% of those in the control group (P<0.001); results below the threshold for minimal residual disease were associated with improved outcomes. The most common adverse events of grade 3 or 4 during treatment were neutropenia (in 51.9% of the patients in the daratumumab group vs. 37.0% of those in the control group), thrombocytopenia (in 12.7% vs. 13.5%), and anemia (in 12.4% vs. 19.6%). Daratumumab-associated infusion-related reactions occurred in 47.7% of the patients and were mostly of grade 1 or 2. CONCLUSIONS: The addition of daratumumab to lenalidomide and dexamethasone significantly lengthened progression-free survival among patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma. Daratumumab was associated with infusion-related reactions and a higher rate of neutropenia than the control therapy. (Funded by Janssen Research and Development; POLLUX ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02076009 .).


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