Isatuximab, carfilzomib, and dexamethasone in patients with relapsed multiple myeloma: updated results from IKEMA, a randomized Phase 3 study

Thomas G. Martin(University of California, San Francisco), Meletios Α. Dimopoulos(National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), Joseph Mıkhael(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Kwee Yong(University College Hospital), Marcelo Capra(Hospital Mãe de Deus), Thierry Façon(Lille’s Cardiology Hospital), Roman Hájek(University of Ostrava), Ivan Špıčka(Charles University), Ross Baker(Murdoch University), Kihyun Kım(Samsung Medical Center), Gracia Martınez(Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo), Chang‐Ki Min(The Catholic University of Korea Seoul St. Mary's Hospital), Luděk Pour(University Hospital Brno), Xavier Leleu(Inserm), Albert Oriol(Institut Català d'Oncologia), Youngil Koh(Seoul National University Hospital), Kenshi Suzuki(Japanese Red Cross Medical Center), France Casca, Sandrine Macé(Sanofi (France)), Marie‐Laure Risse(Sanofi (France)), Philippe Moreau
Blood Cancer Journal
May 9, 2023
Cited by 95Open Access
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Abstract

Longer-term outcomes with the anti-CD38 antibody isatuximab in combination with carfilzomib-dexamethasone (Isa-Kd) were evaluated in the randomized Phase 3 trial IKEMA (NCT03275285), in a prespecified, follow-up analysis of progression-free survival (PFS, primary study endpoint), final complete response (CR) using Hydrashift Isa immunofixation assay, minimal residual disease (MRD) negativity, and safety. Enrolled patients had relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (1-3 prior treatment lines). Isa 10 mg/kg was administered intravenously weekly in cycle 1 then biweekly. Efficacy analyses were performed in the intent-to-treat population (Isa-Kd: n = 179, Kd: n = 123) and safety evaluated in treated patients (Isa-Kd: n = 177, Kd: n = 122). Consistent with the primary interim analysis, the addition of Isa to Kd prolonged PFS (HR 0.58, 95.4% CI: 0.42-0.79; median PFS 35.7 [95% CI: 25.8-44.0] vs 19.2 [95% CI: 15.8-25.0] months). PFS benefit was observed with Isa-Kd across subgroups, including patients with poor prognosis. The stringent CR/CR rate was 44.1% vs 28.5% (odds-ratio: 2.09, 95% CI: 1.26-3.48), the MRD negativity rate 33.5% vs 15.4% (odds-ratio: 2.78, 95% CI: 1.55-4.99) and the MRD negativity CR rate 26.3% vs 12.2%, with Isa-Kd vs Kd. The safety profile of Isa-Kd was similar to that reported in the prior interim analysis. These findings further support Isa-Kd as a standard-of-care treatment for relapsed multiple myeloma patients.Clinical trial information: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03275285.


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