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Venetoclax Plus Azacitidine Versus Intensive Chemotherapy for Fit Patients With Newly Diagnosed NPM1 Mutated AML

Phase 2
Recruiting
Conditions
Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Interventions
Drug: Venetoclax plus Azacitidine
Drug: standard of care chemotherapy plus gemtuzumab ozogamicin
Registration Number
NCT05904106
Lead Sponsor
Technische Universität Dresden
Brief Summary

This phase II clinical trial evaluates the efficacy and tolerability of the non-intensive treatment with venetoclax and the hypomethylating agent azacitidine as compared to the standard of care chemotherapy plus gemtuzumab ozogamicin in newly diagnosed NPM1 mutated AML patients fit for intensive chemotherapy.

Detailed Description

AML is a heterogeneous disease of malignant early myeloid cells with a poor prognosis. Currently the only potentially curative treatment for patients with AML is intensive induction chemotherapy with 7 days of standard-dose cytarabine plus 3 days of an anthracyclin (7+3) followed either by several courses of consolidation chemotherapy with high-dose cytarabine or by allogeneic stem cell transplantation as standard of care (SOC). Complete remission (CR) is achieved in 60-80% of younger patients (aged 16-60 years) and in around 50% of older patients aged ≥ 60 years by this induction chemotherapy. However, this induction chemotherapy is toxic, due to prolonged myelosuppression with resulting infectious complications and organ toxicity with severe nausea, mucositis, colitis and cardiotoxicity. Each cycle of this intensive chemotherapy usually results in prolonged hospitalization of the patients and requires extensive supportive care with blood products and anti-infective agents. In addition, patients treated with intensive induction chemotherapy are at increased risk for several serious long-term side effects including cardiac and neurological sequelae, infertility and secondary cancers. The high toxicity burden in general and cardiovascular toxicity specifically consistently increase total costs in intensive induction and consolidation chemotherapy. From this perspective there is a need for therapies with lower toxicity and better efficacy.

Due to the high risk of early mortality, older patients and those with severe pre-existing conditions are typically treated with non-intensive chemotherapy with either low-dose cytarabine (LDAC) or a hypomethylating agent (HMA) either azacitidine or decitabine.While these treatments offer at best modest efficacy with CR rates of only 10%-30% and median overall survival of 6-12 months, combinations with the B-cell lymphoma-2 inhibitor venetoclax have been shown to produce CR rates between 50-75% in patients not eligible for intensive chemotherapy. The best response of venetoclax-based regimens with response rates up to 93% and two-year overall survival of 75% has been found among others in the large group of AML patients with mutations in the NPM1 gene. Standard intensive treatment in NPM1 mutated AML patients without adverse risk features usually consisting of standard of care chemotherapy plus gemtuzumab ozogamicin (GO) induces CR rates around 85%, and leads to a 5-year overall survival of around 40% - 50%.The rate and durability of response to venetoclax-based combinations in single arm studies with NPM1 mutated AML patients compared favourably with outcomes from intensive chemotherapy. A retrospective analysis in elderly AML patients with NPM1 mutation found remission rates of 73% in the entire cohort and 96 % in patients \> 65 years. The venetoclax-based combination with the HMA azacitidine is generally well tolerated and has a better safety profile than intensive chemotherapy.

Based on these available clinical data it is postulated that non-intensive treatment with venetoclax plus azacitidine in NPM1 mutated fit AML patients may be equivalent or superior to the standard intensive treatment in terms of remission rates, relapse-free survival, treatment related mortality and health-related quality of life. This randomised controlled phase II trial (VINCENT) is to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of the non-intensive treatment with venetolcax and azacitidine (Ven+Aza arm) in a wide age-range of newly diagnosed NPM1 mutated AML patients fit for intensive chemotherapy in comparison to standard of care chemotherapy plus GO (SOC arm).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
146
Inclusion Criteria
  1. A signed informed consent

  2. Newly diagnosed CD33-positive AML with NPM1 mutation according to WHO criteria

  3. Age 18-70 years

  4. Fit for intensive chemotherapy, defined by

    • ECOG performance status of 0-2
    • Adequate hepatic function: ALAT/ASAT/Bilirubin ≤ 2.5 x ULN unless considered due to leukemic organ involvement Note: Subjects with Gilbert's Syndrome may have a bilirubin > 2.5 × ULN per discussion between the investigator and Coordinating investigator.
    • Adequate renal function assessed by serum creatinine ≤ 1.5x ULN OR creatinine clearance (by Cockcroft Gault formula) ≥ 50 mL/min
  5. WBC < 25 x 109/L (<25,000/µL), prior hydroxyurea is permitted to meet this criterion

  6. Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent.

  7. Male subjects must agree to refrain from unprotected sex and sperm donation from time point of signing the informed consent until 7 months after the last dose of study drug.

  8. Women of childbearing potential must have a negative serum or urine pregnancy test performed within 72 hours before first dose of study drug.

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Exclusion Criteria
  1. Activating FLT3 mutation

  2. Relapsed or refractory AML

  3. AML after antecedent myelodysplasia (MDS) with prior cytotoxic treatment

  4. Prior history of malignancy, other than MDS, unless the subject has been free of the disease for ≥ 1 year prior to start of study treatment (exceptions are basal or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin, carcinoma in situ of the cervix or of the breast, incidental histologic finding of prostate cancer (T1a or T1b using the tumor, node, metastasis clinical staging system))

  5. Previous treatment with HMA or venetoclax

  6. Previous treatment for AML except hydroxyurea

  7. Cumulative previous exposure to anthracyclines of > 200 mg/m^2 doxorubicin equivalents

  8. CNS involvement or extramedullary disease only

  9. Known hypersensitivity to excipients of the preparation or any agent given in association with this study including venetoclax, azacitidine, cytarabine, daunorubicin, gemtuzumab-ozogamicin, or mitoxantrone

  10. Known positivity for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and History of active or chronic infectious hepatitis unless serology demonstrates clearance of infection (i.e.

    PCR undetectable viral load for hepatitis).

  11. Inability to swallow oral medications

  12. Any malabsorption condition

  13. Cardiovascular disability status of New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class ≥ 2; unstable coronary artery disease (MI more than 6 months prior to study entry is permitted); serious cardiac ventricular arrhythmias requiring anti-arrhythmic therapy.

    Note: Class 2 is defined as cardiac disease in which patients are comfortable at rest but ordinary physical activity results in fatigue, palpitations, dyspnea, or anginal pain.

  14. Chronic respiratory disease that requires continuous oxygen use

  15. Substance abuse, medical, psychological, or social conditions that may interfere with the subject's cooperation with the requirements of the trial or evaluation of the study results

  16. Simultaneous participation in another interventional clinical trial

  17. Pregnant or breastfeeding women. Breastfeeding has to be discontinued before onset of and during treatment and should be discontinued for at least 3 months after end of treatment.

  18. Patients who are unwilling to follow strictly highly effective contraception requirements including hormonal contraceptives with an Pearl Index < 1% per year in combination with a barrier method from time point of signing the informed consent until 7 months after the last dose of study drug unless one of the following criteria is met:

    • post-menopausal (12 months natural amenorrhea or 6 months amenorrhea with serum FSH > 40 U/ml)
    • postoperative (6 weeks after bilateral ovarectomy with or without hysterectomy)
    • medically confirmed ovarian failure
    • vasectomy Note: At present, it is not known whether the effectiveness of hormonal contraceptives is reduced by venetoclax. For this reason, women must use a barrier method in addition to hormonal contraceptive methods.
  19. History of clinically significant liver cirrhosis (e.g., Child-Pugh class B and C)

  20. Live-virus vaccines given within 28 days prior to the initiation of study treatment Note: corona vaccines are not live-virus vaccines and are excluded from this criterion.

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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Ven+Aza armVenetoclax plus Azacitidinenon-intensive treatment: venetoclax plus azacitidine
SOC armstandard of care chemotherapy plus gemtuzumab ozogamicinstandard of care treatment: intensive chemotherapy plus gemtuzumab ozogamicin
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
modified event-free survival (mEFS)time interval from date of randomization until either primary treatment failure or hematologic relapse or molecular failure or death, whichever occurs first

* Failure to achieve a CR/CRi/CRh after a maximum of two induction cycles in the control arm (SOC) or three induction cycles in the investigational arm (VEN+AZA), i.e. primary induction failure

* Hematologic relapse after previous CR/CRi/CRh

* Molecular failure, defined as either

* Molecular progression, defined as confirmed ≥ 1 log10 increase of NPM1 MRD level in any two samples in a patient without prior MRD negativity or

* Molecular relapse after previous MRD negativity, defined as confirmed ≥ 1 log10 between two consecutive positive samples in a patient who was previously tested as MRD negative

* Death

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Tolerability of treatmentfrom FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

cumulative occurence of CTCAE grade 3 and grade 4 adverse events

Remission (CR/CRi/CRh) ratefrom FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

CR/CRi/CRh rate is defined as the proportion of patients, who achieved a CR or CRi or CRh during study participation.

molecular response ratefrom FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

Proportion of patients with absence of detectable NPM1 mutant transcripts or with detectable NPM1 mutant transcripts who do not meet any of the definitions of molceular failure during study participation.

molecular persistence ratefrom FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

Proportion of patients with detectable NPM1 mutant transcripts present after four cycles of treatment with less than a 4 log10 reduction from baseline.

Rate of CR/CRi/CRh with MRD negativityfrom FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

Proportion of patients, who achieved a CR or CRi or CRh with NPM1-mutant transcripts/ABL1 transcripts \<0.01% during study participation.

early mortalityfrom FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

Early mortality is defined as death from any reason within 14, 30 and 60 days from day 1 of induction treatment.

Relapse-free survival (RFS)from FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

Relapse-free survival is defined as the time interval from date of first CR/CRi/CRh until either morphologic or molecular relapse or death in remission.

Overall survival (OS)from FPFV until LPLV [4 years]

Overall survival is defined as time interval from date of randomization until death from any cause.

Trial Locations

Locations (18)

Universitätsklinikum Essen

🇩🇪

Essen, NRW, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Aachen

🇩🇪

Aachen, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Augsburg

🇩🇪

Augsburg, Germany

Klinikum Chemnitz gGmbH

🇩🇪

Chemnitz, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Dresden

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Dresden, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Erlangen

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Erlangen, Germany

Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität

🇩🇪

Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Halle

🇩🇪

Halle, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Heidelberg

🇩🇪

Heidelberg, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Schleswig-Holstein

🇩🇪

Kiel, Germany

Universiätsklinikum Köln

🇩🇪

Köln, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Leipzig

🇩🇪

Leipzig, Germany

Klinikum Mannheim gGmbH

🇩🇪

Mannheim, Germany

Philipps-Universität Marburg Fachbereich Medizin

🇩🇪

Marburg, Germany

Universitätsklinikum Münster

🇩🇪

Münster, Germany

Klinikum Nürnberg-Nord

🇩🇪

Nürnberg, Germany

Krankenhaus Barmherzige Brüder

🇩🇪

Regensburg, Germany

Robert-Bosch-Krankenhaus

🇩🇪

Stuttgart, Germany

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