Safety and efficacy of standard-of-care ciltacabtagene autoleucel for relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma

Surbhi Sidana(Palo Alto University), Krina K. Patel(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Lauren C. Peres(Moffitt Cancer Center), Radhika Bansal(Mayo Clinic), Mehmet H. Kocoglu(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Leyla Shune(University of Kansas), Shebli Atrash(Levine Cancer Institute), Kinaya Smith(Medical College of Wisconsin), Shonali Midha(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Christopher J. Ferreri(Levine Cancer Institute), Binod Dhakal(Medical College of Wisconsin), Danai Dima(Cleveland Clinic), Patrick Costello(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Charlotte B Wagner(University of Utah), Ran Reshef(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Hitomi Hosoya(Palo Alto University), Lekha Mikkilineni(Palo Alto University), Djordje Atanackovic(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Saurabh Chhabra(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Ricardo Parrondo(Jacksonville College), Omar Nadeem(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Hashim Mann(Virginia Commonwealth University), Nilesh Kalariya(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Vanna Hovanky(Stanford University), Gabriel DeAvila(Moffitt Cancer Center), Ciara L. Freeman(Moffitt Cancer Center), Frederick L. Locke(Moffitt Cancer Center), Melissa Alsina(Moffitt Cancer Center), Sandy W. Wong(University of California, San Francisco), Megan M. Herr(Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center), Myo Htut(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Joseph P. McGuirk(The University of Kansas Cancer Center), Douglas W. Sborov(University of Utah), Jack Khouri(Cleveland Clinic), Thomas Martin(City College of San Francisco), Murali Janakiram(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Yi Lin(Mayo Clinic), Doris K. Hansen(Moffitt Cancer Center)
Blood
October 4, 2024
Cited by 119Open Access
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Abstract

ABSTRACT: Ciltacabtagene autoleucel (cilta-cel) was approved in 2022 for patients with relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma (RRMM). We report outcomes with cilta-cel in the standard-of-care setting. Patients with RRMM who underwent leukapheresis for cilta-cel manufacturing between 1 March 2022 and 31 December 2022 at 16 US academic medical centers were included. Overall, 255 patients underwent leukapheresis and 236 (92.5%) received cilta-cel, of which 54% would not have met CARTITUDE-1 eligibility criteria. In treated patients (N = 236), cytokine release syndrome was seen in 75% (grade ≥3, 5%), immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome in 14% (grade ≥3, 4%), and delayed neurotoxicity in 10%. Overall and complete response rates were as follows: all patients who received cilta-cel (N = 236), 89% and 70%; patients receiving conforming cilta-cel (n = 191), 94% and 74%; and conforming cilta-cel with fludarabine/cyclophosphamide lymphodepletion (n = 152), 95% and 76%, respectively. Nonrelapse mortality was 10%, most commonly from infection. After a median follow-up of 13 months from cilta-cel, the median progression-free survival (PFS) was not reached, with 12-month estimate being 68% (95% confidence interval, 62-74). High ferritin levels, high-risk cytogenetics, and extramedullary disease were independently associated with inferior PFS, with a signal for prior B-cell maturation antigen-targeted therapy (P = .08). Second primary malignancies excluding nonmelanoma skin cancers were seen in 5.5% and myeloid malignancies/acute leukemia in 1.7%. We observed a favorable efficacy profile of standard-of-care cilta-cel in RRMM, despite more than half the patients not meeting the CARTITUDE-1 eligibility criteria.


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