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  • Phase 2b study of 2 dosing ...
    Cortes, Jorge E.; Tallman, Martin S.; Schiller, Gary J.; Trone, Denise; Gammon, Guy; Goldberg, Stuart L.; Perl, Alexander E.; Marie, Jean-Pierre; Martinelli, Giovanni; Kantarjian, Hagop M.; Levis, Mark J.

    Blood, 08/2018, Volume: 132, Issue: 6
    Journal Article

    This randomized, open-label, phase 2b study (NCT01565668) evaluated the efficacy and safety of 2 dosing regimens of quizartinib monotherapy in patients with relapsed/refractory (R/R) FLT3-internal tandem duplication (ITD)–mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who previously underwent transplant or 1 second-line salvage therapy. Patients (N = 76) were randomly assigned to 30- or 60-mg/day doses (escalations to 60 or 90 mg/day, respectively, permitted for lack/loss of response) of single-agent oral quizartinib dihydrochloride. Allelic frequency of at least 10% was defined as FLT3-ITD–mutated disease. Coprimary endpoints were composite complete remission (CRc) rates and incidence of QT interval corrected by Fridericia's formula (QTcF) of more than 480 ms (grade 2 or greater). Secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS), duration of CRc, bridge to transplant, and safety. CRc rates were 47% in both groups, similar to earlier reports with higher quizartinib doses. Incidence of QTcF above 480 ms was 11% and 17%, and QTcF above 500 ms was 5% and 3% in the 30- and 60-mg groups, respectively, which is less than earlier reports with higher doses of quizartinib. Median OS (20.9 and 27.3 weeks), duration of CRc (4.2 and 9.1 weeks), and bridge to transplant rates (32% and 42%) were higher in the 60-mg groups than in the 30-mg group. Dose escalation occurred in 61% and 14% of patients in the 30- and 60-mg groups, respectively. This high clinical activity of quizartinib at the evaluated doses is consistent with previous reports with an improved safety profile. Need to dose-escalate more than half of patients who received quizartinib 30 mg also supports further investigation of treatment with quizartinib 60 mg/day. •Quizartinib at 60 mg/day (vs 30 mg/day) was associated with higher overall response, survival, and bridge to transplant.•The benefit-risk profile of quizartinib in relapsed or refractory FLT3-ITD–mutated AML warrants further evaluation of 60-mg once-daily dose. Display omitted